home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQS);faqs.247
-
-
-
- There are many organizations in the US that provide guide dogs for
- blind people. In the East it's The Seeing Eye (Morristown, NJ), and
- in the West it's Guide Dogs for the Blind (San Rafael, CA). There is
- Leader Dogs for the Blind in the Michigan area. Guide Dogs of the
- Desert is a Southern California-based group. [more detailed
- addresses?]
-
- Dogs guiding the blind must not only be able to guide their owner
- through traffic, obstacles, etc, but also must ignore other people,
- dogs, and distractions. They are, by law in most places, allowed to
- enter any building or establishment.
-
- 1. Guide Dogs for the Blind [US]
-
- Guide Dogs got started in 1942. It costs them about $40,000 per dog.
- This reflects how much money they get in donations: to arrive at this
- figure they take their total yearly operating costs and divide it by
- the number of successful dogs they produce.
-
- The breeds used by Guide Dogs are black and yellow Labs, Golden
- Retriever, and German Shepherd. The males and females used for
- breeding live in homes as regular "pets." They go back to Guide Dogs
- to be bred and the females go back when they're in season even if they
- aren't going to be bred. The females are bred once a year. The
- females also go back to whelp and raise their puppies in the Guide Dog
- kennels. All of these breeders live in homes within a 50 mile radius
- of Guide Dogs.
-
- Families who raise the puppies simply train them in basic dog
- obedience, and stress lots of socialization and good manners. For
- example, if you go to a dog show, you are likely to see several such
- puppies there, learning to take it all in stride. The dogs go back
- for their formal training when they're about 1.5 years old, although
- they can go back as young as 1.0 year old.
-
- Children are preferred as puppy raisers, hence the coordination with
- 4-H. Interestingly enough, the puppies raised by kids are more likely
- to make it through the formal guide dog training. The difference is
- not drastic, but is "significant."
-
- When dogs go back for their training they're carefully screened for
- any hip abnormalities. If the hips aren't very good they're
- immediately "retired." The formal training takes about 6 months.
- During this time they live in the kennels at Guide Dogs. During their
- formal training they get a letter grade (A-F) each week. Dogs can
- fail for a variety of reasons. As you might guess, some dogs don't
- transition well from living in a puppy raiser's home to living in the
- kennels and just get stressed out and fail. The puppy raiser gets the
- option of keeping a dog that failed. If the puppy raiser can't keep
- the dog they can place it in a home. The puppy raiser can also let
- Guide Dogs place the dog; the waiting list is at least 3 years long.
-
- Before a guide dog is given to a blind person the blind person must
- attend training at Guide Dogs. This training is 4 weeks long. During
- this time the blind person lives in the dorms at Guide Dogs. There
- are about 12 people in each 4-week class. The first week of training
- is without the dog. During the last week of training they make field
- trips to downtown San Francisco. People coming back to get a
- replacement dog take a two week "refresher" class. A graduation
- ceremony is held on Saturday at 1pm, every 4 weeks at Guide Dogs for
- the Blind in San Rafael. The puppy raisers come to the graduation
- ceremony and each puppy raiser formally presents the guide dog they
- raised to the blind person. (As you can imagine, it's a rather
- tearful ceremony.) The public is welcome to come to the graduations;
- they are held outdoors and attire is casual. After the graduation
- ceremony there is a demonstration of a working guide dog and tours of
- the kennels and facilities.
-
- Guide Dogs for the Blind is a completely non-profit organization and
- survives entirely on donations. The blind people don't pay any money
- for the guide dog. The guide dog is still owned by Guide Dogs while
- the blind person has it; there have been occasional cases where the
- blind person just wasn't equipped or prepared to have a dog and the
- dog is returned to Guide Dogs. Guide Dogs makes a yearly visit with
- each blind person that has one of their dogs to check on the dog's
- health, behavior, etc.
-
- 2. Statens Hundskola [Sweden]
-
- In Sweden (Statens Hundskola) they screen the dogs at least twice, the
- first time just before sexual maturity to determine if a male dog will
- be neutered. Their main problem is that so many dogs wind up
- unsuitable, so they are starting an education programme for the people
- who take care of the puppies.
-
- [I envision sections on Seeing Eye, UK Guide dogs, etc, being added.]
-
- 3. References
-
- Pfaffenberger, Clarence J. _The new knowledge of dog behavior_.
- Foreword by J. P. Scott. Consultant on genetics: Benson E. Ginsburg.
