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by workingdogz on 06 February 2012 - 15:02
"until there is a sport that allows you to crack a dog in the head with a whiskey bottle when he comes at you and kick him in the ribs with a pasir of steel toe boots...... its still a sport. I guarantee you there are many ring3 dogs that will quickly lose drive in that scenario. Just a little food for thought. Kurt"
LMAO Kurt, great anology!
And yes, no one will get anywhere
by playing "my sport is better than yours".
And yes, it takes a very skilled and capable
handler to get a dog with loads of natural
aggression etc to a high level of competition.
Bastin is a perfect example. He was not a dog
for a novice by any stretch, and no joke either,
but he could maintain control and power to
make top points.
By the way, congrats to you on breeding
Alex, what a super nice dog!

by vomeisenhaus on 06 February 2012 - 17:02
by workingdogz on 06 February 2012 - 18:02


Pedro and Alex made a fantastic
team together, what was more
impressive was the dogs temperment
off the field, around the home!
Tom did have some tough ones for sure!
I was sent this quote through a
working dog friend awhile back,
it comes off Scott Claybough's site,
and the words are very poignant.
I am betting you will agree Kurt!
I hope Scott won't mind me sharing this:
taken from his site at http://vomvastklippa.com
"I only breed Working Line German Shepherd dogs that are working-titled, healthy dogs with hip & elbow ratings. Dogs that have proven their genetic strength and ability to work under stress in training, on the trial field, or on the street. I do not just use the scorebook as a determining factor as to the dog’s worthiness to reproduce. I produce a litter only when we believe that the breeding will produce the dog’s inherited natural working drives, hardness, and temperament to compete in Sport as a K9 Partner, or as a lifelong guardian and member of your family.
Below you will find two quotes by Gunther Diegel, Director of Schutzhund Judges for the Verein für Deutsche Schaferhund (SV) in Germany.
The first quote is Mr. Diegel’s comments on working a genetically weak dog. The second quote is a reminder of what Schutzhund should be. I have added both of these quotes because of my complete agreement with both statements.
When this dog finds himself under stress, as all dogs do at times, he reaches back to his ancestry to get help or relief from the stress. But, as you can see, when this dog reaches back for help from his ancestors...there is nobody there."
The reminder here is that the origin of Schutzhund and the rules under which we "compete" were developed to "test" the dog’s temperament (courage and hardness NOT "play prey" or "ball" drive) for breed suitability - not for a sport. We cannot lose sight of the fact that Schutzhund is a BREED SUITABILITY test or we do a disservice to the German Shepherd dog. Conscientious breeders should train and test their bloodlines...not simple be in the "puppy business".

by myret on 06 February 2012 - 19:02
I do know thats it all is about genetics not sport BUT sport can help select the traits needed for work
the training methods has changed alot becuase people have learned to use positive ways to train dogs instead of the old hard methods we used back in the 80's and 90's becuase of the gsd has become more soft and easier to train it has lost something else like the power to maintain drive for longer time, overall drive, and the nervs to keep drive when corrected or not be rewarded all the time , many gsd today would not have the hardness og fight to keep drive becuase they are softer than in the older days
many people in France that train RING or those who train KNPV still train by those old methods and the dogs has to maintain drive to keep up the harsh training methods they still use

by myret on 06 February 2012 - 19:02
he is good to spot the gentic dogs and not the ones that is made by a good handler his passion for the gsd and he has had very much succes
he is all about the genetics not points only

by vomeisenhaus on 06 February 2012 - 22:02
by workingdogz on 07 February 2012 - 00:02
Please keep in mind, the original thought
behind my post was that some of the
"pop up breeders" seem to think that
people at schutzhund clubs only ever do
schutzhund routines. There are plenty of
people out there all over the world
that don't ascribe to all the toys/gadgets
etc that were developed to help weaker dogs
get trained/titled. There is plenty of "old school"
training still going on all around, but the
noobies/pop-up breeders have to realize
that most clubs are not going to do that
in front of them. Some people don't understand
things like muzzle work, civil work etc. So while
it is still done in most clubs, it's just not
something that is advertised per se.

by myret on 07 February 2012 - 10:02

by myret on 07 February 2012 - 11:02

by myret on 07 February 2012 - 11:02
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