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>We are constantly taking breeds and changing them to meet our needs and desires anyway.
> To me, the cause of suspicion and wariness can be nothing other than fear.
> I'm also not sure that the instinct to protect and fear are the same thing. If you look at a dog guarding sheep, that instinct to protect doesn't arise from fear.
>You couldn't find a better, more well-socialised dog than those competing in schutzhund - since they must be unfazed by anything to pass the temperament test and for the manwork. Yet schutzhund dogs are also the dogs trained to guard and protect and are among the most highly qualified dogs of this kind which there are.
> So to say that somehow it is inevitable that guarding breeds will be wary/suspicious/fearful/under-socialised because they need these qualities to do the work they were bred for, is IMO unproven - and disproven by the dogs which compete in schutzhund and PD working trials.
the only difference here is that the procteviness may not be apparent unbtill maturity, so should not be waited to appear before being trained against)
> Personally I feel "wary of strangers" (in my breed's standard as well) should be removed from all breed standards, as there is no need for such behaviour in today's society.
>That doesn't make it right.
>Let's face it; there are hundreds of different breeds bred to do different things. If you don't want a dog with a particular trait you don't get that breed, just as if you want a horse to win the Derby you don't buy a Shire; if you want a lapdog then a great dane probably isn't the wisest choice! Only a fool gets a particular breed and then tries to override the traits that have been specifically bred for over many generations. Everyone suffers, both dog and owner.
>Of course you should choose a breed which (currently) fits what you're looking for, but I don't see how this is relevant to the OP. Perhaps they did or did not realise what they were taking on with a guarding breed, but they have encountered the problems they've encountered, with their dog. It matters not how they selected the dog in the first place, because this isn't a court of law and we're not putting them on trial to see if they are to blame or not for the problems concerned through their choice of breed - but trying to help them, I thought...
>Rabid, you said this:
> To me, the cause of suspicion and wariness can be nothing other than fear.
>Then go on to say this:
> I'm also not sure that the instinct to protect and fear are the same thing. If you look at a dog guarding sheep, that instinct to protect doesn't arise from fear.
>How can a dog be protective without being fearfull yet not be suspicious without being fearfull? Suspicion is lack of trust, not fear, lack of trust leads to close watchfullness, being ready to guard against any potential danger, not being in fear of danger.
>Re-read what you have said yourself. Dogs in schutzund are WELL SOCIALISED, they are TRAINED in man work, TRAINED to guard, they do what they are TRAINED to do. Dogs that are instinctively too agressive or not so good at listeneing to thier handler or being obedient or poorly socialised do NOT make the grade.
>You'd also be hard pushed to find a good, reputable Mastiff breeder that would think training such a dog in bite work is a good idea. A responsible person does not want to bring out any guarding/protective traits, they want to keep those traits down, not get them on command (lets not forget that the Mastiff of today should be a companion with the energy to match, not a dog with the energy, drive or inclination to spend the day tracking & retrieving before chomping on the arm of a bite suit)
>(lets not forget that the Mastiff of today should be a companion with the energy to match, not a dog with the energy, drive or inclination to spend the day tracking & retrieving before chomping on the arm of a bite suit)
>And nobody is saying a guarding breed is bred to be fearfull or undersocialised, they are bred to be suspicious/indifferent to strangers. Also see above - the stranger as a trigger often does not cause fear/suspicion, if the owner is present.
>some dogs are born with the instinct to protect and need to be trianed not to be protective against evry person they meet
>I do not see any reason for dogs of today to have an instinct to protect or guard, but it's a fact that they do and this needs carefull consdieration, thought and planning before one takes on a dog like this - it's part of the package.
> it's also helpful to remind ourselves that all the different breeds were originally designed for a purpose, and that certain traits that made the dog more 'fit for purpose' will come out, whether or not they're now desired. The best we can do is to train around characteristics that are undesirable in an individual so that they become manageable, but we can't remove them.
>>If the dog is behaving as per how it SHOULD be, then allthough the OP has a problem with the dogs behaviour, it is not a 'problem beahviour' as in a behaviour the dog should NOT exhibit.
>>if the problem is a case of the OP not being able to deal with the breed they have chosen then it is not the dog that needs help...I am amazed that someone would buy a breed and then wish to change the nature of the breed why buy in the first place... I am confused as to why you would require a behaviourist if the dog is behaving as one would expect of the breed.
>>(lets not forget that the Mastiff of today should be a companion with the energy to match, not a dog with the energy, drive or inclination to spend the day tracking & retrieving before chomping on the arm of a bite suit)
>Well perhaps you might want to talk to JG above, who claims that we should not be breeding dogs away from their original purposes nor buying them if we don't want the instincts their breed comes with conventionally.
> I think the point was about the dog's energy levels and drive... and whether that is appropriate in a pet.
> My point is that a highly socialised dog, without any fear issues ('suspicion' or 'wariness') is the most successful at a protection sport... ergo, it is not necessary to breed fearful dogs or dogs predisposed to fearfulness with the point being that you're breeding them that way so they are better at guarding you...
>The OPs dog is a 15 stone dog that is highly protective of it's home & car (that the OP says is a breed trait) and is now worrying the OP re. strange men. This dog is obviously NOT a dog doing well in schutzund it is a giant guarding breed.
> Training should be 100% consistent - it either IS OK to hang off a strangers arm 'playing tuggy', or it ISN'T OK = consistency.
>I am not against it and know little about it,
>You are clearly entirely missing all the points I am making.
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