Loyalty Tests

Man's best friend.

Or, don't bother me while I'm eating.




lol ! the videos are funny .. but I assume that the dogs are smart enough to know that there humans aren't really being attacked .. and they probably know who the the perps are by scent and voice recognition ..
 
lol ! the videos are funny .. but I assume that the dogs are smart enough to know that there humans aren't really being attacked .. and they probably know who the the perps are by scent and voice recognition ..
In a couple of them, the dog goes up but determines that they have known scents so no threat.

Still, Funny AF.
 
Man's best friend.
Or, don't bother me while I'm eating.

Interesting. Those dogs obviously are lucky they didn't have my buddy as an owner. Not long after I met him in the '70s, someone robbed his house by throwing a steak to his guard dog. He got rid of that dog.

If one of his two replacement dobermans would have failed to guard his new home and taken food instead, it would have been curtains for them. Those dogs were trained to defend his house at all costs to the death if necessary.

I was one of the few people who could come visit him alone (his new location was a solitary wooded area) without fear. But any time you arrived, one or both dogs were at the top of the drive identifying if they knew you or not.
 
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Well, I never tried it with food, but my 12 pound mini Aussie would definitely tell you that her job was to keep you exactly where she put you!

My niece's jerkwad boyfriend supposedly was a breeder of Aussies and Keeshonds, and whenever they came over, my girl kept him pinned in the corner of the sofa. He was terrified and she knew it!

The two female mini Aussies had this habit of always being between me and the door. Even when eating, she'd keep her eye on me and the entrances. They also have a breed trait called the little dog syndrome. They were pit bulls in 12 pound bodies.


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