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Everything posted by jawn
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It's been my experience that MOST of these issues can be corrected. Especially with an eighteen month old dog. Sometimes you have to get down on their level so to speak.....sometimes you have to stomp a mud hole on their a**es and walk it dry a few dozen times. There are terriers that just like to bleed, and don't care how they get there, and for whatever reason.... will fight another dog as quickly as anything else.. But most can be convinced who is the boss....those that can't.... can't. Seems like certain bitches take a disliking to eachother.... and come hell or high water.... they'll find
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Most....not all...... but most..... can be convinced to act right if you insist and are very....persuasive. But you have to make the point, and be very consistent. All can be convinced to quit fighting..... but some need shooting to get the point across. JM2C
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Hell I have one too, but of jagd persuasion..... I'll make damn sure there is no Zulu II....This is confusing as hell already.lol
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Can't say if it's the dog in question but a friend has one off of a Nuttals Zulu....The dog is coming up on four years old. The paperwork said Zulu was Nuttals Buster x Nuttals Tadpola who I guess was supposed to be a daughter of Buster too off of a Nuttals Mullins or some such. Can't read the writing and don't know the dogs. But the dog he's got is a worker. Maybe he just got lucky.
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Last year I tightened up on a line of dogs I hun,t and ended up having to cull a few, but also ended up with some fantastic prospects. One bitch had a serious over bite though neither parent has ever thrown this trait when outcrossed in the past. The sire of the litter is already a line bred dog. I guess when I went tighter I pulled some recessives back out. Live and learn.
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For some the majority of a litter will wind up dead before they are ever bred, either through culling or a bad day in the feild. This isn't to say that the best will live to pass on their genetics. It's usually the very bad that are first to go closely followed by the very good. It's when the good ones do make it, and show no signs of defect that breeding makes sense. These dogs are usually born of the same type of sire and dam making genetic defects less common. PLL is a scorge in the jagd breed. I have heard of dogs carrying on or two copies of a mutated gene. But I have never seen one go bl
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I have seen over bites close over time. But I personaly have never seen an under shot dog end up changing. I HAVE seen them work as well as dogs with correct or scissor bites.
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so it's ok to breed and give away a dog with crippling genetic/congenital faults of some kind as long as it's not pedigree and it's free?? that's very decent indeed So it's necessarily diseased and crippled if it's free, or doesn't have a piece of paper declaring it worth working??? If your into guarentees.... buy one.
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I haven't. Probably should but I haven't ever seen a dog go blind from it so for better or worse it's easy to shrug off.
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If for no other reason than you won't have to worry about the damage the anti's willl have done to working dogs in ten years... it's worth the cost. Three or four straws can go a long way... and who knows what that dog that dies way to soon can produce with the right bitch down the road.
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File preperation $45 Collection, evaluation and freezing (four vials) $200 Anual storage per dog (up to 30 vials) $72 Brucellosis test $45 Total base fee for four vials $362 We are collecting several dogs and have used more than one comapny. To make matter worse we have to learn as we go and always end up payong more than we have to it seems.
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Your paying less. Especially for the surgical proceedure. But seems your getting a better deal on all of it except the storage.
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I am in the process of doing it now. I have sent straws to a friend in Australia because of the difficulties of importing dogs, and I believe he is about to try it for the first time when his gyp bleeds. It is a great thing to be able to do. If you've got a good one and the right female hasn't come along yet... you can kick back and wait until she does. Nothing will take the sting out of losing a good one.. but it helps minimize the damage in the event the dog dies doing it's job. As hard as it was to get good jagds here, it makes no sense to let the great ones get themselves killed before
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Jagd terrier for ground work??
jawn replied to EnglishBulldog's topic in Earthdogs & Working Terriers
I think there probably are longer ranged DDs.. But it is discouraged here. Most hunt them under a shotgun and can't have them taking off after God knows what.lol It's like your terrier. If I remember right he pushes for around an hour then returns. It's this kind of hunt combined with a little more leg and strength that could make a heck of a nice dog to hunt behind. Now take the brains of the dumbest drahthaar and add that to winding ability and you might have some improvement over most GHTs. I have some terriers that I think are pretty damn smart. But they are terriers at the end of the -
Jagd terrier for ground work??
jawn replied to EnglishBulldog's topic in Earthdogs & Working Terriers
No drahthaars make great pig dogs, but there is a whole list of things that COULD be gained from the cross. I think adding terrier would increase the drive and likely push the dogs out further in search of game. Drahthaars are great about sticking with a track once thery're on it, but I think going to the jagd would decrease some of the connection with the hunter resulting in a dog that would push out further. It would probably result in a dog that is bigger and stronger than the terrier with a ton of hunt. I think they could help stop runners that sometimes give the terriers trouble. I bet th -
I found Dasty vom Reussenberg, but not the other ones. Maybe they haven't been registered here in Sweden. You can search for all registered dogs at: http://kennet.skk.se...a/Hund_sok.aspx My Ozzy's offical name is ''Gamekeeper's Samuraj", Regnr: SE21332/2010 That's a well bred dog you have. Here's a link to the dog Basko. He's the eighth dog down.http://www.jagdterrier.ch/html/zuchtruden.php
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Here's a video of a dog that hadn't done any retrieving since the beginning of Sept. He came in cold and didn't see the placement of the bumpers. First attempt as evidenced by the camera man.lol
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Hey Jachtterrier... Good looking dogs!!!
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Jagd terrier for ground work??
jawn replied to EnglishBulldog's topic in Earthdogs & Working Terriers
That's funny as hell Mister! I guess it's hard to immagine an uglier cross. I don't think any of us are holding out much hope that they will be any fun to look at.LMAO But I wonder if they will retain the versatility. I haven't felt the need to cross breed since I started hunting the jagd. But this particular cross has been nagging at a few of us for a couple of years now. I bet they pull some fur... and if one or two point? Could be a useful dog. -
Jagd terrier for ground work??
jawn replied to EnglishBulldog's topic in Earthdogs & Working Terriers
Yea... It's crossed my mind. But we're not right in the head over here. Sometimes you have to do stuff JUST BECAUSE someone warned you not to..lol Besides... The way we hunt hogs here, the dogs have to stop the hogs from running instead of driving them. I figure there ought to be enought grit, and the Drahthaar should bring better winding ability to the cross. It'll be fun... or not.lol -
It's impossible to hunt with the really sharp. 4H champions are just for exhibition. Agreed...The average dog is committed to getting himself killed as quickly as possible. But the competition dog... the hardest of them is nearly useless in the feild. They are good to have for breeding though.
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I think there is a dog named Basko von Sechtafeld off of Dasty vom Reussenberg and Exe vom Grenzkamm there in Sweden. His brother Bautz gave me a very good daughter. I wish I had more like she was.
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My best all around dogs come from Fronc Zdeno's Aluminium kennel in Slovakia. I have some small sharp eastern European dogs off of Asstraata and Duvadirto lines. They are tough little dogs that don't like to think about things first. There are a few people working together to get good dogs. It's really helped.
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I can understand why you like him then. The really sharp ones can cost you money every time you let them go. They are the most likely trip to the vets office that I ever fed.lol
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Ive hunted dogs from Mefisto's half brothers and a couple from Beba's line. Most were very good dogs that did whatever was asked of them.