| What's
Schutzhund?
The
Germans call it "hundesport", dog sport. For generations, people from Europe
and North America have been drawn into this unique idea of participating
in an active sport with a dog. Schutzhund offers this in a way that no
other sport can. It is outdoors. It is physical. It is mental. The demands
are great, but the sport also offers competition and new friendships. In
short, it is what all recreational sports should first be: good exercise,
fun and full of rewards. Schutzhund started at the beginning of this
century as a test for working dogs.
Its
initial purpose was to determine which dogs could be used for breeding
and which had true working ability. The growing demand for working dogs
made more sophisticated tests and training necessary. These dogs were needed
for police training, border patrol, customs, military and herding. As these
tests evolved, more people participated just for the sheer enjoyment of
seeing if their personal dogs could be trained as effectively as these
"professional dogs". Now, over sixty years after the first formal Schutzhund
rules were introduced, tens of thousands of people participate in the sport
each year.
Schutzhund
tests three specific areas of a dog's training and behavior.
| The
first, tracking, requires the dog to track footsteps over mixed terrain,
change direction and show absolute accuracy and commitment to finding the
track. It must also find dropped articles and indicate their locations
to the handler. Often this is done under less than ideal circumstances
with difficult cover, bad weather conditions and an aged track. |
Dan laying
a SchH I track in
Denver,
Colorado in 80 mph winds.
|
Many
find tracking to be the most satisfying experience in training, when only
the handler and dog are working together. It is certainly the most peaceful
part of Schutzhund.
|
The
second phase is obedience.
Those
who are familiar with AKC obedience will feel more comfortable in this
area, as many of the exercises are similar to those in Open and Utility.
There is heeling, both on and off lead. The sit, down and stand are also
done, except when the dog is moving.
But
Schutzhund applies its own style to this work. Instead of a forty foot
ring, the handler and dog work on a soccer sized trial field. Some exercises
require the dog to work under the noise of a firing gun. |
In addition
to the normal dumbbell retrieval, the dog must retrieve over a one meter
jump and a six foot wall. Down stays and a long send away conclude the
test.
The
final test is the most misunderstood by the general public. This is protection.
The most important point to understand when watching a protection routine,
is the relationship between dog and handler.
The
dog must never bite the trial helper, unless either the dog or the handler
is attacked. Then it must attack fully and without hesitation. But here
the real difference becomes apparent. The dog must stop biting on the command
of the handler and guard the trial helper without further aggression.
Often
people confuse Schutzhund protection training with police dog or personal
protection work. Only the Schutzhund dog is capable of the feats of never
being aggressive except under those specific situations it is trained to
face, and even then it must always be under the absolute control of the
handler.
| The
above tests are difficult enough, but to make it even more demanding, they
all happen in one day during competitions that are held all over the country.
These trials are held by local clubs or in regional and national championships.
Each dog is judged by a complex point system that then determines the winner
of the trial.
When
a dog successfully completes the first trial, it is awarded a title of
Schutzhund I. It can then progress to Schutzhund II and, the ultimate,
Schutzhund III. |
Bosco
intercepts the
attack
out of the blind.
|
Each
level makes ever greater demands on the dog and training in all three areas.
Cynthia
and Bella report to the
judge
at the start of the competition.
|
Any
Schutzhunder will tell you that a high scoring Schutzhund III dog is the
ultimate working dog: one in a thousand of all working dogs.
In
addition to the Schutzhund I, II and III titles, other titles in advanced
tracking, temperament tests, police training and agility work are awarded.
Today,
Schutzhund is more than the small group that started in Germany so long
ago. |
Its
organizations have several hundred thousand members, scattered across Europe,
North America and several other continents. |