- New York, Howell Book House, 1963.
- Gives an excellent history of how Guide Dogs was started, and has
- other interesting information.
-
- Pfaffenberger, Clarence J., et al., with the editorial assistance of
- Sarah F. Scott. _Guide Dogs for the Blind, Their Selection,
- Development, and Training_. Amsterdam; New York: Elsevier Scientific
- Pub. Co.; distributors for the U.S. and Canada, Elsevier/North
- Holland, 1976.
- Many specific details on the genetics, training, 4-H project
- coordination, and so forth. Includes a history of the organization.
-
- Harrington, Paula. _Looking ahead: Guide Dogs for the Blind_. 1st ed.
- San Rafael, CA: Guide Dogs for the Blind, c1990.
- This one is sort of a "coffee table" book; lots of nice color
- photographs, and it covers the history of Guide Dogs, the training
- (both for the dog and the blind person), the 4-H puppy raisers, and
- lots of other stuff.
-
-
- B. Hearing and Signal Dogs.
-
- Other dogs are trained to assist deaf people. They alert their owner
- to a variety of sounds, usually by coming up to the person and going
- back to the source of the sound. They will signal on door bell and
- knocking, phones, smoke alarms, crying babies and much more. They are
- licensed as are guide dogs and are to be permitted anywhere,
- although since they are not as widely recognized, their owners often
- have to display their permit.
-
- There are several organizations that train hearing dogs; CCI (below)
- is one of them. Others (I cannot vouch for the accuracy of the
- addresses except where noted):
-
- * American Humane Association, 5351 S. Roslyn Street, Englewood,
- Colorado 80111. (303-779-1400.
- * Audio Dogs, 27 Crescent Street, Brooklyn, New York 11208.
- 212-827-2792.
- * Dogs for the Deaf, Applegate Behavior Station, 13260 Highway 238,
- Jacksonville, Oregon 97530. 503-899-7177.
- * Guide Dog Foundation, 371 Jericho Turnpike, Smithtown, New York
- 11787. 516-265-2121.
- * Hearing Dog, Inc., Agnes McGrath, Director; 5901 E. 89 Ave.,
- Henderson, Colorado 80640. 303-287-3277 (voice/tty).
- * NEADS (New England Assistance Dog Service), P.O. Box 213, West
- Boylston, Massachusetts 01583. 508-835-3304 (TT/voice). Verified
- May '92.
- * San Francisco SPCA, Hearing Dog Program, 2500 16th Street, San
- Francisco, CA 94103. 415-554-3020. Verified March '92.
-
- An organization that teaches deaf people to train their own dogs:
-
- * Handi-Dogs, Inc., PO Box 12563, Tucson, Arizona 85732. 602-326-3412
- or 602-325-6466.
-
-
- C. Canine Companions for Independence.
-
- CCI was founded in 1975. They estimate that each of their dogs takes
- about $20,000 to train, a cost covered by donations and volunteer
- work. It is a national-wide organization with many regional chapters.
-
- National Headquarters NW Regional Center
- 4350 Occidental Road 1215 Sebastopol Road
- P.O. Box 446 Santa Rosa, CA 95407-6834
- Santa Rosa, CA 95402-0446 707-579-1985 V/TDD
- 702-528-0830 V/TDD
-
- SW Regional Center SE Regional Center
- P.O. Box 8247 P.O. Box 547511
- Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067-8247 Orlando, FL 32854-7511
- 619-756-1012 V/TDD 407-682-2535 V/TDD
-
- NC Regional Center NE Regional Center
- 4989 State Route 37 East P.O. Box 205
- Delaware, OH 43015-9682 Farmingdale, NY 11735-0205
- 614-548-4447 V/TDD 516-694-6938 V/TDD
-
- This organization is involved in training dogs to assist handicapped
- people. They train signal dogs for the deaf, and dogs for physically
- disabled or developmentally disabled persons.
-
- Canine Companions for Independence has provided highly skilled
- assistance dogs for people with disabilities since 1975. CCI started
- as a small, at-home organization and has grown into a dynamic
- non-profit agency with five regional centers nationwide.
-
- A Canine Companion's specialized training starts in a volunteer puppy
- raiser's home. The puppy raiser is responsible for the young dog's
- care, socialization, and the teaching of basic commands. At 1.5 years
- of age, the dog is returned to a CCI regional training center for
- eight months of advanced training by a professional CCI instructor.
