| By Colin Tennant
Principal of the Cambridgeshire of Dog Behaviour & Training
Breeding for Temperament - Really!
Recently I had a telephone call from a distressed client
whose 155 lb Newfoundland had so distressed her, through
its bad behaviour, that she was in semi trauma. This case
in itself, is not an unusual one at the Canine & Pet
Behaviour Centre. Many people call each week to describe
a difficult or dangerous dog which is upsetting family life.
The culprit of most people's dilemma is a mixture of misinformation,
inexperience, ignorance of the species and in this case
relying on the advice of a particular breeder who is less
well informed than the client they are advising. Therefore,
I do use the term breeder loosely.
The most common and of course, the most serious problem
we deal with at the centre is aggression towards people
and dogs. Lack of early socialisation is the cause of most
of these problems. Now you would think that with all the
mass of information circulating in the dog press and the
general media that by now this would be a minor rather than
a major issue, but the statistics at this and many other
centres prove otherwise.
A Breeder or a Breed Owner Who Breeds.
Breeders - what a curious lot they are! People who, for
many reasons, have taken up the challenge of improving breeds
of dogs by physical appearance and temperament by KC rules.
Of course, this view is a personal one although the improvement
is often a contentious issue even among quality breeders
themselves. I, for one, an ex breeder and show exhibitor,
understand the desire to enthuse and take part in an enjoyable
pastime, of the dog show or passion, call it what you may.
However, I do not understand why thousands of dogs, including
pedigree ones, are needlessly euthanased each year because
although they have generally been bred with good temperament,
they have been inadequately socialised when very young thereby
setting the puppy on a course of uncorrected bad behaviour
finally resulting in destruction.
Bad Advice in Action
I started off with Bert, the Newfoundland, because his
particular Breeder had advised my clients, Mr & Mrs
Harding, not to let their new puppy off the lead for exercise
until he was nine months of age. Bert is a beautiful well
bred male pup who no doubt is a good show specimen. Unfortunately
he has overwhelming dominating characteristics with all
species he meets, including people and a penchant for chasing
and grabbing dogs, especially small ones. He causes chaos
in the home when visitors arrive and a great deal more with
the furnishings. The owners have had a Newfoundland before
and are intelligent people. However they did follow the
expert’s (breeder’s) advice and kept Bert on
a lead until nine months to prevent damaging his bone structure.
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When, with some trepidation, they did release him at the
age of nine months, he went mad with excitable erratic play
having fun and employing bully boy tactics on all living
creatures around him. He has since spent a further 12 months
on the lead so I must presume that his skeletal structure
has so improved that he can now chase, squash and collect
dogs by the mouthful. His idea of play is torment to all
he meets.
Bert, by the way, has been banned from two kennels for
grabbing the staff - i.e. excessive mouthing attached to
155 lbs of dog! He now stays with me and he doesn’t
attack the staff nor is he malicious towards my staff. He
has on occasion grabbed a tee shirt and ripped it playing
tug of war games and it was attached to my kennel man, but
we know that Bert is a lovable, huge, bouncy dog who is
being dominantly boisterous. It is his size that makes modifying
his behaviour just a touch difficult.
Mr & Mrs Harding listed the following on their behaviour
profile form presented to me. Excessive: boisterousness,
barking, jumping up, mouthing, biting, aggression to dogs
and some people, ignoring all commands, mad in the car,
stealing food, furniture destruction, refusing to obey any
commands and so it went on.....
At nearly two years of age Bert is still on a lead because
to let him of would without doubt place Mr & Mrs Harding
in the courts with chance of prison or a £5000 fine
and Bert would be destroyed under the dangerous dogs act.
But why?
I’ll tell you why. Because this breeder obsessively
believes that a Newfoundland’s bone structure will
be impaired if let off the lead. Will it? I believe not.
If it will, why are they breeding dogs which are so in need
of formative virtual convalescent care? Is the breed too
heavy or is it deficient in bone density for its weight?
I rang two Newfy breeders who told me that they advised
socialisation immediately not at nine months. That was a
relief.
I have trained many young Newfoundlands for obedience without
ever hearing of them needing to be formally exercised in
this most restrictive manner. But that said, my main query
is why is this particular breeder of Newfoundlands, with
many years experience in the breed and shows, so ignorant
of early canine socialisation? If a breeder cannot by example
show the pet owning public the way forward in pedigree dog
care then the euthanasia rate will continue unabated.
Other Breeds & Generic Advice
Not wishing to upset Newfy breeders too much let me include
some other examples. Another, not uncommon, statement we
hear at this centre is from the breeders of Pointers, Whippets,
Basset Hounds and other hunting breeds. “Oh, they
don’t or won’t come back when called. It’s
a part of the breed - training them is a waste of time.”
