Regards,
Dev
eljefe";p="6482 wrote: Star wars -the whole 9 yards is on tv in dec end Dev.
Delhi Annual tennyson memorial 'haiku' contest is later, in Jan, dont forget the 5-4-4-5 metre
eljefe";p="6482 wrote: Star wars -the whole 9 yards is on tv in dec end Dev.
Delhi Annual tennyson memorial 'haiku' contest is later, in Jan, dont forget the 5-4-4-5 metre
stunngun";p="6507 wrote: Sorry to hear about this incident Dev!
The word *dogs/pups* dragged me into this topic!
If you are not looking for any particular breed and would like to adopt a stray pup who has been vaccinated, then do let me know! There are 8 of them who are being taken care of by students at a college in Delhi and need to find them homes!
I have been looking after strays since quite sometime but dont keep them as pets anymore. I can vouch this about them- they make amazing guards and are absolutely loyal!
mehulkamdar";p="6532 wrote: Dev,
I used to be a dog judge and amateur dog trainer and this whole notion of "powerful" dogs etc simply does not cut it with me as far as my experience is concerned. I had a Rottweiler mix dog whom I couldn;t bring to the US because of his size and who is now with my former neighbours in Chennai, and, Mark's father had a beautiful Rottweiler who died very recently. They are fine dogs and do get one if you want one. The fact simply is that the dog would be more "show than go" and a determined man would be able to kill it very easily with a large knife. There is a reason why Rottweilers are used more by the scatterbrained film types as guard dogs while police forces use more lithe breeds like Dobermann Pinschers, German Shepherds or Belgian Shepherds around the world. A dog that is needed for guard duties should be lithe enough to get away from someone who wants to kill it with a knife or whatever. A slow, lumbering breed like a Rottweiler, English Mastiff etc just can't do it because they are too big and heavy. A large dog also offers more body area for a man with a knife to stab in a confrontation
I think Stunngun has some very wise words here. I have found mongrels of all kinds to be absolutely intelligent dogs and they seem to have a kind of "native intelligence" that pedigreed dogs just don't seem to have. A very good friend whose brother owns a farm outside Bangalore had several dogs as protection and on one occasion thieves managed to throw poisoned meat into his compound. Every single one of his pedigreed dogs ate the meat and died. A sole mongrel refised it and alerted the man - he came out with a shotgun and shot one of the intruders who died a short distance away while the others fled. This happened in the 1970s and I have heard of several lesser incidents where mongrels have performed far more creditably than any pedigreed dog that anyone can mention.
Though this is OT now, and it has been becoming OT in a sense, let me give you my reasons for suggesting mongrels instead of pedigreed dogs:
1. Most pedigreed dogs in India are heavily inbred and tend to die early. Many also have problems with hip dysplasia and deafness, and they also age very early, often at 5 or 6. I have seen many pedigreed pups with undershot jaws and other birth defects over the years but have never seen a single mongrel with these problems. If a dog is going to guard you, then it has to be healthy and capable of warning if anything goes wrong, to begin with
2. There is the problem of intelligence which I have told you about. I do think that some of the smaller breeds display a remarkable intelligence - Dachshunds and Lhasa Apsos being prime in my list. Neither is going to be any good as a guard dog
3. If you get a mongrel, get it neutered for one thing. Many years ago, when Markus Wolfwho recently died as Chief of the East German Stasi wanted to kidnap an East German agent who had defected to the West, managed to render a whole pack of guard dogs in West Germany completely ineffective by releasing a Dachshund b**ch in heat near them. Western intelligence looked like such idiots at the time - the agent was kidnapped by the East Germans and imprisoned until the fall of the Berlin Wall - thatthey still do not talk about it these days. I remember being completely unable to stop laughing for a long time at the thought of several German shepherd dogs getting desperate over a Dachshund b**ch released by the East Germans in their midst.
