Added: 4 years ago
From: communicanine
Views: 127,670
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  • Perfect!!! Congratulations in dog trainer!

  • Perfect!!! Congratulation in dog trainer!

    

  • awesome training.  Good for you.

  • awesome training. Good for you.

  • Wow! Really well trained! Good Job! x

    

  • Whoever says a dog that is treated right won't protect the owner if the owner offers what the dog wants is completely wrong. My grandpa has a dog named salty that was a Belgian malinois, and if you came within 20 feet of him he would stare you down and within 5 feet you had a dog that attacked a drunk person in a heart beat without commands by running into the guy and then the dog started to drag the guy away from my grandpa. However, salty was trained brilliantly without treats or punishment b

  • Nice out.............great training.

  • very nice training there.

  • bite bite bite!

  • Listens VERY well!

  • Great control, greetings from México...

  • Straight for the groin! Theres a good doggie ;)

  • Great Dog! nice vid

  • Beautiful Dog!

    I wish I had one. =)

  • Great dog. I've got a French Ring Malinois. They are awesome dogs to work with!

  • He wasn't being aggresive cuz the tail wuz waggin

  • cool

  • looking to buy a german shepherd or a Belgian Malinois sadly my dog just died whats a better bread as in smart ness and good good guard dog/ personal protection any1 help me out

  • @cozunited94 Malinois! I love mine.. way smarter than other shepherds Ive had.. 

  • @cozunited94 if you want a dog to go with you everywhere a Malinois is better,,reason,,size.

  • @cozunited94 As I am Belgian, I would say Mechelse Herder, wich means Belgian Malinois. They're a bit smaller but a lot tougher and more active and intelligent.

  • how did u train your dog to do this, i have an american bulldog and would like for him to protect the family and home..

  • @bloodtyredeyes This is something you need to hire a professional for.

  • @bloodtyredeyes Am bulldog should know when to protect u on his own if he a full blooded breed you shopuldnt need any dog training

  • @MissCedarbridge1 This is one of the biggest myths in the dog world. Unless a dog has specialized training it is highly unlikely that he or she will actually defend an owner. Bark at someone, maybe. But actually defend? That rarely happens without training.

  • @communicanine LOL and people who think the way you do is the ones offen get biten by pitbulls now why dont you prove this by coming up to me and grab me while Im walking my friendly pit thats not train to attack if you cant do that then stop streading lies about the bulldogs breed

  • @MissCedarbridge1 It's funny, everybody thinks that there dog is the one that will protect them when needed. In my years of training dogs professionally I've done that test many times that you describe, coming up on someone to grab them while wearing a bite suit, and not once has a dog ever truly protected their owner.I've been barked at, but never has a dog protected their owner.I'm speaking from experience here, not a fantasy based on false understanding of dogs.

  • @communicanine Hi, you say in one of your comments that you've never seen a dog protecting their owner. But when a person comes up to me and he's screaming and acting like he's going to hit me, my dog jumps up and bites the arm of the person. When I say to stop, he'll stop immidiatly. I haven't trained my dog to do this. He's a Belgian Malinois X Greyhound mix. If my dog isn't protecting me, than what is he doing?

  • @saminiky - You'll notice that I said it's rare. Do dogs protect their owners? Yes, but almost never. I was talking to my neighbor, a SWAT guy, he said that for every 50-100 properties they enter that has a dog that only about one dog will try to defend their owner. The rest run off. I don't know why this offends people so much but it does. I've been training dogs for years and the facts are the facts.

  • @communicanine You've never seen my dog and already judging him, quite professional, I must say. My dog doesn't get agressive when he's doing it. and he doesn't do it without reason. Did your neighbor, the swat-guy, every used rescue dogs? cause my dog is a rescue dog and i believe that rescues think different then dogs that have been with the same human al their life.

    But you'll probably say that rescue dogs are unreliable, just like al other puppy-minded people.

  • @saminiky I'm not sure what a puppy-minded person is. Yes, I am judging your dog based on what you said. I don't know what that has to do with professionalism; you are the one who told me the scenario. You said someone yelled at you and your dog bit him. That's not the type of dog I want around me.And for your to say that your dog bites people without becoming aggressive shows me that you don't have a clear grasp on dog behavior.And to answer your swat question, they go into all sorts of homes.

  • @communicanine you apear to be a professional (with al the experience comments and anecdotes) but any (responsible) professional who works with animals will never judge unless he/she has seen the animal for him/herself. You gave your conclusion based on what i said... I could be reading my dogs bodylanguage al wrong, like most people would.

