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by Mithuna on 25 January 2017 - 00:01
Is it possible for a dog to go from untitled to SCH III in 7 months? Why/not? Whats a realistic expectation?

by bubbabooboo on 25 January 2017 - 01:01
How old was the dog ... don't use title for IPO as the be all of training ... Ring sports require a better dog and much more demanding training.
As far as IPO titles go I would be surprised if a dog could go from 15 months to 22 months and get all IPO titles ... it is not impossible but suspicious. There are a lot of titled IPO dogs that are not trained. A noted USCA member who runs a puppy mill in NC claims his one year old male went to Germany to be trained by a Rottweiler trainer and came back with all Schutzhund titles one year later with Schutzhund 1-3 and FH 2 .... but never competed again ... just a stud with as he put it all the titles he could get. A 15 month old dog would need to be pretty much ready for a IPO II at 15 months to get to III at 22 months but it could be done. A full time trainer and friendly judges would make it easy while a part time trainer with several dogs and honest judges would find it very difficult.

by Chaz Reinhold on 25 January 2017 - 01:01
Yes, that is possible. Some people train for the 3. Meaning, you train the dog, tge dog is ready for the Bh through 3. You can easily put all 4 on the dog in 7 months.
I know which breeder you're speaking of and which dog. The question is the training, not the titles. A dog can be trained for a 3 and not titled. I've watched a club member put the 1, 2 and three on a dog that was bought trained in the first 6 weeks he got the dog. Made the world team that year too.
So, it is more a matter of whether this dog had substantial training. 7 months is a short period, but you'd be surprised what you can do with a dog in a short period, if you have the time. Scores may not be great.
I have had almost all my dogs ready for the B at 12 months, like old rules, and they were doing quite well in protection and most doing articles on the track at that age, and that is starting with a pup at 8 weeks/2months. So think of how much more you could do with an adult that already has training and foundation work done.

by KYLE on 25 January 2017 - 04:01

by Jenni78 on 25 January 2017 - 04:01
by duke1965 on 25 January 2017 - 06:01
furthermore you dont want to expect top scores in a short time, there is such a thing as "passing scores",
if a dog ends up with a good trainer after that his scores can go up by good training, I sold a good IPO3 dog to Carlos Rojas that improved on his scores quite a bit after being trained and handled by Carlos

by mrdarcy on 25 January 2017 - 07:01
by Bavarian Wagon on 25 January 2017 - 13:01
It's' simple math...7x30=210 training days...that's a full time trainer. That's 2-4 years of club training days for a regular club person if they're going the one time a week club meets and possibly two if that's available. Add in lack of tracking due to work and other time commitments, and it's easy to understand why titling for the amateur takes as long as it does when a professional can have it done in a quarter of the time.

by Jenni78 on 25 January 2017 - 14:01
by Bavarian Wagon on 25 January 2017 - 14:01
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