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Issue 1) I thought we teach the dog that all of the toys are MINE. If we bring out resource guarding aren't we essentially saying "This is mine, but if you growl or guard it then you can keep it?" Doesn't this contradict the ownership of the toy rule?
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Remember we are discussing the training and conditioning of a working dog, not a pet.
We are discussing resource guarding from "other people", outside the dogs perceived pack. A working law enforcement dog should see itself as more confident and assertive than members outside its pack. It should always receive drive satisfaction with a win. We are not discussing guarding resources from you the owner of the dog.
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Issue 2) Out. If the dog learns he can defend his toy does this make teaching out harder? I can see a reply of "If you do it right then you won't have issues" coming along but can someone detail the correct way to do this?
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For a working
law enforcement dog, and remember these discussions are for developing working ability in a dog, not your average pet at home.
I feel in many dogs, if the dog learns to out to easily, then it has not reached drive intensity. For a working law enforcement dog for example we want drive intensity, not focus on waiting for an out. So yes the out is not easily trained into such a dog.
But we can teach the out in drive training having the pup release a tug on command, staying in drive then reinitiating the bite with a quick movement of the tug, then a win.
We can start this conditioning at a young age, making it all a game. Eventually due to repetition, it becomes a subconcious response in the dog. In sport dog such as Schutzhund, we are not developing high defence, resource guarding or fight drive.
However when building on defence and fight drive in an older dog for law enforcement, focus to win the challange becomes a lot stronger, and therefore the out harder to achieve.
Maybe others here have different opnions, I'd love to get an all round view on this subject. We can never stop learning