PREY DRIVE: ACTUALLY A FAULT? - Page 8

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darylehret

by darylehret on 28 December 2009 - 16:12

Which ramblings gave you that idea?

by freemont on 28 December 2009 - 18:12

Alphapup- I have to hand it to you, you are making me think harder about behaviour.  Perhaps my game of checkers is turning into chess?

by give that dog a job on 29 December 2009 - 15:12

For the guy who is apparently invincible to mali's.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SABjzj2JzYk

As for GSD vs Mal's and Dutchies:

Both breeds are versatile working dogs. They are " jack of all trades master of none". High end dogs of all 3 breeds possess the Mental ability, and the physical ability to excel in many areas or the working dog community. I personally am
a proud GSD owner. However I work all three breeds and have found phenominal dogs out of all three. But the key is proper knowledgable breeding and a sound selection for the purpose the dog is desired to complete.

As far as drives are concerned:

I would prefer a sound dog with a strong balance.  A dog that is over the top in anyone area either needs molding to be versatile or will be used as a single purpose dog. The breed is meant to complete a wide array of tasks assigned and to complete those tasks equally efficiently you need a balance.

I feel people put to much emphasis on drives alone. They are necessary. However I want a total package with mental/physical soundness, little to no handler softness, strong will and desire to work, overall confidence/ courage, and a balance of drives. Most of these traits can be molded in a variety of dogs however this is what the breed was founded on. But a dog that is close genetically is prefered.












by ALPHAPUP on 30 December 2009 - 00:12

Freemont -- i can share with you  : i have done Sch . a little belgium ring and a lot of french ring [ with mals and GSDs]. I spend a lot of time on bite development.. a lot. my ring friends say they want a ' dog with over the top drives' . [ ??? whatever that means to them ]  and they don't care how the dog bites the bite suit.,,,, all they want is the dog to take the helper down [ you get automaitc full points for the exercise at trial]. i think different [ old habits i guess die hard even with me at times]. Why do the germans who taught me ,  say  : " the bite " and is it couragous and pronounced at Sch trial?  [ BTW is it a drive evaluation they look at ?].  BECAUSE ... ' THE BITE" says everything about what a dog wants , desires , is motivated for, what it is feeling , thinking etc etc. ... you need a dog with good high motivation  , non-stressed , confident , feeling skillful etc etc . -- so i don't argue with my ring friends .. let them talk 'over the top drive' .. but give me a dog that with a FULL MOUTH BITE ,  bite the he... out of the opponent. to be redundant. i learned from the belgiums . french and the germans [ all wonderful folks !]  look at the behavior.  e.g the BITE

by freemont on 30 December 2009 - 01:12

Alphapup,

I will post here instead of PMing because maybe someone else reading this thread may gain from it.  My GSD does SAR and not any protection work.  I look at and analyze her behaviour non-stop to better her efficacy in the field.  I work with her because lives depend on it AND for the pure joy of working with a dog (which is also very beneficial).

I don't have the benefit of looking at her bite.  Interestingly,  I sometimes would love, love, love to put her on a decoy and see what she is made of as if it would let me see into the core of what kind of dog she is...  but I digress.

I am just wondering if you have any words for me regarding a sar dog and looking "at the behaviour".

Thanks,

Freemont.

by ALPHAPUP on 31 December 2009 - 00:12

Hello Freemont.... SAR . a few words.....  to be repetative. 1. everything is predicated on two  factors : 1. who and what is the indivdual dog and from that  ,2. the function of our relationship to each owner /dog. We cannot make the dog what it is not. you have to know the potential and the predisposition of the dog. IF YOU DO NOT KNOW THE DOG [ stress level tolerance , need for social l contact ,  dependency /independency , urge to chase , bit/ capture / guard /eat  , a thousand more  etc. .... - all and any attributes [ not all dogs have all attributes ,like people]  that result in behavior..... then HOW  can we ever hope to communicate effectively and work as a team ? i won't ramble about 'THE RELATIONSHIP [ which is just as important] . For example .. even before you take the pup for SAR -- did you see the pup love to scramble towards people... and was it relaxed and  wanting to interact vigorously ? did the pup go away from you toward others and then without prompt return to you ? did you test the dog to see if it wanted to use it's nose and go to the source of what interested it ? ddddddid the pup give up easy at task or did it go and go and go to find what it wanted / did it quit  [ i would even look more into the pup ] . ....  ... look at the feelings / thoughts  /wants /  needs  motivations .. of the pup even before you choose it....  WHY ???? -- for SAR : you need a pup that wants / affinity towards people but then when it finds a person is willing and motivated to return to you for indicating ?? you want a dog that wants to find a person . a dog wiliing to go to a source  tells me about it's motivation to find what it wants. [ these are   examples ../attributes that i would look for . it may be there in varying degrees .. but like a retrieve ..  GSDs dogs with very very low retirieve: many trianers do a force retrieve " to Make" the dog .............. .. at best the dog may comply but you will see a very very poor work attitude in many of these .  So for SAR ... you want the exact opposite traits than you would want in a dog for protection ! [ my comment about ' the bite ' refers to a dog doing protection work .. it tells about the make-up of the dog in regards to that behavior /endeavor .. you do not want a SAR dog motivated and having fun at biting someone !   even if it non-serious as opposed to pers. protection .  you don't want a dog to think that he is lording it over a helper. even though i think the GSD is the most /best versatlie canine .. the traits that exempify what you would like .. is in a blue tic blood hound !  that is what you want to see in a GSD / mal for SAR... Diiferent traits and a manner to evaluate the dog in respect to traits  for a herding dog... that is why i think it is foolish to say ' prey drive ' needed for a herding dog .... do you want the dog to run down / capture and bite livestock . the dog needs to be independent to work from you  and like SAR , don't want a dog needing daddy all the time. herding dogs must also have the heart to want to look to you for orders /direction ... do you understand why i preach // look at the dog and the resultant behavior rather than drive.. the behaviors protecting/ SAR / Herding .. we all look and evaluate the dog by what behavior we want.  a dog doing protection with a half bite is deplorable .. a SAR dog that won't indicate a lost person is pitiful. aand a SAR dog wanting to find to bite .. keep that one home[figuarively].


