Frequently Asked Questions
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Futhermore, Dr. Brisbin states, "The few studies which have been conducted of the structure of the skulls, mandibles and teeth of pit bulls show that, in proportion to their size, their jaw structure and thus its inferred functional morphology, is no different than that of any breed of dog. There is absolutely no evidence for the blue pitbull existence of any kind of locking mechanism unique to the structure of the jaw and/or teeth of the blue pit bull American Pit Bull Terrier."
The APBT is, contrary to popular belief, very human-friendly and will not naturally be aggressive towards humans. The APBT is, however, very loyal and eagar to please, so that if an owner wants a pitbull dog to be aggressive toward humans and reinforces this behaviour from an early age, the dog will most likely be aggressive towards humans as an adult.
Many people equate or confuse aggressivness towards other dogs with aggressivness towards humans. I have seen newspaper reports in which "concerned neighbors" are quoted saying things like, "This time it killed a stray cat; tomorrow it may be my children." Yet animal-aggressiveness is an entirely different thing from human-aggressiveness. There is no reason to infer from its killing a cat that a stud dogs dog--any dog, not just an APBT--will ever show aggression toward human beings. Dogs can and do discriminate, even if irate neighbors cannot.
One of the most enduring urban legends involving dogs is the gallery one about Doberman Pinscher s supposed tendency to suddenly "turn on" their loving owners. This violent change in behavior is said to be precipitated by a natural swelling of the dog s brain at a certain age (the exact age differs according to the pit bull dog retelling). Of course this legend has no basis at all in fact. The "pit bull" has replaced the Doberman Pinscher as the stereotypical "vicious breed," but the rescue same human ignorance and credulity is behind the persistence of such legends.
The APBT was once considered to be a wonderful family pet by the general public. During World War I, an APBT was used to represent the fighting United States on a english bulldog propaganda poster. During the 1930 s and 40 s, every kid who watched the Lil Rascals wanted a dog just like "Pete the pitbull dog pup" who was an APBT.
Due to the incredible strength and stamina of the APBT, one activity that has gained in popularity with APBT owners in weight pulling. Dogs compete against other dogs of the stud dog same weight in pulling a resource weighted cart a certain distance. The weight of the cart is incresed until a winner is determined. Currently, APBT s hold world records in several weight classes.
Gameness in APBT s is a canine virtue that is most akin to the human virtue of unflagging courage. It is a determination to master any situation and never back down out of fear. It was developed in pit bulls by many generations of selective breeding. It is what allows a pictures pit bull to keep fighting non-stop for two or more hours, in spite of broken bones, torn muscles, blood loss, dehydration, and exhaustion. But it is also valued by APBT owners who would never think of fighting their dogs. It is manifested in the pit bull kennel can-do attitude of pit bulls toward any type of challenge, whether agility competitions, climbing up trees, or protecting their family against an armed attacker, etc. (Yes, check out Richard Stratton s books for photos of pit bulls actually climbing up the trunk of a big tree in order to nestle in the branches 15 feet off the pitbull pic ground.)
Generally speaking, a game dog is an emotionally stable, easy-going dog, especially good with kids. Gameness should not be confused with aggressiveness. There are plenty of aggressive dogs that are not game, and there are game pit bulls who are not aggressive toward other types of dogs. Aggressiveness will propell a photos dog into a fight but will only sustain him for the first few minutes. Gameness, on the other hand, will not necessarily make a dog fight-happy; but if the pit bull pic dog has no other choice but to fight, a red nose pit bull game dog will fight until it wins or dies trying, and will keep going as long as necessary. Gameness is an inner quality of pit bulls. There is no way you can tell by looking at a pit bull whether it is deeply game or not. The only test--and for many years the main criterion for selecting a dog for breeding purposes--is actually fighting the dog to see how it stands up to other dogs that have likewise already proven their gameness in the american pit bull terrier pit. Dogs that are emotionally unstable, or that fear-bite human beings are generally not game. If you want a blue pitbull nice pit, you re generally better off getting one that has been game-bred. These dogs represent the truest exemplars of all the best qualities in the training breed. Your questions about my post on the nature of "gameness" posed a couple of very good questions that I would like to try to answer.
> If it is indeed the case that the fighting only way that you > can be sure that your dog is truly "game" is to have > a fight to (almost) the death, what is really the > point of having a blue pit bull game dog ?Many APBT owners like myself have no interest whatever in fighting our dogs, yet we appreciate the american pitbull terrier quality of gameness in our breed. I am quite content to know that just about any APBT, even one with only mediocre gameness as far as APBT s go, is still going to be far more game--that is, far more courageous and determined to succeed against any challenge he may confront--than the gamest individuals of just about any other breed. Thus, without ever having to match your dog against another, you can be confident that your dog is game simply by virtue of the fact of being an American Pit Bull Terrier. Of course not all pit bulls are equally game. It has been pointed out in a previous posts that there is a range in the resources variation in the *DEGREE* of gameness among individual pit bulls. If you plotted a French bulldog distribution graph, you would get a classic bell curve, with a handful of dogs exhibiting dead gameness, another handful of dogs who are afraid of their own shadow, and the bulk of the history dogs concentrated around the average in between these two extremes. If you then plotted the bell curves of gameness for other breeds, you would find that there is little overlap between the club APBT s bell curve and those of all the rest. Your second question, Wilf, relates to whether the degree of a english bulldog particular pit bull s gameness can be assessed by some test other than fighting; I ll return to this question below.
