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#16
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| Re: Schutzhund dog best as kennel dog? Quote:
I don't think it's necessary for all dogs in a household to be best of friends, or even to be out with one another. Makes for a lot of mayhem even without dog aggression in the lines. I know people who have 8 or 9 dogs running around the house, and all you can hear is yelling and barking. Not my cup of tea. Furthermore, I certainly don't believe my dogs need to get along with ANY dog outside my household... what they need to do is learn how to ignore them, and that comes with training and proper guidance. Just because there is a presence of dog aggression in lines does not mean that every dog in those lines will be that way, either. Leadership plays a very big role in the imprinting and management of a puppy. In other words, nurture can help squelch and bring under control some of these natural tendencies, IMHO.
__________________ Elisabeth Tanzbar Rottweilers Walk softly, and carry a BIG pooper scooper. |
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#17
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| Re: Schutzhund dog best as kennel dog? I'm sure they are socialized as puppies, but they are not taken for car rides to the local bank to get a cookie, taken to the parks or walked around the neighborhood asking "will you be my friend"! These are serious working dogs with a specific purpose. They are hard/strong nerved/STABLE dogs. Their purpose is not to be Officer Friendly. They are trained for bomb detection/drug detection/sentry/PP. They do have fight drives that are outstanding, but they are also very well obedience trained. On/Off buttons. They are stable and social enough to be able to do crowd control and go on tours to protect the President of the United States and all other dignitaries. But they do not live with their handlers until and if they qualify to be adopted when retired. There is no room for fear in their resume! Fear aggression as Larry said has no room in ANY dog worth their grain of salt. Just for the record, I'm no trainer and have never trained a Sch dog or MWD of any kind. I have been exposed to MWD up close and personal and know what they are capable of. I've seen where they live and watched them being worked. Very impressive.
__________________ JoJo All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. Edmund Burke |
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#18
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| Re: Schutzhund dog best as kennel dog? Quote:
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#19
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| Re: Schutzhund dog best as kennel dog? Quote:
You said that you already spoke to the OP, was that before the OP posted or after? I ask this, for either you didn't give the OP the answers that they were looking for and they posted to get further answers or you gave great advise after they already posted. If the later, why not share your advise with other inquiry minds who want and/or need to know? Remember, this is a learning forum and sharing advise and knowledge is how people learn. ![]()
__________________ JoJo All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. Edmund Burke |
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#20
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| Re: Schutzhund dog best as kennel dog? I don't have much to add, except that my father was one of the first class of officers to train dogs for Customs. While some dogs were more stable than others, they all lived with my brothers and sisters in the family house (he retired from customs before I was born) and had to learn to adapt to family life as well as work life. Although maybe slightly differnet than police dogs, because they were used for tracking and detection as well as protection and for lack of a better word, "taking the bad guy down" I am sure the training is quite similar. It worked out well, and some of the best dogs my family ever had came from this time period. I would like to know if law enforcement dogs are still trained in this manner. If anybody knows, please post, My dad's training all took place in nthe 70's I believe. |
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#21
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| Re: Schutzhund dog best as kennel dog? Quote:
Perhaps I should have clarified myself when I stated fear aggression. I was speaking of aggressive acts out of fear. Is there a difference between a dog labled as fear aggressive, and a dog that is pushed beyond belief, or hurt, or abnormally startled that bites someone as opposed to a dog who due to lack of nerve is fearful and has learned that biting is the answer? I believe yes there is. There is such a varying degree of nerve development from weak to strong to middle of the road. I'm sure that a good varieity of the MWD and k9 units have the strong nerved dogs who are virtually unflappable, I do believe that there are some out there who are middle of the road, reactive, and less suited for the job they are intended on doing. I would be very curious to find out if each and every MWD or police k9 unit is "just" doing their job because they are "serious working prospects". You can't tell me that these serious tough dogs, no matter how tough and serious they are don't experience fear, however infrequent, and if given an ultimatum wouldn't use their teeth to back themselves up....Especially considering their high fight drive!! They are at the core base, dogs. Perhaps bred to work through and prevail against high stress situations, but, they are in fact dogs. Interestingly enough there is a k9 unit in the town next to me that has an unprovoked bite history. They had the dog on crowd control a few years ago when the Red Sox won the world series . The University of NH crowd was getting overly rowdy, so officers were brought in with k9's and mounted units. During a particularly tense moment when tasers and other forms of control were being applied one shepherd was walking with his handler, and took a cheap shot towards a reporter, who was minding his business, in his buttocks region. I was able to actually view the tape, and it was clearly a fear bite....Perhaps the stress was too much, perhaps the dog was not handled appropriately in crowds, but the reporter wasn't even looking at the dog, and got nailed...the officer didn't offer any commands to the dog either...Was this a "stable dog".... in my opinion, the stress got to much for him. No, he wasn't stable, or suited for that type of job. So, while I think that these MWD and k9 units, and probably some of the Sch prospects are very strong nerved dogs who would have to have the earth come upon them to be unnerved, they may have a much higher tolerance threshold to stress, they STILL can be stressed, and still can react in a defensive way given the right situation.....Would some extra exposure in life help them out.... perhaps, if it was controlled well. ![]()