4. There are two instincts that could be used to train a dog to be a guard dog. One is the pack instinct, the instinct that drives the dog to consider the family that it is with as it's own and protect them. The other is the territorial instinct which has it protesting the intrusion of anyone who is "not a part of the family" on the property that it regards as it's own. Get a pup or a young dog upto a year old, let it run around the houmse and garden or the apartment as the case may be, and make sure that it knows exactly who is a part of the family and who isn't. Personally, my dogs have always been fed by hand by a member of the family and will not eat anything offered by an outsider. I train them to do this from a young age so that there is no possibility of their being poisoned. The flip side of this is that none of my dogs could be left with someone from outside the family and I had to get my Jimmy whom I left behind to slowly get him accustomed to my father's friend and my former neighbour who has him now
5. Don't hire a professional trainer. Dogs are pack animals and they usually accept only one person as an "alpha male." Get some Cesare Milan videos and learn basic tricks or buy a book and read it before you start training a dog. Also, DON'T start too early. I prefer a dog to start training when it is 9 months old or older. They are very intelligent animals (even when theya re pedigrees, though, as I have experienced, mongrels are definitely more intelligent than pedigrees are) and after a while you will begin to bond with your dog when you get one and learn as much about it as it would about you
As I have posted before on this thread, work out a routine to tackle intrusions. You know the layout of your home and get yourself a drill in case you aree at home when an intrusion takes place and one when you may be away. If it is a large home, get yourself two dogs. Have a burglar alarm, especially the type that calls your cell phone and that of your wife's and others who may live with you if this hapens when you are away. If I remember right, Allwyn used to build gun safes and export them from India but I don't know if the company is still in existence. Godrej may be doing it as well, no idea. If you get a Storwell from Godrej, then get it attached to the floor with cement and bricks by a mason and have a separate alarm attached to it. Sadly, once thieves have robbed your home, the possibility is that they may try again after some time as they know what you have there.
Best wishes,
Mehul
I think you are talking about the Indian "Bhutia" breed (I think that's the name) of hill dogs. They can be found in Garhwal as well... and they do have a fierce reputation. I believe the local shepherds use them to guard sheep...dev";p="6736 wrote:By the way have you heard about Naga dogs? They look street dogs but are more fierce, have curling tails and a great survival instinct. You would have to if you were a dog in Nagaland. .
mehul,mehulkamdar";p="6532 wrote: Dev,
I used to be a dog judge and amateur dog trainer and this whole notion of "powerful" dogs etc simply does not cut it with me as far as my experience is concerned. I had a Rottweiler mix dog whom I couldn;t bring to the US because of his size and who is now with my former neighbours in Chennai, and, Mark's father had a beautiful Rottweiler who died very recently. They are fine dogs and do get one if you want one. The fact simply is that the dog would be more "show than go" and a determined man would be able to kill it very easily with a large knife. There is a reason why Rottweilers are used more by the scatterbrained film types as guard dogs while police forces use more lithe breeds like Dobermann Pinschers, German Shepherds or Belgian Shepherds around the world. A dog that is needed for guard duties should be lithe enough to get away from someone who wants to kill it with a knife or whatever. A slow, lumbering breed like a Rottweiler, English Mastiff etc just can't do it because they are too big and heavy. A large dog also offers more body area for a man with a knife to stab in a confrontation
I think Stunngun has some very wise words here. I have found mongrels of all kinds to be absolutely intelligent dogs and they seem to have a kind of "native intelligence" that pedigreed dogs just don't seem to have. A very good friend whose brother owns a farm outside Bangalore had several dogs as protection and on one occasion thieves managed to throw poisoned meat into his compound. Every single one of his pedigreed dogs ate the meat and died. A sole mongrel refised it and alerted the man - he came out with a shotgun and shot one of the intruders who died a short distance away while the others fled. This happened in the 1970s and I have heard of several lesser incidents where mongrels have performed far more creditably than any pedigreed dog that anyone can mention.