Scoutk9GSDs

by Scoutk9GSDs on 31 December 2009 - 01:12

I want to now why an SAR dog cannot be protection trained? Specifically.

Why would a stable dog bite someone who was not a threat? Especially if the handler had not commanded the dog to do so.




by ALPHAPUP on 31 December 2009 - 12:12

  scout ..... a dog can learn two skills ...  BUT .. and contrary to most police depts... a canine should have 1 job ... and excell at that job.!! [ people will argue .but that's ok]   therefore  IMO it's BEST to have a canine that holds all the ness traits for it to perform as best as it can in ONE endeavor/task  and then again ... you have a dog to 'go  [find' ' and have a dog to go [send in reagrds to apprehending]  ... now you are out in the field and " find/ send the dog" ... so what is the dog to do when he comes in contact with the person ?  is he supposed to come back and indicate the find when he should have apprehended or does it accidently apprehend when it should come back and indicate ? how many dogs have been sent in protection [ whether sport or for real] and instead of doing a bark /guard or hold / guard , they actually sneak in a bite ? ......and vice -a verse .....send a dog to apprehend and it gets confused and it goes back to the handler ? .....OK -- the thread was about  " DRIVES" .. my point is to not think 'drive' but bbbut tto look at the canine itself -- a canine's wants / needs /thoughts , feelings , motivations that result in behavior.. i am not here to argue but share a way of thinking .. on that note .. each  should decide for themselves ... about how they view a dog and how it behaves

by give that dog a job on 31 December 2009 - 14:12

Now I have a question Alpha.

In regards to your comment of guard his prey (tug ball etc...) where exactly are you saying this comes into play in training/assessing a dogs avenue for work. I may not be reading efficiently but could you clear that up?

 I personally do mostly a formal force fetch/retrieve. Comes from some of my back ground in field/gun/service dogs. So i dont know that i would agree with you on force fetch equating to an unhappy sulky retrieve. I do think it has everything to with the dog i agree on that though as i do with 99% of your previous posts. But now is the question. As you have some insight on reading into your assessments deaper than most, how do YOU assess/ facilitate/direct a dog retrive drive?

The reason I ask is think it is something very easily messed up and or can be misread. Handler often do things in there tug games and drive building that create possessiveness in a dog. That changes his mind set of return to handler and wants to play keep away. such as allowing him to carry it after he won, leaning over petting the dog while holding it. They see this in protection and think its what to do in there game. This creates that possessiveness. And there are ways to regain it obviously. So I am curious if you were to assess a pup or green dog what exactly are you looking for when you assess for retrieve drive.





by ALPHAPUP on 31 December 2009 - 16:12

GTDAJ -- all points taken .... that is exactly my position .. not all things as they are and seem to be .. each canine is unique.. and another reason i don;t use 'drive '----  because if one reads the dog instead of absolute , limmited words like drive thinking  ... you would not have created the possesiveness as sited in your example to begin with .. in regards to force retieve .. not every siituation is 100 % percent . but two comments . 1 I have learned from my master years ago various force retireves... all dogs respond differently .. but the vast majority have the UMPH  snuffed out in that way of teaching .. again maybe not all.. depends on the dog [ ability to handle stress amoungst  , the ability to recover from pressure --just two factors to consider      . point two ... within any behavior [ sit, down , jump]  : IF the DOG DECIDES  on its own accord TO DO something .. it will be more of an ingrained behavior and  becuase it comes from the heart. and essence of the dog i will almost guaratee it  to be jopyful in it's performance . Not rocket science here .. put yourself in the dogs context.. would you be happier and more willing if I MADE you do something  ?? .. and the more force i use the more some would be resistful ...or ,think about this ... ... : ....some / many dogs hold  this emotion :  to become resentful ! Not what personally i desrire about my relationship with ANY of my dogs ! You know - [ Ying /Yang]  - dogs are just like people yet simultaneously very different -- if one  can comprehend this good for you .. and IMO -- if yone  doesn't ... then consider not being a trainer. one  will never ever be able to ' see within your dog ' and  one will continue to always want words / techniques  that descibe eveything like a book , one will be like a trainer that needs a leash to be able to work the dog rather than using one's  heart and mind to get into the dog's heart and mind.   Just an opinion .. ok to disagrwee . i'll respect that ...





 


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