@@stanleyj3837 Yeah but if someone breaks into your house, you'd be super appreciative of the scariness Hahaha. But honestly they're huge teddy bears when not in protection mode. Great with kids too.
As much as I wish I had sent my dog to Brandon for training before bringing him home ru-vid.comUgkx1_veP7CApJK_GWy_TczaMciuG64PqJeU I am so grateful for this down-to-earth, practical guide. His training techniques and tips really work. Thank you as well for dedicating your life's work to rescue dogs, and to rescuing those of us who want the very best for our 4-legged family members.
This is the Real Genetic from a true Dobermann!! 95% of all Dobermanns are only Show and Sport Dog Garbage but this one in this Video are a true Protector!!!!!
Its all about Genetic Guys... A animal have drives, one of this drives calls Defensive Drive , a good Protection Dog will trained or tested everytime with this Drive
My Doberman is “old school.” You remember the Dobies from the 70s and 80s? That’s him and he naturally behaves like this Dobie in this video. He’s 20 months. Sweet and will let most pet him but he’s ready to whoop ass if “anything” pops off. He’s very defensive and always patrol for trouble. He’s aggressive and we are working to tone it down. He will bite. He is still in tact. So my Vet suggested getting him fixed if the aggression doesn’t improve. He’s 100lbs and at least 28 inches. What’s crazy is he’s ready to protect any member of our household including our Chihuahua even from each other. For example if one of us pretends to beat the other up he is ready to protect that person. If my husband bear hugs me he barks and growls. So yeah he’s naturally old school, beyond smart, stubborn as a mule with crazy drive. He’s definitely not the softer toned down Dobermans that you see today in the US. Although when we’re in certain public places like the pet store he does act like a dog with sense. He be on his best behavior. But I tell people he’s bipolar. Don’t let him fool you. When it comes to protecting us and our property “his territory” he’s a ferocious dog.
Almost all dobermans have those characteristics...I have what you would call a “show” doberman that is suspicious, barks and growls at any person in the street that he isn’t familiar with. Also fearlessly chased a pack of deer as a 7 month old puppy . They don’t have to be full German to have drive .
In the 80s Dobermans were the dog of choice. They were everywhere. I remember as a kid walking to school, always walking past this Auto shop that had them as guard dogs. They were terrifying and cool at the same time.
IF people had a lick of brains and not be followers as in whats in, theyd still be the dog of choice today! Fn amazing athleticism and intelligent specimens, top notch.
Right. We had one. Jake. He was whelped back in 1978 and he was beautiful. EVERYTHING you'd want in a home protector and wonderful pet. You almost NEVER see them anymore though. I always wondered why they seemed to go out of popularity.
In 90's also they was very popular and everywhere. I remember them. At that time I was a kid and see them after returning from class. I liked their barking sound very much.
My neighbor on my complex has a European Doberman that's protection trained. I made the mistake of comming up on it at the corner at night in the parking lot when I was throwing out my trash. Terrifying beast. The height? Size and voice.
I think he stands up beautifully, but I wish he was wearing a chest harness. I feel like a regular collar is going to hurt his throat and larynx overtime. Plus if he was wearing a chest harness he would sound a lot louder and more aggressive. You should put a chest harness on him in the future. Thank you for your time and consideration in reading this comment I gave you a thumbs up FYI.
I have had great European bred Shepherds and I've had a beautiful chocolate Doberman. The dogs look like Olympic athletes. Honestly, my experience is even though the dogs do not look similar they are very similar in ability, temperament, intelligence and aggression. I know Haz does not think much of them. But my 11 month old 80 lb Doberman got between me and and a 130 to 150 lb male mountain lion that had snuck up behind us when I was in my front yard. And he would have Tangled with it had I not screamed at him and called him back. The incident made the newspaper. The mountain lion just ended up slowly walking away figuring we were just too much trouble. I don't know if they'd make great igp dogs but if you're hiking or live in the hills of California, a well bred doberman is a good dog to have with you.
GOOD EVENING MY WIFE AND I ACTUALLY HAVE THE EXACT SAME DOG IN MORPHOLOGY AND CHARACTER. IT IS EXTREMELY FAITHFUL TO THE ORIGINAL DNA OF A FEARLESS DOPERMAN PINCHER FROM PREVIOUS DECADES. WE ARE IN 🇬🇷
I love Dobermans and would love to keep one someday but I wouldn't want to get on the wrong side of one. They're very tough and highly intelligent dogs.
I have always had pitbulls until 2 years ago idk why but i chose to buy a doberman to grow up with my 2 year old daughter.... best decision i could have made they have both made a bonde with eathother and the dog will do anything to protect my little girl
Truckers Reef then obviously you don’t know anything about PPD training. They move to an invisible sleeve when the dog is ready. The dog is still young
Truckers Reef and when given the command, Duke will quit. Sleeve or not. He knows body language. Body language is everything. Raise your arm at me? He will bite you to stop the action of you potentially harming me. It takes trail and error to perfect.
So I know that in the end you want a dog that’s active in aggression. This dog has some good forward aggression, but it looks like his state of mind is a bit on the defensive side, which would mean that his goal is to make you go away. So my question is what made you give him a bite? Am I reading it wrong ?
Not always true. Plenty of news stations proved most dogs won't protect when the home or owner is under attack. This training is necessary if your goal is for the dog to be 100 percent prepared for the potential dangers of life. Hoping a dog would protect is gambling, and no smart person is going to gamble with their life.
In a previous video you said it's hard to find a good doberman. Did you mean from the American lines (that I agree are garbage and should be culled) or did you mean all of them? Don't dobermans have to pass a courage test (ZTP?) in Germany and other places or they're not allowed to even breed? I wish America did that.
I always asked myself why they don't train them to go to the throat instead. An arm IS usefull but you'll be more or less ok after a dog rips your muscles and you could counterattack with a blunt or sharp object.
@@shieldk9 love the channel! Any suggestions for a good doberman breeder in Europe? Owned GSDs but always liked dobermans. Poor health in the breed (so I've heard/seen) is what stops me from getting one.
This is why I don't like the sleeve because it makes dogs think that the job is done once the sleeve comes off. A good protection dog knows that the human is the target not the sleeve. If you jump out on this dog he may hesitate because he doesn't see a sleeve so it's not a real situation.
@@SentientSandbox obviously I know the reason why it's used. But it becomes a toy at some point and the "game" is over when the sleeve comes off for some dogs. The suit is better to me because it simulates a real situation. Making the actual person the target not just the sleeve. That's just my opinion I've see good trainer's not use the sleeve for that reason it's a good tool to start a new dog on and learn how to bite but for primary training its not effective. Because the dog will only get used to attacking the arm vs chest,legs,arm, back.
@@truckersreef6369 When you say "not use the sleeve" do you mean just a full bite suit instead or one of those fake arm things? Or do they use nothing at all? I'm just curious how that would work.