Ture Dutch Shepherd Detection Inside And Outside
Автор: lucask9com
Загружено: 2018-08-31
Просмотров: 4229
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We are Lucas K-9 – a company founded on a passion for performance dogs.
For those who want to find out more about how we handle and train our dogs, please be sure to check out the pictures and videos included on this website
If you are looking for police dogs searching for drugs or explosives, as well as sniffer (detecting) dogs or dual purpose patrol dogs, it is definitely the right place. For several years we have been providing pre-trained dogs to both police departments and the armed forces around the world. Our German Shepherds, Malinois and Labradors come from countries of Eastern Europe (Germany, Poland, Slovakia, Czech Republic and Russia)
Dutch Shepherds are loyal, reliable, alert, watchful, active, independent, intelligent, and intuitive
Obedience and discipline can be achieved with remarkable results. Gifted with a true shepherding temperament, they can supposedly work willingly together with their owners and can deal independently with any task they are assigned, being neither aggressive nor shy. They have a strong character and independence passed down from their herding ancestry
Originally the main function of the Dutch Shepherd was that of a shepherd’s dog in the countryside. From early times, the Dutch had an arable culture that was maintained by flocks of sheep. The dogs had to keep the flock away from the crops, which they did by patrolling the borders of the road and the fields. They also accompanied the flocks on their way to the common meadows, markets and ports.
At the farm, they kept the hens away from the kitchen garden, they herded the cows together for milking and pulled the milk carts. They also alerted the farmers when strangers entered the farmyard. Around 1900, sheep flocks had for the greater part disappeared in the Netherlands. The versatile skills of the Dutch Shepherd made him suitable for dog training, which was then starting to become popular. They were then trained and used as police dogs, as search and tracking dogs, and as guide dogs for the blind. They are, however, still capable of herding sheep.
The population of the Dutch Shepherd was greatly reduced due to modern farming techniques nearly eliminating the need for the breed as a sheep tender,[1] and in the 1940s and 1950s the breed was almost exterminated. The Second World War put a stop to breeding of most dog breeds in The Netherlands. Dogs died from lack of food, or were taken to Germany by the German military. Many bloodlines became extinct.
After the war, breeding began anew and new blood was needed to diversify the gene pool. Sometimes dogs of unknown origin were used. The Malinois was used for a time, but the practice was stopped because the buyers of those puppies did not have the same goals as the Dutch Breed Club.[1] In 1959, with permission from the breed club, a Laekenois dog was used to expand the rough-hair population. With time, the popularity of the breed grew and expanded into other countries.
Reliable, alert, intelligent, and intuitive, the Dutch Shepherd is loyal to his family. You’ll find this dog to be affectionate, happy and obedient – a wonderful combination in a dog. If you have other dogs in your household, no problem; this breed likes other animals.
To keep him happy, the Dutch Shepherd needs plenty of physical and mental stimulation. This is an independent breed, so the Dutch Shepherd can have a will of its own. Most of all, this dog loves attention and loves to learn.
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