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by ALPHAPUP on 15 January 2011 - 17:01
Sorry for the sarcasm ... and generally i keep the subject matter aside from the people ... BUT ... and this is a big BUT considering many new people come to this site for guidance... : you think this is good , never mind great training ... ???... you are giving a illustration to the owrld .. please .. this training as i wrote before is deplorable .. irregardless if the training, as Don stated [ and rightfully so !!] is a few sessions- or a few years in the making !! to bad .. and you are probably counting your blessings you don't train with me because i would read you such a riot actthat your head would spin and you would never forget it .. please .the foolishness ... .you cheer : he[ jody] trains and writes articles for the UScA ./ please .. again by my standards not impressed and now that you tell me that ..even more sao I accent my commentary !!. You folks ought to be ashamed of yourselves for posting such a deplorable exhibit for the world to learn from . and the UScA ... not an organization i am impressed with either !! having drooped my membeship years ago .. Gee... with this quality and display [ and you brag about it ].... ...no wonder !!
by StephanieJ on 15 January 2011 - 18:01
" I also train complete control starting from day one."
Really? Could we see some of that control please?
It is irresponsible, both on an individual and social basis, to engage in this kind of civil aggitation. Bitework without the sanction of a title is a liability, both for the dog owner and the populace who train responsibly, ie. subjecting their training to the oversite of a recognized title or certification. "Personal protection" training remains what it always has been, a bunch of yahoos (with little horns on their head and fake amputated limbs in this case-what is up with that????) with too little ambition, knowledge, and expertise to do other than load em up and ooh and ahh over the snarly face. Great pr for the GSD-NOT!
Really? Could we see some of that control please?
It is irresponsible, both on an individual and social basis, to engage in this kind of civil aggitation. Bitework without the sanction of a title is a liability, both for the dog owner and the populace who train responsibly, ie. subjecting their training to the oversite of a recognized title or certification. "Personal protection" training remains what it always has been, a bunch of yahoos (with little horns on their head and fake amputated limbs in this case-what is up with that????) with too little ambition, knowledge, and expertise to do other than load em up and ooh and ahh over the snarly face. Great pr for the GSD-NOT!

by GSDPACK on 15 January 2011 - 19:01
Viper.. I am not sure what I am looking at.. the dog is too frantic for my taste and it shows in her bites also.
good luck
good luck

by SportySchGuy on 15 January 2011 - 21:01
I cant really see a lot from those vids. I thought the hand was hilarious! LOL Is that fake blood on it? I would like to see the same dog in the daylight doing a simple on lead bite and out. Scenarios are great but after you do them for awhile they sort of get to be just like sport routines. You can do different stuff but the feeling becomes the same to the dog and it isn't beneficial to just keep doing them over and over even if they are somewhat varied.
by faq2 on 15 January 2011 - 22:01
Thanks for the laugh.

by Bhall on 16 January 2011 - 00:01
Thank you for posting the videos
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