 Oh, oh, I'm bringing out that Primer Litter. Oh, that's what you want to see. All right guys, I am very excited today to share with you three new working dogs that we just got in. Let me explain a little bit for anybody who doesn't know. I sell protection dogs all over the world. I deal with the best working genetics in the world, German Shepherds, Maloas Dutch Shepherds, the top of the top, okay? Also, not only am I dealing with the top working genetics. I am selling the highest level trained dogs in the world. Not one company or trainer comes close. I know all of them. I know what they sell. And skill-wise, there is no competition, okay? Just being honest. Anybody who knows about protection training, okay? There are other companies that have great lines of dogs as well. Not better, right? That's not possible. Training-wise, right, we are way beyond anyone else on earth, okay? When it comes to the skill levels that we put on our protection dogs, okay? Now I'm going to show you the three new ones we just got in, okay? We got them in last night. I haven't done anything with them yet. I haven't tested them yet. Now I do know before they came to me that I was sent videos because I have specifications that I want, right, from my working protection dogs. One, they have to have great drive, okay? And we're going to look at that in a second. But the videos that I were sent were decoys working the dogs in heavy defense, right? And can the dogs take that pressure? And there you see one of the dogs I'm going to pull out in a second, no problem whatsoever. So I haven't seen their drive. I'm sure it's good, right? Or else the breeder would not have sent them to me. All right, so I just let her out. She went right for a toy. I have not let her out yet, okay? And you see right away picking toys up. This is the first time I'm taking a look at her. Come on, come on, come on, girl. Let's go. Yes, bro. Good girl. Come here, baby. Yes, girl. Good girl. There you go, come on. Which one, which one? Don't like it, but for now she'd rather play. Then so she has a great, great play game. I've never played with her. It's the first time I've let her out. I have not seen her. I have not seen this in her. Didn't know what she had play-wise. I assumed from my breeder that she'd be very playful and gamey. So she needs work. She needs, you see all the pulling on the toy. She just jumped the fence with the toy, brought it to her kennel. See if she'll do it again. She goes very athletic dog as well, because she leaped that like it was nothing. So I'll see if she'll do it. So, right, right, right. Good girl. Bring this out to test her. See that shaking? Burning the hands, burning the hands. I'm bringing out that primal on her. That's what you want to see, right? But this is the way I'm playing with the whip is bringing out that shaking that I love in protection. And you can shake it like that. Woo! Love in protection. That you don't want shaking. That's nonsense. You want as much shaking as possible. Because that is how a dog and wolf annihilates their pride and immobilizes it, right? That's how they kill things. Oh, my hands are killing me. That's the way you play. Woo! And she'll keep on going, right? Like a shark on a line. I've got to grab that rubber. There you go. There you go. Good girl. Yeah, shake it. That's a good girl. All right. So first time seeing her, now that shaking is coming from my pole work, OK? And in my game, I want to see when they grab that suit, all the shaking. Because if you've been in the suit and you feel that shaking, it throws you off. It can dislocate limbs, shoulders. I've had my shoulder taken out. And it is painful. And that is why I love the shake. Oh, and as long as I play to her properly, I'm going to get that, OK? So all that is not natural, OK? It is me bringing that instinct out in her by the way I'm playing with her. My hands are killing me. Yes. All right. And she, woo! Now she's growling. Woo-hoo! Came off of my hand. That was shadow, year and a half full female. Again, no idea what she had in her. Until right now on camera, where I left the toys out here to get an idea of driven she was. Because I need that in building the foundation of all my protection dogs, OK? It's very important for my system. And leaving them here, again, I got her late last night. She's just been in a camel run from the truck last night. I have not seen her out. This is the first time ever. So I had no idea what she had in her until just now. So as a test, leaving the toys out without anybody playing with them to see what she would do on her own, keeping in mind also she's never been out here. So again, never saw her out before. First time she's been out in here with me. And right off the bat to the toys automatically without being helped, right? I didn't go throw a toy. She didn't see me put the toys. It's very important as a foundation of character that I don't throw the toy, right? I could. But in this particular case, they're adults. I'm under the assumption, because my breeders sold them to me that they have great drive. So having the toys out here flat, not seeing me throw them, did not know that there were toys out here, can't see them. And right away goes to the toys and did not engage with me, was obsessed with the toys. Phenomenal. Now, I do know that she's very loving right besides that. Last night, she came in, was licking us all over everybody. I was trying to fix another kennel run next to her. And she was up over the top, licking me in the head everywhere, right? She's very, very affectionate. So she is going to be a phenomenal protection dog for somebody or a family. So I'm very happy with her. First time seeing that, and man, she's strong. I mean, she has got, now I don't like the pulling again. But that's fine, OK? In my system, dogs cannot pull backwards, OK? Not playing with toys, not on a sleeve, and not on a suit. So I'm going to fix that very quickly, where I want punching in. I don't want pulling backwards, OK? So but phenomenal, phenomenal drive. So I'm very, very happy with that. I mean, and again, I almost didn't bring this out to play with her because she was doing, I already see with the toys, she's crazy with it. But that was great to see, pulling it out and having it move and her chase it. And the power that she's got on the end of that line, my hands are killing me, right? So and me playing the pole properly is bringing out all that drive, that instinct, that primal aggression of grabbing, chasing, and thrashing it, right? So again, when you hear trainers and sports try to hold steady grips and all that, it's just not realistic, right? And you're taking away the primal of the dog for real aggression. So that's how dogs in the wild go grab things, they shake, they get them off balance. And you know, rabbit or whatever it is, it snaps their heads, stuff like that, right? And it immobilizes them. So that shake is very important to dogs in the real world, in their natural habitat. So in protection, I love it. Again, I've had my shoulders pulled out by dogs that we've taught to get in the suit, shake when they get full, deep bites where it hurts. It hurts in the suits. And then they start shaking, makes things way worse, OK? So that is what I want from my protection dogs. And that is shadow, and that was phenomenal. So she needs work, but look, she's got phenomenal drive. I mean, can we get that out of her mouth? Then you can see the engaging, right? And then relax, which I love about the shepherds and our breeder. I hate the pulling, right? For our protection dogs, we don't like pulling back. It's a no-no, OK? But I'll fix that this week.