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by joanro on 16 January 2015 - 15:01

by SportGSD on 16 January 2015 - 16:01
Thank you
Toronto area, Ontario, Canada. Isaak's dam is Edmonton area, Alberta (Wolvesden Kennel).
by Ibrahim on 16 January 2015 - 20:01
Sport GSD, did the judge who described the back of your dog as weak watch him in movement? or he only decided the back is weak from a still stack?
by Ibrahim on 17 January 2015 - 21:01
Horizontal jump in slow motion
by Ibrahim on 17 January 2015 - 21:01
Gallop in slow motion, watch the flexibility of spine in gallop
by Ibrahim on 17 January 2015 - 21:01
GSD, slow motion gallop
by Ibrahim on 17 January 2015 - 23:01
In my opinion in the front GSD has best and safest angulation for gallop/jump/trot. In the rear when it is moderately angulated (as standard states, not overangulated) it has good and safe enough angulations for gallop jump/ and best angulation for economic traot with best endurance.
Now when a GSD is overangulated in the rear, trot economy and endurance is reduced, plus gallop is not very suitable and jump becomes unsafe as pressure is more on hock bone which lands flat on ground, landing is on foot pad and considerable part of the hock bone, the least safe is when the rear is overangulated combined with a long hock bone. Spring action which works as shock absorbant is lessened by the hock bone touching the ground. I don't like this fact, but truth should be said no matter.
To demonstrate this please watch above videos, here are still pictures, please note the difference in between the two dogs in rear hock landing flat on ground in case of the shepherd, and only foot landing on ground in case of the Greyhound.
More angulation in front is better for all types of gait (trot/gallop/jump). Moderate rear angulation is best for trot, the less the rear angulation is better for gallop and jump !!!!
by Ibrahim on 17 January 2015 - 23:01
By the way, there are no GSDs that are overangulated in the front, that is a wrong term, most GSDs, including modern showline, are less angulated in the front than standard calls for. But on the other hand it is true that modern GSD, many of them, are overangulated in the rears. My opinion
Ibrahim

by jemi on 18 January 2015 - 13:01
hock walking

by SportGSD on 20 January 2015 - 01:01
This is Isaak, pics taken today, now 7 months
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