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by apple on 07 May 2019 - 11:05

by Hundmutter on 07 May 2019 - 11:05
by apple on 07 May 2019 - 12:05

by Hundmutter on 07 May 2019 - 15:05
by apple on 07 May 2019 - 18:05
by ValK on 07 May 2019 - 19:05
apple:
I am referring to teaching targeting on a suit where the dog can get a solid grip and quickly subdue his opposition.
so what gonna happen if you taught the dog to target suit but at some point that dog bumped into scenario, when object not wearing it?
Hundmutter:
Isn't it rather difficult to teach both ?
all depends on dog's personality.
it's not hard to do if dog perceive confrontation with human more like play/exercise. such dog more flexible for variations because not really human is target but rather object in human's possession.
different picture with dog who isn't predisposed much for play.
with such dog you can't get both way. if dog been taught to fight human, there are no way that that dog will continue to hang on sleeve or whatsoever else, when he see that at some point the threat come from another hand or leg.
by apple on 08 May 2019 - 11:05
How do you think police dogs are trained? Do they bite a person not wearing a suit or any protective equipment? A dog taught to target different locations on a person's body who is wearing a suit has nothing to do with whether a dog will bite a person without equipment. That is so naïve, it is ridiculous. There are other factors to consider, such as the dog's genetics, whether he learns to work through any stress when pressured without the decoy letting the dog win too much, and the type of suit and the quality of the decoy are factors. Thick, Michelin Man suits don't allow the dog to feel the muscles and soft tissue moving under the suit like a competition suit does. Also, teaching a pushing bite helps to teach a dog how to fight a man with forward aggression.
by duke1965 on 08 May 2019 - 12:05
WOW LOL OMG , just some things crossing my mind reading
First important thing is that every dog is different, so should be trained and buildup differently for a certain job
some dogs will only bite desired position because they are trained/shaped to do so, some because they feel safe there and there alone due to genetics and training, ans some will do so in sport, but when pressured will not have a problem to re-target to other bodyparts
Agree with apple however, if a dog will bite a suit, doesnot mean he will bite in real life.
The type of dog that will out a bite, to bite another bodypart that looks like a bigger treath are far and few between, we need few more of those these days
by ValK on 09 May 2019 - 03:05
apple:
How do you think police dogs are trained?
i don't need to think. for number of years i was involved in prepping such dogs and as a matter of fact, no sleeves were used at all ever.
dogs from puppyhood was taught to target human, not suit. suits (b.t.w. crappy ones, homemade), was just a means to be less hurt from bites. lots of dogs was smart enough to figure out deceptiveness and try to reach exposed parts like hands, neck, face, lower part of legs.
duke1965:
The type of dog that will out a bite, to bite another bodypart that looks like a bigger treath are far and few between, we need few more of those these days
all dogs predisposed for this. it's kind of natural reaction which being oppressed by typical modern training by fixating dogs on equipment (sleeve, suit and absence of real fight back from decoy).
you just need to develop that potential in dog from very young age.
there single condition - pup must have good aggression paired with stubbornness and good level of pain tolerance.
by duke1965 on 09 May 2019 - 04:05
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