- The dog is then ready for an intensive two-to-three week training camp
- where its new owner learns to work with a fully trained dog.
-
- It costs more than US$20,000 to breed, raise, and train each Canine
- Companion, yet recipients pay only a US$25 application fee and US$100
- for training seminar supplies. The dog is provided completely free of
- charge. CCI depends entirely on donations; it does not receive
- government funds. CCI also relies heavily on the dedication of its
- many volunteers, who play a vital role in CCI's mission to provide
- exceptional dogs for exceptional people.
-
- The breeds CCI uses for service and social dogs are black and yellow
- Labs, Golden Retrievers, German Shepherds, and Lab/Golden Retriever
- mix. CCI is moving away from using German Shepherds for two reasons:
- first, a lot of the public view (and fear) German Shepherds as
- "police" or "guard" dogs, and second, German Shepherds bond very
- strongly to people and the program is difficult on them because first
- they form a strong bond to their puppy raiser, then to their trainer
- when they go back to CCI, and then to their eventual handicapped
- owner. For signal dogs they use Corgis and Border Collies.
-
- CCI will work with people in need of assistance to determine if a
- properly trained dog can provide that assistance. Dogs can be taught
- to retrieve a variety of things -- even to distinguish between
- specific items -- and to manipulate a variety of objects. Monkeys
- have been tried for this purpose, as they are more dexterous.
- However, they are not as reliably trainable and are very expensive, so
- dogs present a much more practical alternative. Given some
- extensions, such as rope handles on doors and light switches, dogs can
- give a disabled person complete mobility within her or his home.
-
- CCI finds and trains a variety of dogs for different forms of
- assistance: hearing dogs, physically disabled assistant dogs, even as
- therapy dogs. They are all neutered, as with guide dogs. People who
- are to receive one of the dogs are required to attend a two-week
- seminar to learn how to communicate and care for their assistance. As
- needed, the people and their dogs are provided with permits that
- identify the dogs as licensed canine companions -- this is enough to
- gain entry into most places, as with the more well-known Seeing Eye
- dogs.
-
-
- |D. Therapy Dogs.
-
- |Dogs are quite often used in therapy. This ranges from visiting
- |hospitalized people to being a companion dog for mentally handicapped
- |or disturbed persons. There are a variety of groups that train
- |therapy dogs, some local and some national. Some use the AKC Canine
- |Good Citizen test to choose suitable dogs, others have devised their
- |own Temperament Tests.
-
- |A national organization that dispenses information about therapy dogs
- |is the Delta Society, PO Box 1080, Renton, WA 98057, (206)226-7357.
-
- |In addition many local humane societies, breed clubs, and obedience
- |clubs do some hospital visitation.
-
-
- E. Search and Rescue Dogs.
-
- SAR comprises a large variety of abilities, some of which are covered
- separately below. SAR varies by locale: searching for victims in
- rubble (avalanches or collapsed buildings) is different from searching
- wilderness/forest areas for a missing person. SAR is often linked
- with local law enforcement, as SAR dogs can trail escaped convicts or
- suspects from a crime scene.
-
- 1. Where to get started
-
- It is best to affiliate with a reputable SAR organization. You may
- even wish to join the reserves unit with your local law enforcement --
- this entitles you to insurance protection, for example. Be picky
- about finding a professional organization to join: there are many
- wannabe clubs out there that would really just get in the way of an
- actual SAR effort, and there is variability even with law-enforcement
- groups.
-
- There are some national groups and many states have their own
- organizations (e.g., California's CARDA -- CAlifornia Rescue Dog
- Association, WOOF -- Wilderness Finders, Inc., SSD -- Sierra Search
- Dogs). An additional benefit is being able to learn from people
- who've been at this for a long time: no book or self-training will
- ever give you the valuable insights you can gain this way. These
- types of organization will have their own certification and testing
- processes. For example, WOOF requires dogs and handlers to be dual
- certified -- wilderness AND disaster SAR.
-
- A professional organization should have law enforcement liasons (or
- even be part of the police force) as any search, even for a missing
- person, has the potential for turning into a hunt for a felon. Some
- organizations are put together from law enforcement reserve officers,
- sometimes active duty officers. Others simply work closely with local
- law enforcement. Cooperation for the protection of everyone is
- essential.
