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Five Minute Dog by Personable Pets Dog Training
Quick, practical dog training tips in under 5 minutes—because training your dog shouldn’t take all day.
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With over 20 years of family dog training experience, this podcast delivers real-life advice you can actually use. From simple tips and clear explanations to common behavior scenarios, we’ll help you understand why your dog does what he does—and what to do about it.
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Five Minute Dog by Personable Pets Dog Training
#210 Beyond the Bite: Dogs and Fatal Attacks
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Welcome to the 5-Minute Dog, the mini-podcast that delivers practical training advice in less than 5 minutes. You know, every so often we hear those tragic stories where a dog attack turns deadly and it makes you wonder are some breeds naturally riskier? Do certain dogs have a tendency to fight longer or to keep going once they start? Think about the Rhodesian Ridgeback. Originally they were bred in Africa to help hold lions at bay. That doesn't mean a Ridgeback today is destined to fight to the death, but it does remind us that breeding history does leave fingerprints. And here's where it gets tricky.
Speaker 1:Breeding doesn't just create the dog in front of us. It reflects the priorities of the breeder, and some large dog breeders are still emphasizing stamina and intensity and drive. You know traits that are useful for certain working roles, but those same traits may not always line up with what makes a safe, reliable family pet. Traits may not always line up with what makes a safe, reliable family pet, but meanwhile other breeders carefully select for softer, family-friendly temperaments. This is why we can't just say that labs are safe and Ridgebacks are risky.
Speaker 1:A lab bred for that high-intensity field trial can be just as over-the-top as a rich back bred for gardening, and any large dog, regardless of breed, has the potential to do serious harm if something goes wrong. What we do know from research is that larger, stronger breeds are overrepresented in serious bite statistics, but that doesn't prove that they're more aggressive. It just highlights a simple truth the bigger the dog, the bigger the potential consequences if something goes wrong. So maybe the better question isn't which breeds fight longer, but are breeders and owners making choices that set dogs up to be appropriate household pets? You know genetics give us tendencies, but environment and management and training can determine whether those tendencies ever become a problem.