I agree with you 100% on this..some people cannot handle a chihuahua,,they certainly shouldnt get a large bite trained dog,,I have seen good dogs turn into terrible dogs just from the person that owns them,,they have no business owning a dog like that,or horse or whatever..I know a guy that has a K-9 dog,he is beautiful! but you go over there and the dog is a maniac because this guy has no clue on how to control him,he cannot even get the dog to sit..but he works for me awesome,he is not a bad dog at all,the problem is this guy has a very soft personality and the dog plays on that,the dog thinks he is the pack leader and the guy allows it to happen,even after being told many times how to fix the problem,he lives on a farm in the middle of nowhere so it works out ok for him,the dog runs the farm and does whatever he wants and the guy has a pretty dog to look at.These types of people are the reason IMO that 95% of the dogs are in rescues and shelters,most are not bad dogs,just weak owners,savingdogs said:So you have seen what I am talking about. I knew some folks who were very convincing that they knew what they were doing, but after working there a year, the facade wore quite thin and I grew tired of hiding the dogs and comforting the wounded, among other problems I had with that job. It was really a method of selling their puppies they were breeding for more money more than anything else.tortoise said:I had a bite trained dog that got unstable at about 3 years old. She was the fastest learner and environmentally sound, a really fun dog to work with. But bite trained + unstable/poor judgment is a disaster waiting to happen. I had her euthanized. Heartbreaking but the correct choice.savingdogs said:This has not been my experience with bite trained dogs. I think it depends on who selects and trains the dogs as much as finding a "clear headed" one. I don't think calling other peoples experience "misconceptions" is taking a very broad view. We all have different experiences and call it like we see it. I have respect you have known really good bite trained dogs. I have not. I have known the "reject" dogs as they were in rescue and also worked for people who said they trained top protection dogs and sold them to police departments. In both instances, the folks involved would have been better off choosing something else. JMHO. But it isn't a "misconception"......dogs are not created equal as you yourself said, they are not all "clear headed". What happens when someone chooses the wrong dog to train for this? THAT is what I've seen and it wasn't pretty.
I wish others in that situation would have the balls to do what is right, rather than pass them off as a "wash-out" to an unprepared rescue group.
There are VERY FEW dogs that can do bitework. Training a less able dog is more than irresponsible.
They did NOT work with GSDs however, they had a different breed. I personally have seen another, much better trainer with GSDs doing bite work and doing it correctly, love her dog, but it is so hard for the lay person to be able to tell between the first kind of trainer and the second one. Had I not been an employee of each one I would never have known there was such a difference.