-
- Any dog can detect scent. Some are individually better at it than
- others. Some breeds (especially the hounds) have been bred so that as
- a class, they contain many more talented individuals. A dog's
- conformation, structure and temperament will all affect its talent at
- tracking or trailing. But the breed doesn't really matter, except for
- serious and professional tracking. You can have fun with tracking on
- your own. All you have to do is train your dog to follow its nose.
- Some extremely practical information, whether or not you're serious
- about SAR, to get started with can be found in:
-
- Button, Lue. _Practical Scent Dog Training_. Alpine Publications,
- Inc. 214 19th St. SE, Loveland, CO 80537. 1990. ISBN: 0-931866-47-2.
- A step-by-step practical training guide for air scent, evidence
- search, disaster search and the AKC tracking test. Starts with
- young puppies. Well illustrated and methods extensively tested at
- Los Alamos' Mountain Canine Corps.
-
- 2. Tracking and Trailing
-
- There are two major ways to follow the trail of a person, although
- they're really on two ends of a continuum. _Tracking_ is the process
- where the dog follows the person's exact path. _Trailing_ is the
- process where the dog follows the person's scent, which may or may not
- approximate the path the person took because of factors affecting the
- dispersal of scent such as wind and temperature. Contrary to popular
- opinion, water does not disrupt a tracking or trailing dog, the dog
- will simply cast around for your trail on the other side. In
- addition, dogs can locate corpses in the water, so the theory that
- water does not hold scent does not, well, hold water. Dogs can even
- trail people in cars, from the scent that blows out of the window or
- through the vents of the car.
-
- Some common terminology: A Track Solid dog follows a track, and
- usually the newest. A Track Sure dog will follow the track associated
- with the scent he started with, and will not follow a track laid by a
- different person as long as the second track was laid at a different
- time. A Track Clean Dog will follow the correct trail even if it
- crosses other trails laid at the same time. For example, for disaster
- work (e.g., finding victims in rubble), dogs lead their handlers
- towards any human scent from the rubble; this is "tracking solid." A
- Bloodhound, given a scent article, will "track clean," finding that
- same individual regardless of whatever crosses the track.
-
- To start trailing a specific individual, the dog needs an
- uncontaminated scent article. Best items are underwear, T-shirts, or
- something that the person has directly handled. The scent article is
- just as much evidence as the "smoking gun" is, unfortunately, many
- people (including law enforcement folks) are still unaware of how to
- use scent as evidence and often handle, and thus contaminate,
- potential scent articles. Dogs can still get around this by doing the
- "missing member" search: the dog takes note of which scent on the
- article is not immediately present and searches for that person.
-
- Traditionally, people think of SAR dogs hunting through forest or
- wilderness for lost hikers or children. While this is still quite
- true, SAR dogs also find escaped prisoners, lost [mentally impaired]
- patients, lost children in the city or the suburbs, suspects fleeing a
- crime scene. As a result, urban SAR is rapidly growing.
-
- Bloodhounds are by far the best for performing difficult and long
- trails. They are large (100-120 lbs), capable of covering great
- distance, and their facial structure (loose skin) allows them to cup
- and catch even the faintest scent. Their stubborn and patient
- temperament allows them to stick with trails that are miles long.
- Bloodhounds were originally bred for large prey, and have been used to
- track people since about the 16th century. For smaller game, other
- hounds were developed, with shorter legs and smaller size. These type
- of hounds cannot cover trails as old or as long as the Bloodhound.
-
- Labradors and German Shepherds are often used in tracking. They do
- not do as well with older or longer trails, but are more than capable
- of following trails within their limitations. Also because they can
- work off leash better than the Bloodhound can, they can work more
- rapidly if there is a need for haste.
-
- 3. Disaster search
-
- Some SAR dogs are trained to search through rubble for people. In
- this scenario, the dog is not finding a specific person, as is the
- case with tracking and trailing. The dog is looking for any human
- scent. Avalanches, collapsed buildings, airplane and train crashes
- are all examples of sites where these kind of dogs are employed. Most
- often, German Shepherds or Labradors are used for this kind of work:
- these dogs work well off leash (which Bloodhounds do not) and are
- suitably agile for scrambling around in the debris (which Bloodhounds
- are not).
-
- 4. Cadaver search
-
- Dogs can be trained to find cadavers, new or old. Some dogs are
- employed on archeological digs to help locate old graves. Other dogs
- are used by law enforcement to find recently dead people, or to
- collect all the bones found in an area. Others find drowning victims.
- This is a rapidly expanding field, with new methods of training
- currently being developed.
