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by SitasMom on 07 January 2010 - 13:01
for what it's worth.......
https://leerburg.com/forums/ubbthreads.php/ubb/showflat/Number/220062/page/0/fpart/6
Steve your breeds are definatelly different.like mine dobermanns and ridgebacks.
with my hand on my heart i really wish you never see your ridgeback angry for a human - i wish for me it will never happen again.
its a bloodline issue and a 'more guard'-'more hunter' puppy issue.guards dont track well - hunters dont guard well.
i ve got a guard and a tracker.and its 100% sure that RRs are not for 'ballet' , at least the ones closer to S.A. bloodlines.
cheers
http://www.tigrisridgebacks.com/breedinfo2.cfm
"All this is not to say that the Ridgeback is a pushover when it comes to safeguarding its humans. Reserved but not suspicious with strangers, the Ridgeback has an uncanny ability to discriminate between a real threat and an imagined one.
“They are not a dog that bites first and then says, ‘Oh, no, I shouldn’t have done that,’” says Rupert, adding that Schutzhund or protection training should never be done with this sensitive, intelligent breed. “They are a thinking dog: They look at a situation and figure it out.”
When it comes to Ridgebacks and kids, most breeders stress that the older the child, the better. The Ridgeback is a very physical dog, and a puppy will jump and mouth. As an adult, one enthusiastic swat of that powerful tail is enough to leave a welt on a toddler."
https://leerburg.com/forums/ubbthreads.php/ubb/showflat/Number/220062/page/0/fpart/6
Steve your breeds are definatelly different.like mine dobermanns and ridgebacks.
with my hand on my heart i really wish you never see your ridgeback angry for a human - i wish for me it will never happen again.
its a bloodline issue and a 'more guard'-'more hunter' puppy issue.guards dont track well - hunters dont guard well.
i ve got a guard and a tracker.and its 100% sure that RRs are not for 'ballet' , at least the ones closer to S.A. bloodlines.
cheers
http://www.tigrisridgebacks.com/breedinfo2.cfm
"All this is not to say that the Ridgeback is a pushover when it comes to safeguarding its humans. Reserved but not suspicious with strangers, the Ridgeback has an uncanny ability to discriminate between a real threat and an imagined one.
“They are not a dog that bites first and then says, ‘Oh, no, I shouldn’t have done that,’” says Rupert, adding that Schutzhund or protection training should never be done with this sensitive, intelligent breed. “They are a thinking dog: They look at a situation and figure it out.”
When it comes to Ridgebacks and kids, most breeders stress that the older the child, the better. The Ridgeback is a very physical dog, and a puppy will jump and mouth. As an adult, one enthusiastic swat of that powerful tail is enough to leave a welt on a toddler."
by eichenluft on 07 January 2010 - 13:01
Boston Terrier???
by vom ost see on 07 January 2010 - 14:01
"CODY THE BOY WONDER",yellow lab,super tracking and animated o/b,fast and sure to the bite....very entertaining dog to watch!
by eichenluft on 07 January 2010 - 14:01
I the yellow lab that competed at Schh3 at the HOT some years ago - at Triple Crown - name was Harry. Or something like that. He failed protection that day, just didn't understand the level of threat the helper gave to him - sort of stood there and cocked his head. Well, he's a lab, after all. In training, his bitework looked quite good though. So that makes two yellow labs - cool.
by jettasmom on 07 January 2010 - 15:01
anyone seen a standard poodle do sch? I for one would love to see that.
Denise
Denise
by TessJ10 on 07 January 2010 - 15:01
This came up when Googling "standard poodle schutzhund." I have not researched to verify.
<<Schutzhund
Julchen vom Jahn-Schlössle, a small brown Standard Poodle, owned and trained by Mrs. Telkamp of Heidelberg, Germany flew (if we can believe photos of her jumping!) away with her Schutzhundeprüfung III title in 1973, and along with it came top honours: Besten Schäferhunde (Best Shepherd!) when she won the travelling trophy for the third time and the German Shepherd Dog Club gave her mistress their club's Dog Trainer award.
The brown "Dwarf Poodle" (FCI size: 28-35 cm--approximately 11-14 inches) Cilla vom Elfenblick (SHSB 111.502) b. 4/11/61, owned by Miss L. Läubli, of Luzern (Lucerne), Switzerland (now the judge Lisbeth Mach-Läubli) achieved her Schutzhund I title in 1968; she took third place, surrounded by German Shepherd Dogs. Rosa Engler, Pudel (Cham, Switzerland: Muller, 1995), p. 81, and copies of test results, etc. >>
And Boston Terrier? I challenge that one.
<<Schutzhund
Julchen vom Jahn-Schlössle, a small brown Standard Poodle, owned and trained by Mrs. Telkamp of Heidelberg, Germany flew (if we can believe photos of her jumping!) away with her Schutzhundeprüfung III title in 1973, and along with it came top honours: Besten Schäferhunde (Best Shepherd!) when she won the travelling trophy for the third time and the German Shepherd Dog Club gave her mistress their club's Dog Trainer award.
The brown "Dwarf Poodle" (FCI size: 28-35 cm--approximately 11-14 inches) Cilla vom Elfenblick (SHSB 111.502) b. 4/11/61, owned by Miss L. Läubli, of Luzern (Lucerne), Switzerland (now the judge Lisbeth Mach-Läubli) achieved her Schutzhund I title in 1968; she took third place, surrounded by German Shepherd Dogs. Rosa Engler, Pudel (Cham, Switzerland: Muller, 1995), p. 81, and copies of test results, etc. >>
And Boston Terrier? I challenge that one.

by Psycht on 07 January 2010 - 15:01
Have fun AmbiGSD!
I've titled my ACDs in the sport and there are several that have attained SchH3/IPO3 titles. Fun dog to do the sport with if you have one that has what it takes.
This is a picture of my old boy who just turned 11 doing bitework a few years ago:

I've titled my ACDs in the sport and there are several that have attained SchH3/IPO3 titles. Fun dog to do the sport with if you have one that has what it takes.
This is a picture of my old boy who just turned 11 doing bitework a few years ago:


by Davren on 07 January 2010 - 16:01
I found a you tube with a Giant Schnauzer doing Schutzhund. I was looking for the standard poodle; i would have sworn that someone once told me about a standard poodle being trained for such work. I guess I was wrong.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mh81nqIJEJI&feature=related
I need lessons on how to put a you tube video on here without cut and pasting a link!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mh81nqIJEJI&feature=related
I need lessons on how to put a you tube video on here without cut and pasting a link!!
by eichenluft on 07 January 2010 - 16:01
Giant Schnauzers are not an unusual breed in the sport - in fact they are one of the more popular "odd breeds" and one you see regularly at all-breed events. Also Doberman, Bouvier, Rottweiler, and sometimes American Bulldog, Pitbull, and even Boxer and Airedale are seen titled.
molly
molly
by Uglydog on 07 January 2010 - 16:01
Standard Poodles have titled SchH3 in Germany.
One took high in trial in the early 1970s
Not sure the club though.
One took high in trial in the early 1970s
Not sure the club though.
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