Gulp! I can’t believe in just two more weeks almost all of these beauties will be heading to their new homes! We are still determining which pup will go where. There are a lot of amazing drives, and definitely some dominant attitudes in this litter, so it’s really important for us to get it right!
Below, in birth order are a couple of photos of each pup (taken with cell phone) and current weights as of today. I will hold off on commenting about their personalities for now as these are so far just observations in the litter, not as individuals. I know you’re all excited to find out which one is yours, but it’s still too soon to tell.
The M-litter kids are 3.5 weeks old and growing like crazy! Yesterday they had their first taste of puppy mush, which is simply softened puppy kibble enriched with a powdered puppy formula, plus some hot water to warm it up.
Unfortunately, my website software doesn’t allow me to upload the video directly, so I hope you’ll click on the link to see how they enjoyed it! Today they will have two feedings of mush, plus Mom’s milk. They will work up to 4 feedings per day, with their bed time snack becoming dry kibble by the time they’re 7 weeks. By the time they’re ready for their new homes, they are quite capable of eating dry kibble.
We are still screening applicants for the remaining three puppies. We’re not sure if it’s going to be three females or two females and one male. One applicant is more interested in drive over gender. So it’s too soon to tell yet. If you’re interested in a puppy from this or future litters, please complete our online Potential Puppy Owner Questionnaire
I try to keep this website upbeat and positive, but life is messy and sometimes bad things happen. The emotions in the early days of a litter are high; fed by exhaustion, aching muscles from hours of lying on the floor, sitting cross legged, doing puppy shakedowns, running at every little squeak or squeal, and making sure every puppy gets on the nipples. Last year I was having an emotional moment and wrote a post on Facebook. I liked it a lot. I won’t post it here, in case you’re the kind of person who isn’t keen on emotional stuff. Instead I’ll attach the link to the original post, you can click on it or not. This Box
Yesterday was one of those days when bad things happen. I wrote a longer post. A catharsis. I thought about my first post all day, sorting through what was important about the events of the day and how I felt about it. It never comes out the way I want when I actually put it down in text, but in the end, I was pretty pleased with the result. Should you wish to read it, you can find it here. This Box Revised
For those interested in a pup, at this time we have reserved all the males, with a waiting list, and we have one female reserved. There is a great deal of interest in this litter, it’s potentially the last time for this combination. If you’re serious, I wouldn’t wait to contact us.
Click on the images to see larger size. Thank you Lisa Guadet for helping us bring this beautiful brood in to the world, and capturing all of these special moments.
Two days early, but we managed to pull together to get ‘er done! đ Beginning early evening on Thursday, January 16, 2020 in to late afternoon on Friday, Momma Rogue delivered us a beautiful litter of 10. Six males and four females are all doing well after a full 24 hours.
This is a three-peat of our wonderful K & L-litters. Offspring from those two litters are already earning titles in working sports, including a few BH (temperament/obedience) titles and some advanced tracking titles. At least one of the K-litter will be competing in IGP1 (formerly Schutzhund and IPO) this winter. One of the L-litter is training in police work, specializing in bomb detection.
This combination has also produced some of the most amazing companions/family guardians for singles, couples, and families. The feedback we get from our buyers assures us, our breeding program is definitely on the right track.
There is a great deal of interest in this litter already, we are in the early stages of screening, and securing homes right now. Some are return buyers, pre-approved, and some are trusted friends known for many years. A few are new to us with background in police and k9 work. We have not promised the entire litter yet, but we are reserving some pups for those who’ve expressed interest in the recent past.
Temperament and drives are the deciding factors when selecting homes for any of our litters. If you’re on the reserve list it’s because we need to see (in the coming weeks) if any of this litter will be suitable for your needs. It doesn’t benefit anyone (least of all the puppy) if we can’t make a good match for your wants/needs. Please be patient with us as we make that determination.
If you wish daily updates and news, follow us on Instagram @LeidenschaftKennels, or check our Facebook page!
Happy New Year!!! We are so excited to begin 2020 with another fantastic litter of puppies due on the 18th! Rogue is in excellent shape and sporting a large and growing baby belly!
With puppies due soon, I am more conscious of all the potential hazards which could present accidents or injury to mom and/or the litter. Rogue reminded me of just such a hazard this morning. Read on.