Though this is OT now, and it has been becoming OT in a sense, let me give you my reasons for suggesting mongrels instead of pedigreed dogs:
1. Most pedigreed dogs in India are heavily inbred and tend to die early. Many also have problems with hip dysplasia and deafness, and they also age very early, often at 5 or 6. I have seen many pedigreed pups with undershot jaws and other birth defects over the years but have never seen a single mongrel with these problems. If a dog is going to guard you, then it has to be healthy and capable of warning if anything goes wrong, to begin with
2. There is the problem of intelligence which I have told you about. I do think that some of the smaller breeds display a remarkable intelligence - Dachshunds and Lhasa Apsos being prime in my list. Neither is going to be any good as a guard dog
3. If you get a mongrel, get it neutered for one thing. Many years ago, when Markus Wolfwho recently died as Chief of the East German Stasi wanted to kidnap an East German agent who had defected to the West, managed to render a whole pack of guard dogs in West Germany completely ineffective by releasing a Dachshund b**ch in heat near them. Western intelligence looked like such idiots at the time - the agent was kidnapped by the East Germans and imprisoned until the fall of the Berlin Wall - thatthey still do not talk about it these days. I remember being completely unable to stop laughing for a long time at the thought of several German shepherd dogs getting desperate over a Dachshund b**ch released by the East Germans in their midst.
4. There are two instincts that could be used to train a dog to be a guard dog. One is the pack instinct, the instinct that drives the dog to consider the family that it is with as it's own and protect them. The other is the territorial instinct which has it protesting the intrusion of anyone who is "not a part of the family" on the property that it regards as it's own. Get a pup or a young dog upto a year old, let it run around the houmse and garden or the apartment as the case may be, and make sure that it knows exactly who is a part of the family and who isn't. Personally, my dogs have always been fed by hand by a member of the family and will not eat anything offered by an outsider. I train them to do this from a young age so that there is no possibility of their being poisoned. The flip side of this is that none of my dogs could be left with someone from outside the family and I had to get my Jimmy whom I left behind to slowly get him accustomed to my father's friend and my former neighbour who has him now
5. Don't hire a professional trainer. Dogs are pack animals and they usually accept only one person as an "alpha male." Get some Cesare Milan videos and learn basic tricks or buy a book and read it before you start training a dog. Also, DON'T start too early. I prefer a dog to start training when it is 9 months old or older. They are very intelligent animals (even when theya re pedigrees, though, as I have experienced, mongrels are definitely more intelligent than pedigrees are) and after a while you will begin to bond with your dog when you get one and learn as much about it as it would about you
As I have posted before on this thread, work out a routine to tackle intrusions. You know the layout of your home and get yourself a drill in case you aree at home when an intrusion takes place and one when you may be away. If it is a large home, get yourself two dogs. Have a burglar alarm, especially the type that calls your cell phone and that of your wife's and others who may live with you if this hapens when you are away. If I remember right, Allwyn used to build gun safes and export them from India but I don't know if the company is still in existence. Godrej may be doing it as well, no idea. If you get a Storwell from Godrej, then get it attached to the floor with cement and bricks by a mason and have a separate alarm attached to it. Sadly, once thieves have robbed your home, the possibility is that they may try again after some time as they know what you have there.
Best wishes,
Mehul
penpusher";p="6761 wrote:One of the new comers turned to me and asked if had a dog. For me dogs are for gaurd duty so I told the fellow that there was no need for me to keep dogs as we had policemen to do their job.What I did not know was that the boys father was in the police.We never talked after that.
mundaire";p="6752 wrote:I think you are talking about the Indian "Bhutia" breed (I think that's the name) of hill dogs. They can be found in Garhwal as well... and they do have a fierce reputation. I believe the local shepherds use them to guard sheep...dev";p="6736 wrote:By the way have you heard about Naga dogs? They look street dogs but are more fierce, have curling tails and a great survival instinct. You would have to if you were a dog in Nagaland. .
I have little knowledge on the subject... mostly second hand stuff, heard from all manner of people - as always would be interested to learn more...
Cheers!
Abhijeet