-
- 4. Related testing
-
- Many SAR organizations will put together mock disaster sites and
- evaluate dogs sent over the sites. There are no standards or anything
- like that except within a particular organization.
-
- For tracking and trailing, AKC and ABC (American Bloodhound Club) have
- a series of titles in tracking (TD, TDX) and trailing (MT, MTX). ABC
- is negotiating with the AKC to add the trailing titles to its standard
- set.
-
- 5. References
-
- Bryson, Sandy. _Search Dog Training_. Third printing. Boxwood
- Press, 183 Ocean View Blvd., Pacific Grove, CA 93950. 1991 (c 1984).
- ISBN: 0-910286-94-9.
- A well organized, comprehensive discussion of search dog training.
- Includes practical tips, discussion of search and rescue and the law
- and many other topics.
-
- Davis, L. Wilson. _Go Find! Training Your Dog to Track_. Ninth
- printing, 1984. Howell Book House, Inc., New York. c1974.
- ISBN: 0-87605-550-1 (hardcover).
- Blurb: "Major L. Wilson Davis is America's recognized authority on
- Tracking -- named in September 1973 to the Obedience Advisory
- Committee of the AKC as its official consultant on Tracking and
- scent training for dogs. This official status follows upon decades
- of recognized achievement in these phases of Obedience training.
- Following distinguished service with the K-9 Corps during WWII, he
- has been active in the Governmnent's program of using trained
- tracking dogs for the recovery of detonated missile parts in missile
- experimentation. Major Davis was an AKC licensed judge for all
- classes of Obedience. He is presently training director of the
- famous Oriole Dog Training Club of Baltimore. He organized and
- headed the Baltimor City K-9 Corps, one of the finest in the
- country, and is often asked to lecture and advise police departments
- on the use of tracking dogs in law enforcement. Major Davis is a
- recipient of the Quaker Oats Distinguished Service Award for his
- dedicated contributions to dog training."
-
- Pearsall, Milo D. and Hugo Verbruggen, MD. _Scent: Training to Track,
- Search, and Rescue_. Alpine Publications, Inc., Colorado. 1982.
- ISBN: 0-931-866-11-1.
- Blurb: "The authors first look at the scientific qualities of scent
- -- what and how dogs smell and how environmental factors affect the
- track. Then they use this background as a basis for training.
- Topics include the science of scent, kindergarden puppy tracking,
- tracking equipment, tracking tests, training to search, search and
- track, search and find, search and rescue, trail companion, scent
- and the law enforcement agency, first aid on the trail and much more."
-
- Tolhurst, William D. with Lena F. Reed. _Manhunters! Hounds of the
- Big T_. Hound Dog Press, 10705 Woodland Avenue, Puyallup, WA 98373.
- 1984. ISBN: 0-9617723-0-1 (hardcover).
- Tolhurst is a Search and Rescue volunteer in upstate New York. This
- book recounts his experiences using bloodhounds in trailing. Many
- fascinating stories. Tolhurst includes a section on training a dog
- to locate dead bodies.
-
-
- F. Water Rescue Dogs.
-
- [would love more history and references]
-
- There are some dogs trained for water rescue. Some dogs are trained
- to deliver flotation devices to the person, others actually drag the
- person out of the water. The latter is most often done by
- Newfoundlands, as they have the swimming ability and size to perform
- such feats.
-
- G. Narcotics and Evidence Dogs.
-
- This is commonly considered a subset of SAR. Dogs can be trained to
- alert (by barking, pointing, or pawing) on controlled substances such
- as drugs, agricultural products (e.g., in customs or at borders), and
- nearly anything else (for example, gunpowder (to detect guns), bomb
- materials, arson materials). Narcotic dogs are trained to search
- through buildings, cars, and luggage for their scent. They can be
- trained to alert on more than one kind of drug, and can do so despite
- ingenious efforts on the smuggler's part: dogs have been known to
- locate drugs concealed in gasoline, rotting food, skunk oil, and many
- other efforts. They can be trained to discriminate between large and
- small amounts: in fact some dogs are trained to whiff passing
- vehicles; if it alerts on one, that vehicle can be stopped later and
- searched without directly involving the dog and its handler.
-
- Evidence dogs are trained to search for items bearing human scent,
- sometimes specific human scent. They are utilized in crime scenes to
- find evidence thrown away by a suspect. Such evidence can be later
- used (if handled properly) by a Bloodhound to link the scent on it to
- a suspect: several such cases have been deemed admissible evidence in
- court.