__________________ Jessica Newcomb (Jess) U-CD Sinjin's Max Factor CDX, RE CGC "MAX" Camelot Von Der Frolikind RA NA NAJ NJP NAP CGC "CAM" |
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#22
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| Re: Schutzhund dog best as kennel dog? It was interesting to see the respones out there. Obviously we are planning on a house dog. I don't think of our dogs as running amuck in our house. We have a lot of fenced property, several runs, and a dog room. We try to rotate in pairs between house and outside. Puppy will be well socialized, go to my office etc. Planning on starting w obed but if temperament is good will look into excellent local schutzhund club. I've always considered myself a rottie person but stumbled across a shepherd litter that looks amazing and the breeder wants the dog to be a housepet. Pedigree includes working ch, police dog/cadaver dog etc. Something to consider. |
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#23
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| Re: Schutzhund dog best as kennel dog? Quote:
Quote:
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Both boys decoy now, Val, (the oldest), put his first BH on a dog last year and Lili (the baby girl) has taken over Bill's newest puppy and named him "My Chunky Puppy". I can't imagine not letting my children interact with my dogs. Quote:
Liz
__________________ Liz Crawley ~~~and the grrrrrls... Chrome von Ausbreitung CGC VPG2 BST UCI-CH Elfed von Ausbreitung CGC TT BH Franny von Scosher CGC BH Wingra "Duckie" vom Dreilaendereck Nikita von Scosher |
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#24
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| Re: Schutzhund dog best as kennel dog? Quote:
something thhat needs to be understood police canines (not all) are often very poorley trained /trained too fast (because of money issues) and unscrupulos breeders and trainers prey on police departments and sell them pos dogs period.another big problem with police canines is lack of ongoing training. there are several fine police canines but these are from departments that have ongoing and there own programs and the ones that are really good you'll find many of there handlers participate in other venues. certainly all dogs to bite must have a certain amount of uneasyness about a situation in order to bite but it is far far removed from biting out of fear. to take a military working dog and socialize it heavily with all types of people like you would a pure pet dog would be a disaster. when you get a well bred dog and do your resurch for what you want they simply arent rattled by surprizes/noises/firecracker/people running by the soundness is truly in the genes, you still need to proof these things. but its very rarely something to have to work on. like skip i chose to live with my dogs kenneling may give you a tiny edge if the dog has the drive to only live for his training and this is the persons belief that kennels a dog they believe that the only excersize/companionship comes with its training and the rest of the time it sits and waits for its training so in fact it does live for this but on trial day the 1 or 2 point differance isnt worth it. |
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#25
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| Re: Schutzhund dog best as kennel dog? Olay, I'm a newbie here, but how could anyone keep a rottie, of all breeds, in a kennel? They are such people dogs,it would be a terrible thing to do. I've fosteresd close to 300 dogs, and I can't imagine any dog would benefit from that. Granted I don't do hounds. |
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#26
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| Re: Schutzhund dog best as kennel dog? Larry, Thanks for your input. I understand your opinion more. Unfortunatley around here, many of the k9 units are imported, and many have been failures. I have had both the pleasure, and dissapointment to attend some seminars that they have put on for the general public along with watch several demos. What I saw were sharp dogs, very capable of being fast, ultra responsive to commands, but little pushing put them over the edge. I have seen some nice dogs put through, but not enough. I like what you said about the knowledgeable handlers being involved in sport work....To the best of my knowledge, none around here are. I can see how that would greatly improve the workability of the dogs. I have a friend who I track with who has a reactive shepherd. She has been a shepherd owner for 25 years now, works her dogs in agility, tracking and obedience, got the dog from a reputable breeder. The dog is truly out of control. He attacked and injured her horse requiring vet attention (horse was at a standstill when he attacked her), She cannot walk him down a downtown street without him lunging and barking at people, dogs, cars, you name it. He's been evaluated by 3 pet dog trainers. All have said to put him down, he's not worth the liablity. She contacted the local "working dog club" (used locally for training of police dogs) with no response. She finally was able to find a neighboring state police who said they'd take the dog on trial.... The officers response when she told him about all of this dog's troubles???? The tougher the dog, the harder the problem is to treat, the more likely they'll fit into our program... What an pompus attitude.... I've found something interesting about this dog....Can the reactivity be worked through, yes, to a degree, but what bothers me is when this dog is put to actual work, he winds himself up into such a tizzy that he is not able to think....I'll be curious to see where they go with him, or if they turn him down. Anyhows.... just another police project over in this area which frustrates me. I know there are some good ones out there, I get frustrated though when they are putting the public at risk by putting lesser dogs out to work the streets. Liz, I read the article about your boys (I think they were your boys??) In the USRC magazine..... Good for you for getting them involved. My hope is to get my young daughter 4 involved with my OB, agility and tracking as she gets older.
__________________ Jessica Newcomb (Jess) U-CD Sinjin's Max Factor CDX, RE CGC "MAX" Camelot Von Der Frolikind RA NA NAJ NJP NAP CGC "CAM" |
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#27
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| Re: Schutzhund dog best as kennel dog? Quote:
My hope is that my youngest daughter will let go of my leash some day!! She keeps trying to take my dog away from me ![]() Liz
__________________ Liz Crawley ~~~and the grrrrrls... Chrome von Ausbreitung CGC VPG2 BST UCI-CH Elfed von Ausbreitung CGC TT BH Franny von Scosher CGC BH Wingra "Duckie" vom Dreilaendereck Nikita von Scosher |
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