As I was finishing morning chores with the dogs, I was
reminded by the distinctive âpeepâ of the Hairy Woodpecker that their suet
feeder needed filling. Itâs a great feeder, containing a basket within a wire
mesh to allow the small birds to feed and minimizing the gluttony of the Jays,
Starlings, and Grackles. I took the feeder inside to fill with the frozen suet
balls Sobeys makes in store. They are compact balls of ground beef fat with
tiny bits of meat and birdseed combined. The birds love them, and they are a
great value compared to commercially produced blocks.
Anyway, what does this have to do with raising dogs? As I
was securing the wire mesh feeder Rogue came by with her nose in the air. Normally
quite trustworthy with food, at 7+ weeks pregnant, sheâs looking for every
extra calorie she can get! As her nose skimmed the counter, I moved the Styrofoam
meat tray a little farther back. Also on the tray is a pair of nitrile gloves I
wore to handle the balls, plus the mesh bags that comes with the suet balls.
Instantly I imagined any or all of that trying to pass through her intestines.
As soon as I secured the feeder, I disposed of the meat tray and its contents
in the garbage can.
Ron will sometimes accuse me of seeing the worst in
everything. Heâs not wrong; but it doesnât come from a place of negativity, it
comes from having a vivid imagination. I can actually SEE the consequences of a
misstep in any situation. It can be the most benign set of circumstances and my
brain will form a worst-case scenario. Fortunately, most often nothing happens,
whether from removing an enticing meat tray, or it just wasnât in the cards
that time.
Regardless, when raising puppies to be good dogs, DILIGENCE
will solve or prevent almost every problem you can imagine, or have
experienced. I have a good friend who shall not be named; she has an amazing
dog, who also shall not be named. But this dog has got in to and eaten a long
list of things that really arenât good for dogs. Chocolate covered almonds, not
once, but two days in a row. Toilet paper on a daily basis. Jumped on the table
and ate a casserole. His latest feat, a box of toothpicks. The dog is 18 months
old. Heâs also a very determined dog. That said, diligence from a young age,
would still prevent these escapades.
If your puppy pees on the floor, itâs your fault, not his.
Either he woke from a nap and you werenât quick enough to get him out the door,
or he had a big drink of water after a play session, or you didnât pay
attention to his subtle cues because you were immersed in your smart phone.
We have a few rules in our house regarding puppies and
adolescents.
If
you canât watch him, crate or x-pen him. He canât get in to stuff thatâs not
good for him if heâs safely in his crate or x-pen.
You
wake him, you take him. Like young children (and old people) puppies and
adolescents need to pee almost immediately upon waking.
Have
plenty of safe chew toys to substitute for shoes, books, chair legs etc. If you
catch your puppy chewing (and you should because youâre being diligent) sub out
the bad thing for something puppy is allowed. This will reduce frustration and
conflict.
Although
we share many of our groceries with our dogs, we never feed from the table! And
if youâre not sure the treat youâre about to give your dog is safe (many people
foods are not!) Google it. Youâre probably on your phone anyway! đ
There are likely others that Iâm
forgetting at the moment, but the whole point of this post is to encourage you
to pay a little more attention to the circumstances in your life. Imagine a
situation which could be unsafe for your dog, and then fix it. At the very least,
youâll avoid conflict, and potentially an expensive vet bill and trauma for
your dog.
Questions or comments can be
directed to ourpassion @ leidenschaftkennels dot com.
Rogue vom Klingsgarten IGP1, IFH-V and Glock von der Leidenschaft IPO3
We are pleased to announce our M-litter has (hopefully!) been conceived this past weekend. This will be a THREEPEAT on our Glock von der Leidenschaft IPO3 and our German import Rogue vom Klingsgarten IGP1, IFH-V.
Already the offspring from the K and L-litters are proving themselves on the performance fields. 11 month old Loki just earned his CKC Tracking Dog title! Several of the K-litter pups have earned their BH titles, and others some additional tracking titles. As well we are seeing fantastic drives and strong nerves in the protection phase of these sports. LeKarter is in the early stages of police training, with a specialization in bomb detection. And of course many of these pups are doing the toughest job of all, being a great family pet!
You can follow the progress via Instagram “leidenschaftkennels” and on our Facebook page.