  • @communicanine I was being sarcastic about the professionalism part. A responisble professional animal trainer, never gives his/her conslusion, untill he/she has seen the animal for themself. You gave your conclusion based on what i said. If you read your last comment to me, you say i don't know anything about dog behaviour. But 2 sentences above you say i was the one talling the scenario, if i don't know anything about dogs, how can i give an objective reflexion of my dogs behaviour

  • @saminiky Sorry, I disagree. Over the past few years I've done about 150 radio and TV appearances where I take questions from dog owners around the world and have to give advice quickly. Does that mean I can be wrong? Sure. But I've been doing this long enough to where I can be pretty accurate. So if your description was accurate I feel that my conclusion was accurate. Does that make me irresponsible? I don't think so but you are entitled to your opinion.

  • @saminiky Also, where did you get this standard that a responsible pro has to see the dog first before giving an opinion/conclusion? That isn't a measure of a pro in this industry. There are dozens of trainers who write columns, articles, books, do radio, tv, chat forums, etc. where they give opinions and conclusions without seeing the dog. I'm wondering how this has become your standard of a 'responsible animal trainer'?

  • @communicanine You've cleary didn't understand my last point about the whole rescue-dog-thing. I meant that mr swat-guy never trained with a rescue dog, always with dogs that have been with the same person since they where puppy. You -with al your unanswerable knowledge- must know that a rescue dog thinks in other ways than a dog that always had the same owner. (oh and btw i didn't say someone yelled at me and my dog bit him,just like that - maybe you should read the comment attentive )

  • @saminiky - Also, your dog sounds like a huge liability. The last thing I want is for my dog to bite somebody because I'm getting yelled at. That is not the definition of a well trained dog at all. More than likely, if your story is even true, you have a dog that isn't 100% stable that launches off when he feels like it. I'll take a well trained protection dog over a liability any day.

  • @MissCedarbridge1 It's funny that it's always the pit bull owners that think there dogs are so tough. I love pit bulls but out of all the breeds I've trained in protection over the years the pit bull is one of the weakest. Awesome dogs, but not very suited for protection training.

  • @MissCedarbridge1 Have you ever wondered why it makes the news when a dog protects it's owner? Because it's so rare.

  • @communicanine no its not rare its just really isnt news thats why you need to live where I live and you would see alot of dog protects and cooks get biten

  • @communicanine i think both you and misscedarbridge both have good points and can see both your arguments. I feel some dog breeds are def more ready to defend than others, and in some cases will defend without training,, however, the personal training really assures a true guard dog, and can help an unprovoked attack. Very interesting debate though you both have!

  • @MissCedarbridge1 Dumbest thing I ever heard. And how would it know how to protect against a human?

  • The Malinois really impresses me! I always have, and always will favor the German shepherd as my favorite dog, but i see the Malinois as the only dog that trully compares with the GSD as the best well rounded guard dog. I think the trade off is the German shepherd has more raw power,, but the Malinois has crazy stamina! Either way, both are easily the 2 best well rounded guard and attack dogs,, thats why the police mainly use them!

  • now that is good training

    good work lads

  • Comment removed

  • AMAZING! Your dog is perfect, i would love a mali!!!!!

  • Wonderful training!!! Most people know nothing about the importance of the release-- you have complete control over that beautiful Belgian. I'm hoping to get my little girl this far by 2yrs old.

  • dam thats a well trained dog

  • dogs need training, food, walks

    gun is more efficient

  • as long there your friend.

  • What a handsome boy. I always wanted a Mali. I already have a German Shepherd; they're both wonderful dogs.

  • CAUCASIAN MOUNTAIN DOG is the best :b

  • Wow! You can buy that sleeve? Well, nvm I was going to, but couldn't get anyone to be the guinie pig = P

  • you should get a profeesinal other than training your dog to atack yourself

  • a novice (or guinea pig) can do more harm than good

  • agree with u guys is ...we need a dog is to protect n not only for sport or show..be more practical...i knew bout the case is without the sleeve the dog will not bite...

  • You need more control - barking not allowed when seated next to handler. When you increase control, I would also suggest longer lasting bites to make the grip better.

  • I want him to bark while he is next to the handler. This is for personal protection, not sport. When it comes to personal protection the idea is to scare away the bad guy, i.e. the barking.

    Also, he has a very good grip, not great. Again, for personal protection I'm not looking for grip development like you do in schutzhund. I need function.

  • beatiful dog

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