-
- Dogs that are trained to alert on contraband items are almost always
- owned by law enforcement personnel, as these individuals can most
- easily legally obtain small quantities of contraband to train their
- dog with. In other words, average citizens do not train narcotic dogs
- because of legal difficulties. The dog's training record must record
- legal acquisition of contraband material used in training: if no such
- record exists, or the dog does not have a training record, then its
- evidence will not be accepted in court. (In other words, don't try
- this at home. Similar problems exist for the cadaver dog: dead human
- parts must be legally obtained.)
-
-
- H. Schutzhund.
-
- My thanks to Michael Sierchio for this section.
-
- 1. What is Schutzhund?
-
- Schutzhund is a German word meaning "protection dog". It refers to a
- sport that focuses on developing and evaluating those traits in dogs
- that make them more useful and happier companions to their owners.
-
- Schutzhund is a dog training and breeding regimen developed originally
- in the 20's by the Deutsches Shaeferhund Verein (German Shepherd Dog
- Club), or SV, in order to maintain the working ability of the breed.
- While the term Schutzhund means literally "protection dog", the
- training involves work equally in tracking, obedience and protection.
- In order to get a Schutzhund degree a dog must pass all three phases
- of the work. Also, a working title (at least a SchH I) is required for
- breed survey purposes, and in order to register an approved litter.
-
- The first Schutzhund trial was held in Germany in 1901 to emphasize
- the correct working temperament and ability in the German Shepherd
- breed. SV, the parent club of the breed, developed the Schutzhund
- test as a way of maintaining reliable dogs with traits suitable for
- breeding.
-
- Many countries and working dog organizations have also adopted
- Schutzhund as a sport and test of working performance. International
- rules have been established by the Verein fuer Deutsche Hundesport
- (VDH). The first SchH trial in the U.S. was held in California in
- 1970. In 1987 the U.S.A. alone sanctioned nearly 300 trials with a
- total entry of 1,800 dog/handler teams.
-
- Many breeds now participate in addition to GSDs. While there may be
- individual dogs of a particular breed that may be suitable for the
- work, the following are most consistently able to perform: GSDs,
- Belgian Malinois, Doberman Pinscher, Bouvier des Flandres, Rottweiler,
- Tervuren, Boxer, Giant Schnauzer, etc. Generally, these are larger
- working breeds with strong prey and defense drives, and temperaments
- suitable for the tasks of the training. Under current rules fighting
- breeds, such as Pit Bulls, Am Staffs, Bull Staffs, etc. are not
- eligible to participate.
-
- There are three major degrees awarded - SchH I, SchH II, and SchH III
- -- in order of increasing difficulty. SchH I (IPO I) is the
- apprentice test. A SchH III dog must demonstrate a high level of
- performance, ability and courage.
-
- The traits that make for a good Schutzhund candidate mostly are innate
- characteristics that must be bred for. Even among dogs bred out of
- Schutzhund bitches and dogs, a minority have the ability to reach even
- SchH I, and a small percentage will have the necessary drive,
- intelligence and hardness to achieve a Sch III title. In addition to
- breeding, early development is important. The young pup should not be
- subjected to strong corrections or experience being dominated by
- another dog, and all training and play should end on a positive note,
- with the pup "winning."
-
- The IPO (International Pruefungsordnung) rules, under the auspices of
- the FCI (Federation Internationale Cynologique), are similar to the
- Schutzhund rules and the trials are run in the same manner, with the
- exception that no evaluation of the fighting instincts, courage or
- hardness of an IPO entrant is performed during the protection phase of
- the trial.
-
- (The following information on degrees and requirements is from the
- United Schutzhund Clubs of America)
-
- Degree Min Age
-
- B Begleithunde 12 months
- (Companion Dog)
-
- FH Faehrtenhundpruefung 16 months
- (Advanced Tracking Dog Test)
-
- AD Ausdauerpruefung 16 months
- (Endurance Test)
-
- SchH A Schutzhund Examination A 18 months
- SchH I Schutzhund Examination I 18 months
- SchH II Schutzhund Examination II 19 months
- SchH III Schutzhund Examination III 20 months
-
- The maximum score in each of the three phases shall be 100 points.
- Therefore, the highest possible score in a trial is 300 points. A
- degree shall be awarded only if a dog achieves at least 70 points in
- Tracking and Obedience, and at least 80 points in Protection.
-