
This is a placeholder text
Group text
by duke1965 on 30 September 2011 - 07:09
if green dog is under threath he will make choice
training can make a dog stronger and some dogs will make different choice after training
I agree however that only few green dogs will protect you , and sportbreeding of today will bring that number down even more

by ronin on 30 September 2011 - 07:09
I think it makes a big difference if the dog is on a lead, in the car or in house or garden.
Police Dogs are bred, imported, assessed then trained for 12 continuous weeks in the UK and its very common for them not to bite the subject on their first few conflicts, or the bite is not a committed one. I also train with the military, recently doing an exercise with a special forces malinois, 7yrs old, been back a week from Afghanistan, where god only knows what he had been doing; he missed a bite on an external metal staircase.
I had a rottweiler, that had a real dominant presence, totally passive dog, he would barely bite his dog biscuits, but his presence was incredible.
Can I state the obvious for PP dogs which are rarely tested; they don't know what the weapon hand is, they don't know what a knife or a gun is and how it can injure them, and they can't distinguish between a jogger and robber running towards them.
Its a romantic idea that there's someone out there thats got your back.
Ronin
by ironshepherd on 30 September 2011 - 09:09

by Red Sable on 30 September 2011 - 10:09
We shouldn't have to train courage, maybe that is where we are screwing up with the sport dogs. We are breeding for flashy obedience. All dogs know how to bite already.
This dog I had was a dominant dog in every way, and his obedience was good, but not flashy. He thought he was near par with me when it came to rank, he did obey, but he wouldn't win any points for it, and that suited me fine. Definitely a dog of courage, had lots of prey, would search for a ball in a corn field all day till he found it, attacked the weedeater, lawnmower, even chain saw without fear.
I agree with Gustav, they are few and far between now.

by FlashBang on 30 September 2011 - 13:09
He also has been TT'ed by the ATTS, has his CGC, and is a herding dog so it's not "unstable nerves" or a "bad wired" dog acting aggressively.

by Emoore on 30 September 2011 - 13:09
I don't know if he could or not, but I have a very nice collection of firearms and I WILL protect him.

by GSDguy08 on 30 September 2011 - 14:09

by Felloffher on 30 September 2011 - 15:09
I would suggest that all the believers run a scenario at your home to test your dog if it's important to you. If you're not concerned I guess there's no harm in believing your dog will take care of things. However, I would not put that faith in my own dogs if they weren't trained.

by ronin on 30 September 2011 - 15:09
Again referring to my experience at work it's about 50/50 whether a person defends a partner or friend, and men are the worst offenders.
There are some very sad articles from WW2 concerning the Nazi's rounding up Jewish Families, and when it's a case of it's you or them (loved ones) the tragic reality faced with such an over whelming threat was it was each to his own, we revert to animal behavior in the most extreme circumstances!
When driving a safe car such as a Volvo you are increasing your likely hood of surviving a serious accident because of the design and build of the vehicle but it's not a guarantee. Likewise with a PP Dog, the breeding and training, with a bit of luck on the day will increase the probability of a positive outcome.
Of course you can lucky with a mutt, like you can get lucky falling off a motorbike.
Ronin
by Donald Deluxe on 30 September 2011 - 16:09
He also has been TT'ed by the ATTS, has his CGC, and is a herding dog so it's not "unstable nerves" or a "bad wired" dog acting aggressively."
And what's he going to do if I walk up to him and drive a size 11.5 steel-toed boot into his ribs? Fight or flight? You have no way of knowing, just as I don't with either of my two GSDs who have zero protection training. Barking at the gate is a far cry from serious combat with a larger, more powerful creature.
An untrained, unproven dog that barks and jumps around behind a fence is a deterrent and nothing more, and anyone who trusts such a dog to physically confront an aggressive human intruder without further evidence of what the dog will actually do is making a serious, perhaps life-threatening mistake.
Contact information Disclaimer Privacy Statement Copyright Information Terms of Service Cookie policy ↑ Back to top