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by susie on 07 June 2017 - 18:06
Yes, Kitkat, you must be doing something right...

by susie on 07 June 2017 - 20:06
Cut, for me the sport is not "watered down" in case the handler/owner of a dog trains according to breed genetic traits = is able to see the genetical advantages and disadvantages of his own dog compared to others.
IPO is still able to tell you everything you want to know about a dog - be it hardness, courage, fighting drive, or be it willingness to please, ability to solve problems, and so on...
It´s not the fault of IPO rules that people try ( and are partially able ) to circumvent proof of genetic traits. Those people either didn´t understand the reason of this test, or they simply don´t care.
In case of the intitial (IPO) test "points" don´t really matter, but the learning experience about the working abilities of someone´s own dog. Not everybody is the "perfect" handler/trainer, so points are not that important for evaluation of a dog - the training process in itself is important.
by duke1965 on 08 June 2017 - 07:06
susie
first there is difference between broker of family and showline dogs and broker of policedogs, the first is moving along past brokers, most people who have one dog for sale put it in FP, PDB and WD themselves and ask more money these days than brokers ever did, but that is another story in itself
Im talking policedogs and that works differently, worldwide vendors dont have time to to work trough 20 people and locations to get a group of dogs for a certain goal/client therefore they work with people like me, who collect these dogs and make it possible for them to test and buy desired quality at one adress
The fact that raising a dog is cheaper in a certain country has nothing to do with the endprice they are asking, green dogs are expensive due to a shortage simple as that
finally I know the German police pay shit prices, its non realistic, german police will pay about € 1000 euro less per dog than vendors worldwide, let alone the price police worldwide pays, dutch police pays around €5000, almost double of german police
finally, the east european dogs will NEVER be to expensive for police as they are mostly NON pedigree and mixed breeds now and they will never be in demand by private people, that world will allways be ruled by a supplie and demand price, the breeders will continue to produce at price that vendors are willing to pay

by Baerenfangs Erbe on 08 June 2017 - 07:06
by duke1965 on 08 June 2017 - 07:06
by Gustav on 08 June 2017 - 10:06

by yogidog on 08 June 2017 - 12:06
by duke1965 on 08 June 2017 - 13:06
yogi there will be individuals selling all the time, also there will be pedigree dogs going there as well, and also K9 units will pay different prices, but we are talking about different/much larger numbers of dogs weekly/monthly also for large contracts
your airport police is not going to europe for three dogs and is very happy with the price you sold them for,and probably airportpolice will use them for detection only,correct me if wrong.
but there are clients that buy 60 a month in europe or contracts for 450 dogs per year or more.
these buyers will not drive around USA or Europe to buy one here and three there

by yogidog on 08 June 2017 - 13:06
by Bavarian Wagon on 08 June 2017 - 13:06
For example, you sold 3 dogs at 3000 euro at what, a year old? I sold an IPO prospect out of my own breeding with very good foundation in all three phases at 6 months old with hip and elbow prelims for $3500. That's probably the most the dog will be worth without a lot of extra work because you can get females with BH or even IPO1 for about $5000. They might not be the same quality, but the majority of people don't care and just care that the title is there so they can breed the dog ASAP and get their money back out of it. In the US, I can also get about $1000-$1500 a month for training a dog towards a title, or even pet training, so you see where the value isn't really there to keep a dog back and either keep it "green" or train it for some line of work. Considering that female could've easily been sold for $2000 at 8 weeks old, you see where there is little added financial value to keeping a dog back for a breeder that's not too concerned with placing dogs in working homes.
But that's where the dogs without pedigrees come in. Not only are the puppies worth close to nothing, the only time they have value is once they've proven they have working ability. At that point they're somewhere around $3000. They're rarely more because the private sector wants pedigrees in order to possibly make money off of puppies in the future and the biggest competitors, who many times have the big pockets, can't trial with a dog that doesn't have a pedigree which also pushes the price down. A good, young, male with a proper sport foundation that is showing exceptional drive and nerve for competition, is easily worth twice or more to the private sector than it is as a police prospect.
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