Dogs.

   / Dogs. #141  
Gypsy attended puppy school at pet smart for yhr basics.

Then we took her to a professional trainer for more in depth training.

Here's the guy we used.


Here's one of his old training videos taken around the time Gypsy was seeing him. We had her in gor obedience training.

The bite work going on was her distractions

🤣🤣🤣 I bet it was! I often think that classes provide a great background noise in training that helps dogs learn to focus.

All the best, Peter
 
   / Dogs. #142  
The basic training works well enough for my purposes. I want a dog to sit, lay down, and stay on command. Also to come when called and be well mannered. I don’t need them to do anything more. My Aussies are also naturally easy to train and I can just tell them what I want them to do and they will learn quickly. I’ve never had another breed of dog so easy to train.

Cooper
View attachment 2919436
The training with the professional was to tweak her existing training plus work on recall.

Normally petsmart was enough for us. But Gypsy needed a little more direction, and my wife and I needed some training to be able to handle an adult alpha female German shepherd.

Like I stated before. Gypsy was there for obedience training. Not personal protection.
 
   / Dogs. #143  
The training with the professional was to tweak her existing training plus work on recall.

Normally petsmart was enough for us. But Gypsy needed a little more direction, and my wife and I needed some training to be able to handle an adult alpha female German shepherd.

Like I stated before. Gypsy was there for obedience training. Not personal protection.
Aussies are so easy to train. Last fall some chickens got out of the pen and started scattering. Cooper was by my side. I just said “Cooper go get the chickens.” In five minutes he had them all back in the pen. He was never trained to do that. I just pointed at the birds and he knew what I wanted.
 
   / Dogs. #144  
I bet it was! I often think that classes provide a great background noise in training that helps dogs learn to focus.

All the best, Peter
We actually had her trained by kids and we would pull random kids out of the group there to work with her.

Calvin (trainer) told one kid (10yo) to run around her while she was laying down and told to stay. As well as jumping over her.

Said kid had a dog there for personal protection training with his dad.

That kid looked at Calvin like he bumped his flipping head

But he started running by her at first. Then as his confidence built up, he would actually run at her and jump over her.

We got a really good picture of the boy (Zack) and Calvin laying on the ground with Calvin resting his head on Gypsy's belly and Zack laying on Calvin.

Thats when they told us, Gypsy had a really good disposition to be a therapy dog.
 
   / Dogs. #145  
She fell asleep waiting to go for a ride.
 

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   / Dogs. #146  
Happy dog, very smart, knows a lot about what I am saying, but disobets when he doesen’t want to do something. (Like come in from the cold.)
 

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   / Dogs. #147  
We actually had her trained by kids and we would pull random kids out of the group there to work with her.

Calvin (trainer) told one kid (10yo) to run around her while she was laying down and told to stay. As well as jumping over her.

Said kid had a dog there for personal protection training with his dad.

That kid looked at Calvin like he bumped his flipping head

But he started running by her at first. Then as his confidence built up, he would actually run at her and jump over her.

We got a really good picture of the boy (Zack) and Calvin laying on the ground with Calvin resting his head on Gypsy's belly and Zack laying on Calvin.

Thats when they told us, Gypsy had a really good disposition to be a therapy dog.
We had a German shepherd was like that, and she "worked" for a number of years as a therapy dog in local hospices and nursing homes. My wife, her guide, said it was amazing how many residents would perk up and come out of nearly catatonic states when she came in the room. A gentle, gentle soul, great with puppies and strangers. She was also great at finding lost calves and gently getting them back to mom.

Our current dog has no issue with people stepping over her, or lying down on her, or snuggling her which she adores, but she is highly, highly, reactive, and when outside is always on guard, and keeping miscreants away. We have needed 1,000% more training time with the new dog to get and keep her attention on us when the pig or coyote is scented, tracked, or bolts by. It is a work in progress, and we aren't where we would like to be with her just yet. Having had several before this one, means we know the drill, even if the training and tools have to be enlarged and modified for high reactivity and high prey drive.

Our first GSD came to us trained similarly to the dogs in your video to track, and locate strangers and if needed, drop them if they moved. A super friendly and happy dog, you'd never have guessed, except for how relentless she was at finding a thrown toy in a field. Our current GSD is heavier, more athletic, and unbelievably fast. She can, and has, run down fleeing pigs. She doesn't give up, except on command. Before we had much training with her, I had seen her body check coyotes and send them flying twenty or thirty feet. She is an interesting mix of personality traits, though I will say that the high alertness and reactivity makes it hard for her to focus on us, which makes the time to train and set behavior much longer.

Funnily our prior GSDs were almost 100% outdoor ranch dogs by their preferences, and this one prefers to be inside guarding us when we are inside, and outside with us when we are out. Compared to others, she is a more an instinctually personal protection dog, which is certainly the dog that she was bred to be. Her breeder is just down the road, and the breeder's primary business is breeding and training dogs for police and drug work. We have been happy to give good lives to the "rejects" that are too old for breeding, (aka fully trained), or just dogs that aren't quite on the K-9 police work trajectory and need to try something else. Over the years, we have fostered a number of the puppies because we can expose the dogs to a wide variety of experiences on the ranch in a controlled manner and help build their confidence. We have gotten the chance to see many amazing dogs over the years.

They have been fun animals to be around, but not exactly a dog for everyone. I try always to be mindful of the need for care when around animals, especially larger animals.

All the best,

Peter
 
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   / Dogs. #149  
Did your dog have a hematoma on that one ear that won't raise? I had a shepherd mix that had that. Reminds me of him. :)
 

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