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by duke1965 on 22 May 2017 - 20:05
agree with last post susie, but disagree with statement nobody cares, many LE personell definately care what they are taking on the job with them, and they definately dont want an overly social prey only dog unless they have a detection only dog
but it definately matters if you are looking from a sport, or companion or PP or
Patrol point of view
by joanro on 22 May 2017 - 20:05
Is this dog cornered, or is he meeting the decoy in a forward attitude?
The whip is a first for him to ever be exposed to, the entire scenario new environment for him.
Btw, this was a test to see if the dog was 'bluff' when strangers/visitors showed up or would he follow through with a bite. He was never worked in any bite work by his owners.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HgdZZx7SSgU&feature=youtube_gdata_player
by duke1965 on 22 May 2017 - 20:05
by joanro on 22 May 2017 - 20:05

by susie on 22 May 2017 - 20:05
The GSD intentionally is no "police dog" breed, but a "working dog breed", that should be able to live in an active, knowledgeable companion dog ( not "pet dog" ) home. At this point most problems arise ( a lot of pet homes believe they are knowledgeable companion homes ).
Personally I like the extremes, but those dogs were never ment to be the norm, they simply are too much for unexperienced people.
by Bavarian Wagon on 22 May 2017 - 20:05
A truly genetically civil/aggressive bite anyone dog is useless for most people and Susie is correct that in today’s society the dog is more of a liability than a benefit. There are very few applications and possible homes where such a dog is useful and there are very few jobs which cannot be done just as effectively with a more social, public safe, prey balanced dog. The majority of pet dogs and sport dogs are never going to encounter a true threat and it’s much easier and safer for their owners to own a more social dog that is then taught contextual protection rather than some monster who needs to be managed to make sure it doesn’t bite every person it meets in it’s life who 99.99% of the time are not a threat and do not intend to cause harm.
by vk4gsd on 22 May 2017 - 21:05
by joanro on 22 May 2017 - 21:05
First time the dog was ever on 'back tie', is not the same as what you are talking about....dogs chained up etc. The back tie is for the safety of the decoy. Didn't you learn anything about restraining a dog when the Canadian was down under?
Just to help you understand, vk, I am standing next to the dog with a fur saver collar and a leash in hand. The dog is not even 'aware' that he is 'backtied' because he has zero experience with it. Far as he 'knows', I am holding him back when he moves forward toward the decoy.
The dog has a lot going on that he never heard or saw before, he handled extremely well...BTW, the look in his face at the end of the clip, is what anyone gets from him who comes too close to me. He is obedient which is imperative for a dog like this.
People can look in the van when he is in the big wire crate when we go to the farm store...that is the look they get, no barking.
Good to know that he would not back down when challenged.
by vk4gsd on 22 May 2017 - 21:05
Thanks for clarification.
by joanro on 22 May 2017 - 21:05
No, he is not chained, and it's not a post. So you didn't learn anything from the Canadian...too bad for you.
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