Well unless your parents trained you with a taser gun
No, no taser, but they did whip me with a belt or switch (having to go outside and get your own hackberry switch was the worst, if you got a big one it hurt like hell, if you got a small one, well then dad got to pick a new one for ya, and that never ended well, lol) when I misbehaved. I mean, we could get into the whole spare the rod spoil the rod discussion, but were talking about dogs, so back to the topic at hand.
I think its cruel,your dog looks very unhappy.
I wouldnt recommend it,unless of course your animal is just a tool, might as well go all the way and use a steel toe boot.

unch:
Unhappy? to someone who knows dogs, he would like like a wore out dog. Every one of those pictures was taken after he had spent half, if not the whole day running in the mud, running across a field, swimming in a pond/lack/bay, pointing, retrieving, ect.
And if you are close enough to use a steel toe boot, just use a pinch collar, they are great as well.
And if you zapped a child every time they did wrong they would end up very untrusting. Plus daily exercise easily burns off any extra weight that treats may add. I've always used positive reinforcement with my German Shepherd, and she is in peak physical condition, as well as being as well trained as they come.
There's a huge difference in raising children and training dogs. Not to mention, positive reinforcement training isn't all about treat rewards. I know the e-collar can be used to train a dog for certain behaviors if used properly, but positive reinforcement training works much more effectively. Especially being a puppy, and family dog first, you don't want a relationship built on intimidation and dominance.
Nobody said to shock the heck out of a puppy or even use an e collar on a puppy.
Now about the relationship being built on intimidation and dominance, well for a dog that is part of the family, that is basically what you want. Now you can go too far with this and create a dog that will consistently cower away from you, but like I said earlier, if you know what you are doing, then this is not a problem. Caesar Milan, for what he is worth, has at least one thing right; the relationship an owner has with their dog(s) is a pack relationship. As the "pack leader" you are just that the leader, the alpha member of the pack. As such, you should rule with an iron (electric) fist. I have seen many many dogs that did not have this in place (in particular, many vizslas and weimaraners) and everyone that I have seen like this was the "alpha" or "pack leader" of the house. Whats the problem with this? Plenty, the dog thinks that they are in charge, they are the dominate member of the relationship, they run all over the owner, digging, chewing, peeing, ect. In a relationship with a dog, someone (you or the dog) will be the dominate member, let it be you. Neither of my dogs chew, dig, or eat horse crap. How do you recommend that I could have stopped my dogs from eating horse crap using "positive reinforcement"? Please tell me.
I am not trying to debate training philosophies, more recommending positive reinforcement training over fear based training. I guarantee it builds a better relationship between dog and owner, and will create a better family dog. An older man I know trains seeing eye dogs, and has trained the best of the best dogs using only positive reinforcement, so being a bird dog really doesn't make a difference on what type of training should be used.
That's all fine and dandy in a perfect world where the dog is by your side on a leash 24/7. How do you recommend I positively reinforce my dogs to do the right thing (stop, retrieve, change direction, go farther, come back, stop chasing a rabbit, ect) when they are 10-200 yards away in thick South Texas brush or 100-500 yards away across an ag field or 50-300 yards away across a lake, bay, or swamp? Please tell me how to do this. The fact is, as a working bird dog (as well as a member of the family) it is a far more efficient use of time and energy to use an e-collar as an aid in training.
At the end of the day it's up to the owner to decide, and I am simply making a case that positive reinforcement is the best route to go. Bird dogs are especially respondent to this training, as they have above average prey, scent, and food drives. I've seen way too many dogs become fearful, and even aggressive towards people by the use of non positive training methods. And have yet to see one dog that hasn't become well trained using positive reinforcement.
Like I said earlier, have you ever trained a bird dog? Not just basic retrieving, I am talking about the whole enchilada; basic retrieval work, advanced retrieval work (multiple marks, blind retrieves, hand signals, ect), proper crossing and distance when hunting upland birds, pointing and retrieving said upland birds, blood trailing, as well as being a member of the house.