> If I had a breed which was powerful with strong guarding traits you can bet your life that 80% would go up to 95% the trouble begins and ends in who is breeding and everything leads on from there on in.
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I have close ties with the Doberman breed as one of my friends who is a close neighbour has been in the breed and I have close contact with her dogs.
She has sadly had two with unacceptable character traits, both well bred, but you get the odd rotten apple (an unfortunate combination of characteristics), one is manageable, the bitch shows intense ear aggression when out, and almost seems to not know what she is doing. she is walked muzzled and literally foams at the mouth when she sees another dog or person, at home she is absolutely sound and fine with other dogs that are brought there, yet will react to them outside the home, it is almost as if she has agoraphobia. The behaviours started when she had her first season and just started to get worse as she matured (she had been successfully shown until then) and had further seasons, spaying had no positive effect. She is now 9 years old and absolutely the soppiest dog you could meet when you go to the house.
The other a male had excessively high drive and despite expert handling would try to dominate every person he met and would see any confident person as a challenge and react negatively. One day without any provocation he knocked down her toddler son as he walked past and stood over growling. Thankfully the child stayed absolutely still and the owner was able to call him off, but it was decided he was not going to be safe as a family dog and he was Put to sleep. The whole incident lasted seconds, with the owner/mother supervising. He was around 3 years old.
She had never ever bred but has had around 8 of the breed over the years with all but those two with excellent people and dog family friendly characters. As they worked I used to have a large part in the early socialisation of the dogs.
I would be terrified to breed if I was in the breed, not only do they have large litters, but if the new owners get it wrong it so often can lead to the dog needing to be Put To Sleep, and so often the majority of people wanting one shouldn't have one, so home vetting must be even more of a nightmare.