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by Mithuna on 20 September 2016 - 19:09
Am I to assume that many of the police dogs are nervy/weak?
Why do some dogs refuse to tolerate as little as a stare from a stranger?
Experts?

by Reliya on 20 September 2016 - 20:09
As far as I know, some police officers choose the most aggressive/nervy dogs because they think that's what they want for a patrol dog.
My cop buddy went through several dogs looking for the "prefect" one.
Also, police aren't breeders trying to select for temperament and other things. They're just looking for a dog that can do a job and have a different process of selection. Some police dogs don't even release upon command and even bite the wrong thing, and I've seen this myself.
So, the answer to your question might be "yes."

by Mithuna on 20 September 2016 - 20:09
Reliya
I have a problem with the logic. The vet tech observations are based on many and your claim is that you know of one. Your sample size is a bit too small. I need to hear from others.

by Reliya on 21 September 2016 - 00:09

by bubbabooboo on 21 September 2016 - 00:09

by Q Man on 21 September 2016 - 01:09
Police Depts are Cops not dog trainers or dog people...I have known Police Depts that select according to color...not working traits...
Some dogs...mainly males...are very dominant...and aren't what you'd want as your pet...but are great for their work...These dogs also aren't for PR purposes...
Once again it comes down to who chooses their dogs and what their goals are...I would say that most Police Dept's dogs are all chosen by the same person and therefore have like similarities...
~Bob~

by Mithuna on 21 September 2016 - 02:09
Good post Qman.
Just had a very Dominant male/ex police dog at my house for a short stay. First time in my life I met a dog that was willing to literally push aside an adult human being . If someone had told me I would have doubted it.. but this dog was truly a difficult animal to deal with. On the way to becoming that he bit 2 owners.
I liked his blood though..old working lines: Drigon, Racker, Crock, Mink, Sagus and Eros Busecker Schloss. ..all in one animal.
by Gustav on 21 September 2016 - 03:09
by Haz on 21 September 2016 - 03:09
That being said taking a nice working dog into a small room with strangers that are going to poke and prod him as well as "look him in th eye" and dont be surprised at the results. Thats why they invented muzzles.
by Bavarian Wagon on 21 September 2016 - 13:09
The most important thing in police dogs is environmental nerve strength. The dog can’t be weird about any environment or floor covering. As long as the dog has the drive to go, it just can’t be stopped by what is around it.
What you missed in most of the nerve discussions is that most people say that an UNTRAINED dog that reacts to simple eye contact is nervy. A dog trained/taught to react to eye contact…or even a training method that exaggerates the dog’s natural lower threshold for eye contact…isn’t nervy, it’s just taught that if X then Y. Control is quite important in these situations because you can teach a dog to only react on command...so even if a helper is staring at a well trained dog, the dog will not react until it is told to. In the very best of dogs, they load on that threat and explode when told to do so.
When training…most dogs are taught to react to the body language of the helper and react accordingly, most training methods involve a helper posturing a lot with a new dog, and doing less and less in order to make sure a dog will learn to bark at the most passive of threats (no posturing or eye contact).
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