Again - these breeders are placing negative suggestions
in the client’s mind and they are probably too lazy
to spend the right amount of time training their own
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puppies during the formative months - including obedience
training. They compound the ignorance by passing on this
misguided view to their new puppy buyers. By the way, one
of the most obedient dogs I saw performing for a pet owner
was a Basset Hound called George he was trained 10 minutes
a day by his owner, not a trainer.
I do recognise that, many hound breeds - sight or scent
oriented, are less malleable for training than say the gundog
breeds but we have found that with early training, from
six weeks of age, (demonstrated in the new Complete Puppy
Care film for all breeds), obedience is not difficult to
achieve. In the film I purposely used a Miniature Dachshund
because it is not a breed we generally see performing obediently.
He did well and is now a young adult happily walking about
Berkhamsted Town in Hertfordshire. He is as obedient as
any well mannered dog should be.
If some breeders imbue the public with psychological negatives
that the breed is untrainable then, when owners have difficulties
- which we all do at times - they will just give up psychologically.
That is a bad start for an owner and new puppy and of course,
poor presentation of the breed as a family pet.
Pet Dog Owners
I do realise that the good breeders educate themselves
in canine husbandry and their keenness and desire to see
their stock reared to adulthood is genuine. If not, I would
have a queue outside the centre with misbehaving pets. I
also know that many of the problems presented to me are
directly related to the public’s mistreatment or poor
care management of their pet. However this article is about
a group of people who have decided to breed dogs and moreover
impart advice to clients as self declared experts. I believe
it is incumbent upon them to show the way by example.
When I use the term Breeder, I often think hard because
the term means nothing really. It is a person who breeds
and possibly shows. Someone who breeds in a flat, a house,
a large house, bad kennels, good kennels, backyard, farm
and so on. All sorts of people, intelligent people, not
so intelligent, profit first, profit last, at a loss but
it’s a good job - the variations are endless.
Dog Training & Behavioural Programmes
Back to Bert. Bert’s owners have had four hours of
behavioural advice and Bert has taken part in obedience
training courses. He is slowly being allowed, under supervision,
the natural inclination to investigate other dogs. Unfortunately
due to his huge size and weight it is a very precarious
re introduction to his own kind. He will often pounce on
a dog and therefore two trainers and the owners have to
be at hand. Also, a supply of trained, stable tempered dogs
whose owners don’t mind them being assaulted growled
at and dominated by Bert. It is quite a tall order and
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an expensive one too, all for the sake of socialising a
puppy between six and twelve weeks and beyond. This is one
of 36 dogs of this type I have seen in 1999!
If breeders of certain breeds feel that the dogs are so
difficult to train or control then why breed and sell them
to the unwitting pet owning public in the first place, where,
surprise, surprise, the dogs do have to come on command,
walk properly and not run amok in public places and have
to mix with large numbers of dogs and domestic pets.
I hope that the responsible breeders will read this article
and perhaps remind their less responsible fellow breeders,
with a kick up the bum, to get up to date with our dogs
and their future in Britain because that is where the vast
majority will live; not in the world of shows, rural kennels,
kitted out cars and the other trappings of the dog hobbyist.
Before I completed this article I telephoned Mrs Harding
and the update is that Bert has stopped grabbing, pushing
and mouthing guests to the point of injury. He will now
walk without catapulting his 155lbs at every passing dog
and he no longer spins around their little car like some
dervish. I believe another 12 months rehabilitation should
get him straight.
In conclusion let us understand what has gone on. For the
sake of socialisation at six weeks onwards a dog like Bert
has taken three trainers, twelve helpers, including owners,
three less than confident kennel staff and hundreds of hours
of time plus thirty participating dogs, all of whom have
been temperament tested to the limit by Bert’s exuberance.
The cost in money has been £1500.00 not counting the
free time from helpers. All because of advice from a lady
who has had many years breeding, showing and winning with
her Newfoundlands but doesn’t understand the basics
needs of the habituation of the domestic dog.
I believe socialisation to be the most critical factor
in pet dog ownership. Dogs can look good. However, dogs
must behave well if they are to fit into our complex law
driven society. More and more restrictive laws are excluding
dogs from public places - it pays us all to not only train
our dogs to be well behaved but also to be ambassadors for
the right to own a dog because one day it may not be so.
Interesting web sites:
www.colintennant.co.uk
www.petsonfilm.co.uk
www.cfba.co.uk
www.cidbt.org.uk
www.godt.org.uk
www.rossmcarthy.co.uk
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