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by Baerenfangs Erbe on 17 March 2017 - 01:03
by Von Eganhaus on 17 March 2017 - 11:03
Not unusual to hear a dog start in prey and drop into defense on a table (when done right). Keep in mind my goal is primarily not to get defense (although it would be nice) it is simply to stop cheweyness (still not sure if a word) and limit motion.
This is a fun (goofy at times) sport dog and I am a simple club guy with no aspirations of setting the schutzhund world on fire. The goal is to consistently learn and improve (dogs and me) without harming, confusing or creating bad habits. Find want works, if not move on, accept it and focus on strengths.
If my only worry with this dorky dog is that he pushes in once on the sleeve...or is a little chewey on a dumb bell...then life is good. And by the way, if he is chewey on a dumb bell it will probably be my fault because I have limited patience for dumb bells and I have the attention span of a gnat...so I will take my points on chewyness but he will rocket over meter jump and A frame, snap to a quick fuss and fly - platz on a send out...so what's a little cheweyness amongst friends???
Not looking to create drama, arguments or theoretical warfare...just asking for personal experiences and training methods. So far...so good. I have a couple of things to try and see what works.
by vk4gsd on 17 March 2017 - 11:03
I don't see how defense will improve grip, it usually does the opposite.
The fullest bite us always prey by definition.
Your helper might not be skilled at bite development. That is the more likely scenario.
The grip fanatics I have seen have 20 different sleeves on hand and choose them like a golfer chooses golf clubs for every shot.
Such helpers are very hard to find anywhere in the world.
Prongs, stim, tables..... to stop a shifting "chewey" grip just all sounds wrong and bass ackwards... i fear for the dog.
by Bavarian Wagon on 17 March 2017 - 14:03
by Baerenfangs Erbe on 17 March 2017 - 14:03
by Bavarian Wagon on 17 March 2017 - 15:03
by Baerenfangs Erbe on 17 March 2017 - 16:03
There is no back pressure on my dog either, if you are referring to my three year old dog since he was in a harness. He doesn't need it.
I also know how the table works.
Personally, I prefer to let a male sit for a while. Once they are mature, they learn rather fast and can take quite a bit of pressure. The regular age for a dog to show up at nationals is 5 years of age. So I am not concerned that he's not titled yet. My plans are not IPO for him. I kinda got hooked on suitwork.
by Von Eganhaus on 18 March 2017 - 02:03
by Von Eganhaus on 18 March 2017 - 02:03
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