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by Red Sable on 12 October 2011 - 00:10
Okay, so you don't mean slow to mature as in when they get more defense, more courage, those kind of things? What you have at eighteen months is pretty much what you've got?

by JON ERIC on 12 October 2011 - 00:10
If you are looking for Sharp Crisp Obedience at a young age,then i would Not recommend DDR Pup.
However,if you want a Good Defensive,Loyal Buddy for Life,then search for a DDR Pup.
The Fact that I pointed out the Immaturity in the DDR,does Not mean that this is a Bad quality.Simply put,just expect it.
However,if you want a Good Defensive,Loyal Buddy for Life,then search for a DDR Pup.
The Fact that I pointed out the Immaturity in the DDR,does Not mean that this is a Bad quality.Simply put,just expect it.

by JRANSOM on 12 October 2011 - 00:10

by JRANSOM on 12 October 2011 - 01:10
Also, I was told that Czech dogs and DDR go hand in hand as they use alot of the same dogs. Just what I was told though.

by JRANSOM on 12 October 2011 - 01:10
My female is almost all defense but does have good prey drive.

by Red Sable on 12 October 2011 - 01:10
Can you pm me the breeder JRANSOM?

by BlackthornGSD on 12 October 2011 - 02:10
Also, I was told that Czech dogs and DDR go hand in hand as they use alot of the same dogs. Just what I was told though.
Most Czech dogs go back to old DDR dogs or have common ancestors with DDR dogs, from back when both countries were Communist and shared a border and thus could trade dogs/bloodlines more easily. No dogs that are all from DDR ancestors have any Czech dogs behind them, pretty much. Since the DDR (East Germany) ended back around 1988/89, a dog referred to as DDR would be one that goes back to dogs left from that period and whose breeders have made a deliberate attempt to keep those bloodlines alive.
http://www.ddrlegends.com/nobleheritage.html
Most Czech dogs go back to old DDR dogs or have common ancestors with DDR dogs, from back when both countries were Communist and shared a border and thus could trade dogs/bloodlines more easily. No dogs that are all from DDR ancestors have any Czech dogs behind them, pretty much. Since the DDR (East Germany) ended back around 1988/89, a dog referred to as DDR would be one that goes back to dogs left from that period and whose breeders have made a deliberate attempt to keep those bloodlines alive.
http://www.ddrlegends.com/nobleheritage.html

by Chaz Reinhold on 12 October 2011 - 03:10
I've heard that DDR dogs can run 45 mph on three legs and potty train themselves.

by Red Sable on 12 October 2011 - 10:10

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