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by Alirod12 on 16 October 2009 - 19:10

by tigermouse on 16 October 2009 - 19:10
he will be more attentive / people orientated :)
by Trafalgar on 17 October 2009 - 02:10
If everyone worked extremely hard providing perfect environments - the result would be that dogs NEED perfect environments.
If his parents weren't great dogs with a LESS THAN PERFECT ubringing than they shouldn't have been bred.
therefore, my thought would be not to sweat the small stuff.
so what, if he's a little more independent than perfect!? So much the better for him; he'll miss you less when isolated from you.
etc...etc...
emphasis should be placed upon the really important stuff (like not biting people, not attacking small animals, not destroying your house, not eating strange objects...etc....)
as far as his personality goes- accept it as is - and worry less about his possible lack of perfection.

by Slamdunc on 17 October 2009 - 04:10
You've only had the pup for 4 days, give him a chance to settle in. In a couple of weeks you'll see his true personality. He sounds really nice, good luck with him.
Jim

by windwalker18 on 17 October 2009 - 06:10
Plan specific times each day to work with your pup, so that he has 100% of your attention for that time. While the tendency toward being independent is there it can be modified by the effort you make

by Princess on 17 October 2009 - 16:10
by Alirod12 on 17 October 2009 - 18:10

by Red Sable on 17 October 2009 - 21:10
Aloofness doesn't alway mean dominance. Yes, post some pics

by RLHAR on 17 October 2009 - 22:10
Very confident, nothing backed her down, friendly but independent.
I did some reading and found that this independence is something you find in the Czech lines and I've had no trouble training her or with her desire to please!
I can't say I wanted a dog who was a lap dog or a velcro dog myself but I did sometimes wonder about that indepence, wonder if she cared if I was there or not, up until the first time I took her to the vet.
We had a very awkward vet trip (the tech was scared of her and didn't know what she was doing) and so I ended up holding her head. She very quietly licked my hand and looked at me with the most trusting eyes, a pure expression of "I don't like this Mom and it upsets me but you're here so it's going to be okay" and I knew then that for all the rest of the times she was Miss Independence, she was 'my dog' and I was her pack leader in whom she trusted.

by Two Moons on 18 October 2009 - 04:10
Give him time and begin socializing him little by little.
Build a strong bond but understand he may always have an independant aloof attitude about him.
This is not a bad thing.
There are so many things you can do to build a bond between the two of you.
Hand feeding
Grooming
Talking
The right kind of touching
Face on face contact
So many more.
P.M me if you like.
He sounds great to me.
Moons.
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