Our small club The Sirius Working Dog Association held our two-day trial on October 5 & 6, 2019. With DVG Judge Ann Dolan, we tried 5 BH titles and one IGP 1 title on the first day. Successful teams: Lisa Gaudet with Khaos von der Leidenschaft, BH Stephen Lanyi with Khira von der Leidenschaft, BH Ron Murray with Zeus vom Goldbergsee, BH Ron Murray with Rogue vom Klingsgarten, IGP1
On day two, we had two successful tracking teams: Stephen Lanyi with Khira von der Leidenschaft, IGP-V Track Ron Murray with Rogue vom Klingsgarten, IFH-V Track
Helper BenoĂŽt Maye and Ron Murray with Rogue vom Klingsgarten IGP1
Lisa Gaudet with Khaos von der Leidenschaft BH
Stephen and Khira von der Leidenschaft BH working their IGP-V track with Judge Ann Dolan
Ron and Rogue heading to their IFH-V track.
Beautiful tracking fields. Ron and Rogue vom Klingsgarten IGP1.
Ron Murray and young Zeus vom Goldbergsee heeling for their BH.
Lisa and Khaos in the group.
Congratulations to everyone and looking forward to a few more weeks of training before the S-word arrives! đ
February 2006, Ghira vom Klingsgarten VPG3 IPO3, on the right, wearing an e-collar to control her high hunt drive!
E-collar training
We are not the type of trainers who slap an e-collar on the
dog and leave it on. That is, in our opinion, lazy. And what happens if for
some reason you canât wear the collar on the dog? We believe, a dog should
fully understand what is expected of him, learn the command, the desired
reaction, and respect his handler. MOST of our obedience is obtained this way.
That said, there are a number of situations for which the
e-collar is the BEST tool for the job.
PROBLEMS:
Dog aggression
Food aggression
People aggression
Chasing game/livestock/vehicles
Counter surfing (can also be effectively corrected with mousetraps!)
Running away, not returning (after the foundation recall
work is completed)
Dogs with HIGH drives are a blessing and a curse. A dog with
drives loves to do stuff. They also LOVE to do stuff. Not necessarily the stuff
you want them to do.
I recently had an email from a puppy owner who is having an issue with her dog chasing wildlife. She busts out the door past the children, and then itâs game on. Recall is useless. This dog has drives, and your biscuit means nothing when there is prey on the run. <— Insert E-collar HERE!!!
It is important to do some foundation work with the e-collar
before ANY corrections are made, or you will have to leave the collar on the
dog. A smart dog will quickly learn the collar controls the correction, and
thus, no collar equals FREEDOM! So to make the collar and the corrections as
effective as possible, you need to fool the dog. For a few days before you plan
to begin setting up the problems, put the collar on the dog, as tight as it
will need to be for correction. Put the dogâs regular collar on as well. Or put
a box link or slip chain on too. Randomly take off and put on all the collars
for a few days, until your dog really has no idea what he is wearing, or why.
Be sure to move the e-collar around so the contact points donât cause any rub
sores. Please understand E-collars DO NOT BURN or otherwise cause damage from
the electric shock. Rub sores can occur if the collar is too tight or sits in
one spot for too long, or if the dog is digging at it. The use of an e-collar
is NOT inhumane, as many bleeding heart dog âtrainersâ would have you believe.
E-collars are effective training tools when used properly and CAN save your dogâs
LIFE. If your dog is running towards the road and doesnât come back when
called, a quick buzz from the collar can interrupt that thought process and
prevent a tragedy. If your dog is the cause of an accident, you are liable.
There are several problems that can be corrected with the
use of an e-collar in this situation. Each requires setting up the situation
and teaching the desired behaviour.
First step would be setting up the âbusting past the
childrenâ. Once the foundation work is done, as described above, then itâs time
for the setup. Decide as a family what the new command should be; something
simple that the children can articulate, and unique to the situation. Our command
of choice for doorways, gates, crates, stairways, etc. is âWaitâ. It means,
wait there until youâre given information otherwise. It is different from a
stay command in that they donât have to hold the last position given. âSit-stayâ
means hold that position until the next command is given. âWaitâ simply means
do not proceed. If the dog gets bored of standing and waiting, they can sit or
lie down without having broken a command.
So, with the command of choice agreed upon, next is setting up the situation. This can also be accomplished using a leash or long line, but for fast moving dogs, e-collar is cleaner. Do some practice with the dog, teaching the new command and response. Open the door; give the command, if the dog proceeds through the door, correct. Use all your tools for the first few times; leash and collar, and a stern verbal correction if the dog makes a move through the door. Once he has learned this with you, then set it up with the children. Have them open the door; you still issue a firm command, at the same time the child gives the command. Dogs do not usually respect small children, so it will take some extra commands on your part to get him to respond to the command regardless of who issues it. Once this is accomplished, then comes your proofing with the e-collar. Set up the situation, child opens door, normally gets pushed out of the way. This time however, youâre going to stay silent, allowing the child to command the dog; youâre simply going to make the correction with the collarâs remote IF the dog disobeys. Always start with a low correction level to begin with. If itâs ineffective, then move to the next level until you get the desired correction. Sometimes a dog will react to their first e-collar correction by running away from the spot where they were corrected. Itâs not a bad idea to have a long line on the dog until you can gauge the reaction.
