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by susie on 30 October 2015 - 19:10

by bubbabooboo on 30 October 2015 - 21:10
The dog gives back to their human what the human gives to the dog. All humans never give enough to get maximum results from their dog.

by Jenni78 on 30 October 2015 - 21:10

by Naytejr on 31 October 2015 - 04:10

by susie on 31 October 2015 - 07:10
by gsdstudent on 31 October 2015 - 11:10
by Gustav on 31 October 2015 - 11:10
I have seen litters of two hard dogs that had pups that were extremely weak nerved expressed through extreme shyness or extreme aggression.....but that is not the norm. I have also seen litters from parents in which one is shy and pups were sound, but again that is not the norm.

by Naytejr on 31 October 2015 - 12:10

by Jenni78 on 31 October 2015 - 15:10
I would say there's been a spectrum. Nothing where I was like "holy cow, who are your parents again?!" But I can think of one instance in particular where there was a pup unlike any pups I'd had before, in that he was far less precocious, had somewhat lower drive, but in my eyes he lacked the strong confidence early on that I was used to seeing out of that bitch. I described his behavior to some knowledgeable friends who said I was too hard on him, they all mature differently, blah blah blah. I had previously only had very solid pups from that female, in all honesty never a shy puppy, so I erred on the side of caution and sold him to a pet home. He was not a nerve bag, but he was reserved enough that I did not ever see him being on par with his siblings.
Well, fast forward a bit, he's 13 weeks old and the people call me for training help because he's a handful. I hooked them up with a K9 trainer friend of mine in their area and he excelled and he thought the pup was great. Maybe he truly was just a later bloomer. They are 3 years old now and nerves are very good to outstanding. But I still wouldn't breed that dog...LOL. Too many others that were strong out of the box so to speak to take a chance that nurture may be what made him the strong dog he is today.

by bubbabooboo on 31 October 2015 - 15:10
Late maturing pups and adults are quite common. If genetics is to blame for all puppies who are not "good enough" to please poor trainers and those who rear puppies from 8 weeks in a less than wise way then it must be the same reason that a family with 8-12 children from the same parents don't have two children the same in both appearance or personality ?? The oldest children get more attention and structured parenting from the parents and the youngest are almost raised by their siblings. How does that usually work out?? Are the oldest children the more serious?? How is it possible that the oldest child in a family of eight siblings from the same parents will be the more serious and perfectionist while the youngest of the 8 to 12 from the same parents will be a mess ... hint ... could it be environment ?? Children raised in the same household from the same parents from large families of 8-12 children usually ( not sometimes ) turn out quite different and these differences are usually apparent in adult behavior and appearance as well. Link to an article on birth order and personality based on birth order below.
http://www.parents.com/baby/development/social/birth-order-and-personality/
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