HOW CAN I TAKE MY DOG HARDDER - Page 2

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Rugers Guru

by Rugers Guru on 07 October 2008 - 22:10

liquid nail works well too


jletcher18

by jletcher18 on 07 October 2008 - 23:10

breed it to a working line dog and hope for the best.

john


snajper69

by snajper69 on 08 October 2008 - 00:10

lol


AgarPhranicniStraze1

by AgarPhranicniStraze1 on 08 October 2008 - 01:10

Awe John  you're rough! LMAO  Brutal but honest. 


MygsdRebel

by MygsdRebel on 08 October 2008 - 01:10

LMAO. Nice one, John.


Two Moons

by Two Moons on 08 October 2008 - 01:10

cinga,

Why protection?    What kind of protection??  You need to try to be much more specific.

Detail's make a difference.

You guy's quit picking on cinga....and his dog.

Start over cinga....... tell us what you have in mind.

Moonie toon's.

 


Kreiger

by Kreiger on 08 October 2008 - 10:10

I feel natural aggression is the only way to go.I do not like it when I have to build and work at what should already be there naturally!


by Vikram on 08 October 2008 - 12:10

WHat you are driving at is table training a dog which probably has a very low threshold levels into protection.

 

If the dog is not genetically strong nerved and hard enough its no use trying to make him hard because that dog would fail you when the real situation arises and will pobably be an unstable dog throughts his /her life

 

regards

 


poseidon

by poseidon on 08 October 2008 - 14:10

Hello Cinga,

I would suggest that you take your 2 year old dog to a proper working dog's club for a true assessment of his ability for protection work.  Hard training is not advisable for weak dogs which is genetic.  No matter how much training the dog gets, the hardness will not be there.  However the danger of doing more harm than good is eminent.  The dog may become more fearful and suspicious and a fear biter.  Therefore it is very important to have your dog assess for this type of work before starting any sleeve work etc.  On the other hand, there is agility trials which would suit most social dogs.  There are stimulating mentally and physically for both handler and dog and the overall result is a happy one.

Good luck with your decision. 


steve1

by steve1 on 08 October 2008 - 15:10

Before you can ask the Dog to do anything you have to teach it by training it to progress. and it takes time and patience,

Some Dogs come on quickly some do not and that point does not make them inferior to the quicker learning Dogs

 A Dog will only know anything if it is taught it, so go slowly but do join a club with people who know how to go about it

all excersises should be fun to the Dog

Steve






 


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