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what does one need th do to start training my puppy for being a guard dog that is the reason that i got him for for protection of my family he is 2mths old ROTT/SHEPARD MIX but he is a wimp there is a little dog around that attacks and he wimpers and shakes shoul i do something or let nature take it course help me please becouse i dont want my dog to grow up a wussy vet said he will be over 100 pds and very very strong????

2007-01-05 23:02:19 · 8 answers · asked by THE WAR WRENCH 4 in Pets Dogs

8 answers

Be careful training a guard dog. A dog will naturally defend his pack (family) and so you can have a nice gentle dog that will be aggressive if someone is aggressive towards his family. A 2 month old dog is a baby so you can't expect him to be anything else but a wuss.

2007-01-05 23:11:10 · answer #1 · answered by Gone fishin' 7 · 1 0

I might be the person to help you out to getting a decent guard dog!!! I have 3 dogs, they all came out protective and guard dogs! They are 2 Rhodesian ridge-backs and 1 boxer, all 3 purebred and AKC papers! This is important!!

First, your "mix" might not be the best choice, but you can do something to fix this! A purebred dog has a firm personality and feels strong about himself so will be better in guarding. A pure strong and big Rottweiler is a good choice, so is a pure Sheppard, a fine boxer will always be reserved to strangers, all mastiffs in general are ok (bull-mastiff, dogo argentino). Also, Akita's are good for this.
When selecting a guard dog look at the parents personality always, if the parents are guards, so will the puppies!!
Select a big healty and energetic puppie, not the slow timid and smallest puppie!

I selected a boxer female after seeing the protective behavior of hes dad and mom, and she came out identical, started to guard my house at 5 month old! Has never been scared of other dogs and people and is not shy! Many people underestimate boxers but these dogs were bred to be protectors. Just find a good one.

Important: A dog can bark and protect but never,never think that it can beat a person with real bad intentions. 1 peace of meat with poison and good bye dog!
Don't get a greedy dog. Boxers are not greedy, mine is not...so it will not eat poison so easily.
Last...Dogs and wolfs hunt in a pack or group!! Dogs get more protective in groups, get 1 or 2 more dogs and you have a small pack watching your house!!! they will help each other in any situation. 1 dog is not enough to really be able to protect a house.
Always use intelligent aproaches to protecting your home, the main approach to guard your home is having 2 or 3 dogs but always try to be present to help them if a real buggler gets in, the dogs might stop him for a few minutes and after you are to jump in and act. a dog cannot fight a person with a gun or other professional tecniques. They will alert the presence of a stranger,after you need to act!!

2007-01-06 14:43:35 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You should not try and train a dog to guard/protect yourself as you could mess the dog up and instead create an aggressive dog that can not be called off or controlled.

Reserach protection training schools on the internet and go from there.

Your dog also may simply not be suitable to guarding/protecting and you can make a dog change it's personality.

2007-01-06 00:51:49 · answer #3 · answered by Sas 3 · 0 0

He is still just a puppy. If he is a Rott/ Shepard he will become a good watch dog. He just needs time. I have a german shepard mix and she barks when any one even walks in front of the house. She barks at everything and everybody. She is a great watch dog. Good Luck!!

2007-01-05 23:13:33 · answer #4 · answered by cindy ccc 2 · 1 0

I suppose that you're referring to a individual defense canine. Protect puppies are bred specially to shield property and belongings. Individual protection dogs are bred to protect not simplest property, however individuals as good. To answer your question, yes, a good-informed individual safeguard canine will shield its owner (with its existence). Folks purchase personal security puppies for security/safety factors. Do you are living in an discipline where houses are more commonly burglarized? Do you live in a city where ladies are regularly crushed and/or raped? Do you've got a stalker who won't leave your by myself? Do you've got kids? Are you single ladies that lives on my own? Do you dislike the inspiration of carrying around a handgun? Do you've a house or vehicle that you feel wishes security? In the event you answered sure to any of these, then you've gotten a cause to buy a individual protection dog. Edit: concerning individual safeguard puppies and guns, private protection dogs are notably proficient to target hands which are protecting weapons. Evolved coaching can also be executed to educate puppies to attack when any one moves/motions their weapon hand (i.E.: a gunman raises his handgun to fireside). Additionally, private security puppies are confronted with situations that might happen in actual life (burglaries, automobile theft, etc.). They comprehend when and find out how to attack. If a burglar went up once more a personal defense canine, my bet would be on the individual defense canine. The burglar, like most persons, would usually be startled by means of the dog. Therefore, he would now not shoot correct away. If he did go to shoot, the canine would undoubtedly attack. Plus, although the dog was once hit, if it was not a lethal shot, the dog would still attack.

2016-08-10 11:02:52 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

i strongly suggest that for next couple of months, you let the pup stay as close to your family as possible, so he becomes one of them and sees himself as part of your pack. alienating him is not going to help the guard dog issue in a good way. at 2 months, ANY puppy is a wimp. he's still a baby for pete's sakes. many dog trainers don't accept dogs before 6 months old as their concentration span is still too limited becuase of their playfulness, but others do from 3 months for "puppy training". i suggest you sign up with one of these trainers. your pup will start with basic obedience, move possibly into long distance control training, and after mastering those, move towards protection training. don't push it. beating your puppy (like some idiots do) to make him aggressive will only produce a dog that at some point will end up dead due to attacking ppl.

2007-01-06 01:02:18 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's just a BABY,you nit!!!

2007-01-05 23:51:12 · answer #7 · answered by tyke 1 · 0 1

How about getting a gun and taking care of your own dirty work instead of having an animal do it for you?

2007-01-05 23:05:54 · answer #8 · answered by AngryAmerican82 3 · 0 6

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