
This is a placeholder text
Group text
by duke1965 on 01 November 2010 - 06:11
Conclusion:
If the dog is civil or not is a learned behavior. Ability of different dogs to learn such behavior is inherited.
so you say any untrained green dog with inherited civil behaviour , will not attack a man that threathens him , unless he is first learned to do so
because thats what Im still reading in your post l after you already changed it three times already

by Davren on 01 November 2010 - 06:11
by duke1965 on 01 November 2010 - 16:11
if he writes that a dog being civil is learned behaviour , I think he means that a dog being civil is learned behaviour , and if I respectfully disagree with that , I write that I disagree with tat
sure I understand that in training you can choose too work on civil or prey , but it has to be there too be worked with ,
thanks anyway for your clear comment

by poseidon on 01 November 2010 - 19:11
I have described my dog as having a civil edge. She had done very little protection work training, 4.5 months in total and she is 3.5 years old. She is my first GSD and I am learning much from her especially as regards to her temperament and my handling skills.
Here's an example, she was under a year old and we were in a park. A group of teenagers were walking towards me and playing rough with each other; pushing and shoving then one lad did a flying kick at his mate. By then they were about 10 feet away from me. My dog sniffing the ground at the time was startled by the noise and charged. Immediately the lad took notice of my dog and ran. I was not prepared or rather had no idea that this would happen. I screamed "No" to my dog and tried to called her back. She carried on the chase. I resorted to screaming at the lad to "Stop" and when he did, so did my dog. She stood sniffing him and I managed to put the least on. All I did was apologise to the boy and in exchange I got a mouthful of swearing.
I like to know if my example is right to describe my dog as having a civil edge. She is aloof with strangers, no problems with children. However a bit dominant with other dogs and quite possessive.
One thing I noticed about my dog, if you are relaxed she is fine. If tense or acting suspiciously, she seem more alert. So when I greet people I never met before in the park, I use my nice tone of voice alot.

by GSDfan on 01 November 2010 - 19:11
This is how I took it (correct me if I'm wrong)....civil behavior, in terms of a dog taught protection. Civil aggression is hard wired, civil behavior is learned- requires nurturing. For ex. an adult dog on a backtie, first toss of a bite pillow. A dog with stronger defense than prey will bark at you not the prey object. If you give that dog a civil bite in that moment, will he bite?...probably. Will he bite well? No. Will he have confidence, commitment, forwardness? No
The dog learns civil behavior either through repitiition (training in defense- which I don't like) or through getting the dog to work in prey and revisiting civil later (going back to civil will be easy for said dog).IMO if you agree or not it comes down to whether or not you consider the act of biting or the entire action (in the state it is required for the work) "civil behavior".
JMO
by sable59 on 01 November 2010 - 19:11

by Prager on 01 November 2010 - 19:11
Another example. The dog in a hardware store is laying on the floor and does not care who comes and walks by or not. Than the store closes and if the same people who were uninterested to him during the day would come in the middle of the night such dog would then turn aggressive. That discrimination between same situation during the day or night is a learned behavior. The ability to bark and bite is inherited behavior.
Thus what I am saying the dog knows ( or not) genetically how to respond to danger, like barking, biting, ... and so on. But where or against what or whom or in what situation to apply it is learned behavior.
Or in prey drive:
Wolf pup learns to hunt bugs, lizards, rabbit, dear in that order of difficulty. Your pup on the other hand learns to chase instead of a bug burlap and then sleeve , body suite ... All that is learned behavior. Inherited is the drive in this case prey drive which is triggered by the motion. Shaking of the head is pray kill instinct inherited in all higher animals. Even cow will shake head in prey kill style if electrodes stimulate proper part of the brain, so will lizard, dog, bear, shark or human. That is inherited behavior. What in particular they will chase and prey shake per se is learned behavior. Also you can determine what is learned and what is not learned by if you can unteach it. You can unteach the dog to chase running kids or passing cars. Thus to chase that particular target is learned behavior. You can not change genetics by teaching. You can only develope it . You can change application of these genetics through learning.
Prager Hans
http://www.alpinek9.com
by duke1965 on 01 November 2010 - 20:11
but Ill agree to disagree with you hans , no use in repeating points endlesly
I would however love to see some trainingvideos of you clarefeing your point of view

by Felloffher on 01 November 2010 - 20:11
What happens to the dog especially PSD when it's put in a defensive position during a fight and has never been there before? Defence done correcty with the right dog is an important training tool. IMO a street dog without any D training isn't a complete dog and has holes in it's training that will be exposed sooner or later.

by Prager on 01 November 2010 - 21:11
every dog will , by nature , make its own choice when to fight or flight , nothing learned behavior about that , Ive seen dozens of examples over the years of 100% green dogs and what choices they make in various situations
Yes duke it will make such choice based on experience and inherited and acquired courage. There is not such thing as "green dog" . Dog is gaining experiences from day one after the birth. That is learning.
P.S> I have not learned how to download videos. I am a roadkill on Internet superhighway:)
Prager Hans
http://www.alpinek9.com
Contact information Disclaimer Privacy Statement Copyright Information Terms of Service Cookie policy ↑ Back to top