The separate exercises of chasing, in this case deer, but
any other animal, person, bicycle, skateboards, cars, etc, is also easily
corrected with the e-collar. The command for this correction is simply NO! No
means NEVER. Never chase an animal, person, or vehicle. If for some reason you
WANT the dog to rid the yard of deer, or rabbits, etc, you could choose the
word Stop, or Leave it, or simply recall the dog to you. Come! or Here! At the
exact same time as the command is given, in other words, no command is given
and then time for the dog to respect said command, give a strong correction
with the e-collar. Remember drives are HIGH when your dog is in chase mode. You
need to interrupt the thought process immediately. If the dog doesnât react to
the first correction, up the level and re-command at once. Always PRAISE for
the desired behaviour. If the dog stops, or returns to you, make a big deal of
it. Lots of praise, pats, âgood-boyâs. No need for treats. Your voice and your
affection are the greatest reward.
To proof your recall, go back to your training collar, box link, slip chain or flat collar, and use your long line. Make sure your dog fully understands the command and the desired response. We have two recall commands. Come is formal. It is used when the recall is urgent. It means: stop whatever youâre doing, return to me as fast as you can, and sit in front of me until I give you the next command. It is NEVER allowed to be ignored, and therefore must be taught well with your leash, and then with your long line. We also use Here. It is less formal, but still means return to me. It might mean I want to pat you, or I want you in the house, car, crate, etc. It doesnât require the formal sit in front. Itâs also acceptable if the dog stops to pee (not mark) or pick up a stick, or grab a toy, on the way back to you. If the intent is there, then no correction is given. Once the foundation work is done, then you can offer your dog more freedom with the use of the e-collar. PRACTICE this, so that you know your dog understands what is expected. Add distractions. Recall your dog away from the playing children, or the birds on the beach, or the bicycles on the trails. Donât wait for the make or break situation to find out if your dog will respond. You might not be wearing the e-collar THAT time.
The investment in an e-collar can be as little as a hundred
dollars or so, up to several hundred. The collar you choose should be based on
your needs. Do you have multiple dogs? There are systems for that. Do you
travel dense wilderness, or use your dog for hunting? There are systems for
that too. Sometimes you can borrow or rent a system from a friend or a trainer
to fix a specific problem or try it out. Choose a collar system to match the
needs of your situation. The most trusted brands are those chosen by bird
hunters. They will be waterproof, durable, and adaptable.
As with any training issue, weâre always available for assistance. See our Contact page or find us on Facebook! đ
We are excited for Lazer, as his new people live right next door to his sister Leia in Nova Scotia! The two are already sharing adventures. <3
Loca is SOLD, but she will stay with us for a few more weeks before moving to West Virginia where she will train with Tracy Landis and Jennifer Gilzow in TWO protection sports! IGP (commonly known as Schutzhund) and the sport of PSA (Protection Sports Association). She’s going to be a super busy girl!
Ron and I would like to thank everyone who has helped raise these crazy kids, especially those who filled in when I was down with a broken ankle!
We are grateful to the families who welcomed each of the 13 L-puppies in to their homes and hearts. We wish everyone the very best.
We are making plans for our M-litter, but will hold off any announcements until later this year.
The end of May and the first few days of June have been a busy time for our canine pack! We are pleased all the news is HAPPY! đ
On May 27, 2019 we took our youngsters to see world renowned Ophthalmologist Dr. Cheryl Cullen for their CAER (Companion Animal Eye Registry) eye exams. Khira von der Leidenschaft (co-owned with Stephen and Alyssa Lanyi), Zia vom Lindelbrunn, and Zeus vom Goldbergsee all received CEAR certification. This is one more step cleared for inclusion in our future breeding program.
On June 1, 2019 after a sudden inquiry of the puppies, we determined a suitable home for our princess Leia. She has gone off to be a loving companion and home protection dog for a couple in Nova Scotia. We are happy with the match, and wish her the best life! <3
And last but certainly not least of this month so far, our boy Glock von der Leidenschaft IPO3 celebrates his 10th birthday today! We wish his siblings who are still with us, a very happy 10th birthday, and remember those who have crossed the Bridge.