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Anyone Else Working Malinois X Greyhounds Or Similar


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These 2 are first cross with a greyhound sire and Malinois dam. They are litter mates a dog and a bitch. Any one working similar cross's.

They're are doing very well and produced a fairly even litter. Hardy, fearless, clever, but a bit hard to keep occupied. Good with the gun, live stock, not seen ferrets yet, bark/bite on command, fol

These three came from a bitch that was very driven. I was told she failed her police test on the "leave command". However she was not a maniac that would bite anything that moved. The pups have a very

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Got a mally bitch myself very tempting them mate atb Flacko

 

She's a nice bitch too flacko maxhardcore has just the dog for her too ;):thumbs:

If you do decide on a litter would you let me know how you get on please.

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These herders mallinois Dutch laekoneis herders etc are the at the front of herding type breeds in the world unspoiled by kc, these are the type that need to be used in my opinion to get good solid hardy types of the pastoral types because they bred for work and work only different lines suit individual requirements but it's work ethic that these breeds at the moment are used for . Maybe in a decade time it could be different the malls are already very popular over here don't take long ta spoil a type once they become popular the malls seem to throw a nice light f1 seen a few all like peas in a pod my thoughts on the f1they seem to be stable clear headed line bred may start ta get very high driven animals and these would need the right type of handler with the nouse to handle them . Now they could be something ta wet the appetite.atb bunnys.

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Did you breed these dogs GVC? There was a litter from Kent advertised on here a few months ago. Anyone know how they are getting on?

 

They're are doing very well and produced a fairly even litter. Hardy, fearless, clever, but a bit hard to keep occupied.

Good with the gun, live stock, not seen ferrets yet, bark/bite on command, follow the beam, retrieved most things, not entered water yet but I have no doubts. In fact the only thing they are lacking is my ability to train two highly driven pups!

All good guards, but sensible with and steady with it.

I've liked them so much I'm running two this season. One of them is a bit hard to live with, but the dog I used is too.

 

Before everyone jumps on it and thinks they are the best thing since sliced bread, they are not for everyone, they need lots of stimulation. If not they will drive you mad, really!

My dogs are out at least twice a day, not necessarily working, but playing, socialising, training and keeping them busy. They need to be in and out of the home to give them proper socialisation and stimulation.

They chew like feck, they are noisy in kennels, will eat every thing they are not meant to, they jump up at people, can be sensitive to a heavy hand and will take them selves off hunting if you don't keep your eye on them. So all in all a fecking nightmare if you don't know what you are doing or don't have enough time for them.

 

Anyone still want one? :laugh:

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These herders mallinois Dutch laekoneis herders etc are the at the front of herding type breeds in the world unspoiled by kc, these are the type that need to be used in my opinion to get good solid hardy types of the pastoral types because they bred for work and work only different lines suit individual requirements but it's work ethic that these breeds at the moment are used for . Maybe in a decade time it could be different the malls are already very popular over here don't take long ta spoil a type once they become popular the malls seem to throw a nice light f1 seen a few all like peas in a pod my thoughts on the f1they seem to be stable clear headed line bred may start ta get very high driven animals and these would need the right type of handler with the nouse to handle them . Now they could be something ta wet the appetite.atb bunnys.

 

Malinois are better suited to Lurcher breeding mainly because of their conformation.

Dutch hearders are heavy, Laekoneis are rarely worked nowadays, also they are few and far between to have a good choice.

F1 breeding nearly always offers a steady animal, but genetics are not always that straight forward. Like the well documented GSD x on here that doesn't guard and to look at it's a beast, One of the bitches I have here that's just like a Mali in temperament, hyper as.

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Did you breed these dogs GVC? There was a litter from Kent advertised on here a few months ago. Anyone know how they are getting on?

 

They're are doing very well and produced a fairly even litter. Hardy, fearless, clever, but a bit hard to keep occupied.

Good with the gun, live stock, not seen ferrets yet, bark/bite on command, follow the beam, retrieved most things, not entered water yet but I have no doubts. In fact the only thing they are lacking is my ability to train two highly driven pups!

All good guards, but sensible with and steady with it.

I've liked them so much I'm running two this season. One of them is a bit hard to live with, but the dog I used is too.

 

Before everyone jumps on it and thinks they are the best thing since sliced bread, they are not for everyone, they need lots of stimulation. If not they will drive you mad, really!

My dogs are out at least twice a day, not necessarily working, but playing, socialising, training and keeping them busy. They need to be in and out of the home to give them proper socialisation and stimulation.

They chew like feck, they are noisy in kennels, will eat every thing they are not meant to, they jump up at people, can be sensitive to a heavy hand and will take them selves off hunting if you don't keep your eye on them. So all in all a fecking nightmare if you don't know what you are doing or don't have enough time for them.

 

Anyone still want one? :laugh:

A very honest post leegreen, a rare thing in the working dog game :yes:

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I bred litter dutch herder x greyhound and they do whats required of them the dog we kept even doing hares single handed in dead winter, there easy trained biddable an great guard dogs but I wouldn't recommend one as a first dog

Have you a side-on photo of your dog Larry?

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