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by Hundmutter on 14 June 2017 - 05:06
by duke1965 on 14 June 2017 - 05:06
well dog1 that is what I mean by you cannot walk a street in both directions at the same time,
I personally know and seen several real good showline dogs, but who will take the time and chance to go and compete with them,
many years ago I was training in a club with several world level trainers and one of them took on a showline dog that was good enough to compete with, even started at selections for nationals when they found he had some medical issue that forced them to stop
but even if he would have been successfull do you think that would have set something in motion, showline people will allways select looks first, and sportpeople will choose workability first, dont think the split can be reversed,

by kitkat3478 on 14 June 2017 - 07:06
This is the video I put up awhile back, actually here got the link to work. Some could not see it. As before, I have hard time figuring out how to load videos. This dog still going strong, with staged car jackings, pay downs, overall protection. What's her line, she is a German Shepherd with all the qualities "Not only I expect, but also my buyers expect", and the qualities the State Police return to me for more of. I know, I just a peon in the dog world, but I doing more for the breed than many a breeder, and yes, that makes me proud.

by Hundmutter on 14 June 2017 - 08:06
by Mackenzie on 14 June 2017 - 08:06
Training and passing the test at whatever level is very important for the future of the breed. As long as the pass mark is within the level required that is all that is needed and should not be derided by the more enthusiastic people who want to compete at the higher requirement from competition Trials where points mean prizes. Whatever the pass mark is at the end of the day a pass is still a pass.
Finally, show lines can work to high standards they just need the trainers to make the grade.
Mackenzie
by duke1965 on 14 June 2017 - 09:06
hundmutter, if you read again, I say some individuals do, but it will never be like before the split, where a sable could win the show and a VA dog win the bundessieger so to speak
furthermore I think the SV can do what they want, the good breeders will continue to breed what they did before, and the people cutting corners will continue to cut corners
Mckenzie, dont think what you see on videos of bitework prior to hauptzuchtschau, can be blamed on bad training only
by Gustav on 14 June 2017 - 11:06
@ Hundmutter...actually it IS the fault of both sides that dogs that could routinely do both ( be shown and compete) are in the minority. It's the attitudes of breeders that value winning in show first, or winning in trials first, and breed with those priorities FIRST, instead of for strong core traits in structure and temperament. Duke is right, and if a German Shepherd needs specialized training and trainers to excel at ordinary requirements for the breed, then if that doesn't tell you something isn't right, then your head is in the sand.( not you personally, but folks that refuse to accept the reality).
by GSD911 on 14 June 2017 - 11:06
Here's the problem...
Correct. In the states, there aren't enough good helper/trainers. To be more specific, there aren't enough of the helper trainers that are interested in dealing with show line dogs. In my experience, the best trainers and helpers would rather only deal with working lines because that's what they compete with and that's the level of performance they want to showcase as THEIR training.
Yes, I do agree that not everyone can or wants to deal with a show line male like mine who demands play, interaction and training 4-5 hours a day. But for me, having it all is well worth the effort.
by Bavarian Wagon on 14 June 2017 - 13:06
It’s the same with Universal Sieger and the effort and money it takes to make the team…I know the United States is a special case with how big the country is, but in order to qualify for the world universal sieger, you have to show at the national sieger show, and also trial at one of the national championships. This year, that meant the national in California, and the show in Georgia. Each being completely across the country from the other. Makes sense why the US only sent two dogs. Last year, we sent a full team, the trial was in Kentucky and the show was in Indiana, much more attainable for many.
by Mackenzie on 14 June 2017 - 14:06
Duke 1965
Mckenzie, dont think what you see on videos of bitework prior to hauptzuchtschau, can be blamed on bad training only
I did not make a comment on video's about the dogs at the Hauptzuchtschau. As far as video's are concerned most are unreliable because some people do not really see what is going on.
Some weakness is seen in top dogs, for example a number of dogs from Zamp were not alway willing workers. I was asked to train two son's from Zamp out of two different mothers when I lived in Spain. Both were very weak in their drives and even to the basic obedience showed no signs of wanting to work. I gave both dogs back to the owners with one insisting his dog could make Sch H 3 but he eventualy passed his BH at two years and 3 months. Low scores but over the line.
Mackenzie
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