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by Jenni78 on 22 February 2010 - 13:02
It's just a personal thing, but while training and trials are great, I'll take the dog who's actually doing it over a dog who got a title in a mock-up of it, any day. Not to say the titles don't say anything about herding capability, just meaning that if you can still find a working shepherd dog, or a close link, then go for it! They seem to be a dying breed.
by eichenluft on 22 February 2010 - 14:02
molly

by UlfKintzel on 22 February 2010 - 14:02
The point is not without merit. To further that, there are GSDs that are great in every day herding but never really score way high in a trial because they work in a different manner than required in the HGH trial. On the other hand, there are dogs that obtained a title whose work is pleasantly to watch yet they don’t have it what it takes in the real world. Well, all trials have limitations but one can always go to a trial, they are always public and announced, and can get an opinion him- or herself.
I disagree with your assessment of working GSDs dying out. There are still plenty but they always have been the minority and they have been pronounced dead for many decades now. Yet, they still exist and continue to exist. I have no problems finding enough suitable blood lines.
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Ulf Kintzel - White Clover Sheep Farm - 683 Bagley Road. Rushville, NY 14544 - PH & FAX: (585) 554-3313 - www.whitecloversheepfarm.com
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“Destiny is not a matter of chance; it is a matter of choice. It is not a thing to be waited for; it is a thing to be achieved.” William Jennings Bryan

by july9000 on 22 February 2010 - 17:02
I have to agree a 100% about dogs performing well on trials and the ones who really have it for doing the job everyday..I'm still new at herding but I did schutzhund and find you can make the same assessement. I've seen wonders on the field and great scoring dogs who in a real life situation wouldn't make such great working dogs..and i've seen great working dogs doing not so good on the scoring sheets...I too prefer the second ones...

by bearbear on 22 February 2010 - 20:02
Kathy

by UlfKintzel on 22 February 2010 - 20:02
All true but I just like to add this: I have known people who belittled trials and didn’t care to compete in them. They claimed a trial can’t tell them what they don’t already know and scores meant nothing to them. That is fine. Here is the risk: You may find yourself soon in a situation comparable to kennel blindness. You think your dogs are good working dogs but you are alone in your assessment. The outside world doesn’t share your biased evaluation about your dogs. Yep, that can happen and it has happened many time. I continue avoiding this by continued participation in trials even though I do have already a good idea how valuable each dog is in the real world at my farm. This way I am getting a qualified opinion and validation at the trial and I prove to the public the value of my dogs, they don’t have to take my word for it.
Trials remain a very valuable tool in the assessment of dogs. It is our error when we expect a trial to represent the real world or when we are to assume that the highest scoring dog is indeed the best dog when a trial will fail us. If we see it as what it is, a valuable test, no more, no less, then we should embrace trials. But von Stephanitz said that much more eloquently than me:
“Trials always remain trials, they can never be completely like real life,
same as the exercise can never be equal to war. But we can all recognize if
the leader and his troops are ready for the real thing,and so it is for
trials. It is the responsibility of the judges to conclude based on the
exercises and the way in which they were solved, if the dog is suited for
work. Of course the mistakes of the handler and of the training must be
taken into account. Such a judgement about the suitability for work is
useful for the breeding effort. But you cannot demand more from a trial,
otherwise it will become a goal in itself, a sport, and will harm instead
of being useful to the breeding effort. We must realize that we do not breed
and work for exhibitions or trials but for our breed and to serve the
general public (common good).Trial artists do not serve this purpose
anymore than empty exhibition winners, and performance trials are to real
work as a school exam is to real life, as many pupils will fail in real life
that excelled in school exams and had an excellent final report.”
(p.1130 Max v Stephanitz Der Deutsche Schaeferhund in Wort und Bild 8th
edition 2nd replication print of 1932 edition, SV 1987)
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Ulf Kintzel - White Clover Sheep Farm - 683 Bagley Road. Rushville, NY 14544 - PH & FAX: (585) 554-3313 - www.whitecloversheepfarm.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“Destiny is not a matter of chance; it is a matter of choice. It is not a thing to be waited for; it is a thing to be achieved.” William Jennings Bryan

by phgsd on 26 February 2010 - 03:02
http://herdingbeaucerons.com/
I started training there with my GSD late last year, it has been a lot of fun. I am hoping to do her HGH in the fall (maybe also her Schh2 and/or 3 around that time too so we'll be busy).
She is doing a really nice job, starting out it wasn't so pretty because of her high prey drive...it took some time for her to figure out that she had to maintain the border, but now she is doing really nicely.
I also wanted to add that my dog is not from herding lines, although she does go back to some Kirschental dogs in the 5th+ generation. Her pedigree is primarily strong schutzhund lines.

by GSDXephyr on 26 February 2010 - 04:02
Heather

by phgsd on 26 February 2010 - 06:02
Sure here's a link:
www.pedigreedatabase.com/gsd/pedigree/458805.html
Kessy is just an awesome working dog, she loves herding and I'm also really enjoying it. The snow has been killing us lately...we've missed a lot of lessons over the last few weeks :(
This pic was taken in December.

by GSDXephyr on 26 February 2010 - 12:02
Heather
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