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by Hired Dog on 28 August 2020 - 09:08
Speaking truthfully, I cannot deal with needy dogs. I do not mind high pack drive where the dog prefers to be around you, but, needy is also nervy and cannot deal with a dog that is either always staring at you, or, jumps every time you switch butt cheeks on the couch because it thinks you may go somewhere without it....
I like a dog that comes to you for a few seconds of attention, but, then goes away and does what it was doing, a dog that will run around in a field, but, swings by you and checks up every few minutes. I need a dog that is able to function independently as well as take direction from me.
My wife likes her dogs to be up her butt, to lay on her while she watches TV, no thank you. Lay down by me, great, check with me every so often, awesome, but, too needy, no thanks.

by crazystyna on 28 August 2020 - 10:08

by Hired Dog on 28 August 2020 - 10:08

by Hundmutter on 28 August 2020 - 10:08

by crazystyna on 28 August 2020 - 11:08
Hired Dog, Hundmutter, when you get a puppy, do you know exactly how the pup will turn out? What do you do if the dog develops something you don’t like ( no civil drive, clingy, etc. anything that you don’t desire in the dog)?
Thanks!

by Hired Dog on 28 August 2020 - 12:08
Anytime you buy a puppy is a gamble, regardless of where that puppy comes from, you are taking a chance. Personally, I need a dog that I can work, if that does not happen, I cannot use the dog, which is why I prefer young adults that can be tested and show you what you want to see.

by Rik on 28 August 2020 - 13:08
there is no one that can guarantee a puppy will turn out to meet a for sure criteria. there are just too many things that can go wrong along the way.

by Hired Dog on 28 August 2020 - 14:08
As far as guarantees, no, there arent any, its a puppy, always a gamble.
by ValK on 28 August 2020 - 14:08
and of course fundamental knowledge learned from more experienced people.

by Hundmutter on 28 August 2020 - 15:08
My circumstances are a little different; puppies I have had the extended opportunity to assess, as distinct from those I've had care of from whelping onwards, mainly fall into two camps over more recent decades:
The first litters were those bred by my mentor, a Show exhibitor, and so what I'd be looking for there was conformational promise combined with temperament suitable for the Showring, first & foremost. IE NOT very 'aloof' because they would have to be kind to handlers and judges ! Nothing too OTT in terms of high energy/'drive', as these were not normally to be worked, and those not making it to the Showring would usually be sold as pets. However that would not rule out looking for a degree of spark, and aptitude for work / sport, because the breed here in the UK is not as divided into 'Working' Dogs and 'Others'; and, at least on the 'Germanic /International' side, S/L are just as likely to end up doing Obedience, Working Trials etc, even where not IGP training, if their new owners had the interest in doing those things. Several dogs from this (now deceased) breeder also went to the Police and the Prisons Services.
I have had two of her dogs as my own companions. The first was a bitch who had to be taken out of the breeding programme because her hips scored poorly; she was a reasonably successful Showdog who I then turned into a (less) successful Obedience Competitor (she'd have done better if I had been a better, more competition-experienced handler & trainer !). The second was a higher-energy young male who we rejected because of size and overbite, who went to a pet home with a relative, but then was re-homed to me @ 18 months. He was a bit of a spoiled nightmare by then, but eventually developed the 'Off' switch and settled as a nice steady dog, who didn't really Show or Work but with which I had some fun training and doing a limited amount of Tracking. [See my avatar pic]
The second batch were puppies ( and older rescues) bought in or otherwise obtained for my last employer, after they stopped breeding their own stock. Here I would be looking less for conformational points as these dogs were not Shown, and more for suitability in the role they held with us, which I cannot go into detail about but which included being useful for guarding duties, but also temperamentally stable and capable of being around strangers, without difficulty. Mostly we got that recipe right; I can only think of two we had to move on (both adult rescues, not our own or other breeders' pups) because they did not 'fit'. One dog not bred by us but by a local breeder and obtained as a 10 week old turned out to be quite the nicest GSD I've ever known by the time he matured; not the most beautiful, but not fugly either, he'd have held his own in a Show even if not placed. He had a brilliant temperament.
Not sure if that tells you anything that helps, OP - but I have never had occasion to go out and buy a puppy, with any express intention for what I wanted it to turn out capable of !
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