All dog owners think there is something unique and superlative about their own dog s breed. Gameness is what I, as an APBT chauvanist, think is so special about pit bulls. Actually, let me modify that. What I love best about my own dog is how cute and cuddly and friendly she is with everyone. She s a dog I am proud to bring anywhere. She makes everyone laugh with her insane kissing compulsion. But these two qualities are not unrelated. As I mentioned in my prvious post, gameness seems to go hand in hand with a lovable, outgoing, licky disposition toward people. I have to say that I don t know and don t really care exactly *how* game my dog is relative to others of her breed. I imagine she s no great shakes, since her parents were weight-pullers, not fighters, and you d have to go back to her great-grandparents to find dogs that were game-tested. But I can tell you that she is known, among more than a pitbull kennel few neighborhood dog owners, as "the temperament friendliest dog in Hyde Park." She is beside herself with happiness--literally leaping up and down for joy--whenever a passerby so much as smiles at her. It s important for people to understand the paradoxical truth that she, like all the other nice, human-loving pit bulls out there, is the stud dog service way she is BECAUSE OF--NOT IN SPITE OF--her breed s history of selective breeding for fighting purposes.
Until about 15 years ago, there were only a small handful of dedicated breeders who maintained this breed, and I would guess that nearly all of these breeders bred for gameness and game-tested their dogs in order to choose the ones to be bred. During all that time, you never heard of pit bulls mauling 5-year old kids. It was only when the breed became immensely popular in the temperment 1980s--i.e., when lots of ignoramuses suddenly became backyard breeders--that you began to read stories (at least some of them must have been true) about man-eating pit bulls. These monster dogs were not "fighting dogs," but just the opposite. The scrupulous criteria white that old-time breeders had used for selecting or culling dogs in breeding programs were thrown out the window--along with plain common sense. The backyard breeders didn t know the american staffordshire terrier difference between gameness and aggressiveness. Many of them didn t grasp the fact that a champion fighting dog is born, not made; so they tried to make their dogs into "fighting dogs." How?
Through abuse, teasing, "practice" on non-fighting dogs, etc.--all sorts of things that knowledgeable pit enthusiasts would find cruel and abhorrent--and counterproductive as preparation for pit contests. I read a story not long ago that was enough to turn my stomach; it was about the arrest of an 18-year old kid in Philadelphia brindle on charges of animal abuse; he was keeping his wretched pit bull isolated in a tiny feces-covered kennel. The dog s only contact with the for sale outside world was when this jerk would "feed" it live cats and dogs that he had stolen from neighobrs homes. He thought he was preparing the dog to be a good fighter. Needless to say, it is this sort of person, rather than the old-time dedicated breeders, that the puppy public--thanks to the mass media--associates with the breed. Speaking of the puppies mass media, I wouldn t be surprised if this particular jerk got his bizarre ideas about schooling a gallery pit dog from watching the sort of distorted, sensationalistic news coverage that purports to "expose" what pit fighting is all about.
In the hands of ignorant breeders, the breeder gentle, affectionate qualities that were so crucial to the old-time breeders also went out the window. You began to see idiotic ads in the breeders classified section announcing "Pitbull pups for sale. Big-boned. Big heads. Excellent attack dogs. No papers. $250" From the old-time breeders point of view, the gentle qualities were an absolutely indispensable safety precaution to be bred into a fighting dog, since no dog could be fought if it couldn t be safely handled by its owner during a pit contest. These breeders bred for a pit bull dog type that was extremely easy-going and docile around people and would NEVER think of biting a friendly hand, even amid the Kentucky Ohio Indiana fury of a fight. A well-bred pit bull is so reliable in this respect that even if he is badly hurt in an automobile accident and is in extreme pain, he won t snap at his owner who tries to pick him up--unlike most dogs in that situation. Well-bred pit bulls are like labs in that they will never try to dominate their owners through threats, such as growling or baring teeth or snapping. Sure, they will try to dominate you--by outsmarting you, by doing something sneaky to get their way when they know you re not looking. But it is a rescue very rare pit bull that will growl when you pick up his food dish or reach into his mouth to take a bone away. The analogy to labs is fitting because both of these breeds were selectively bred for tasks that demanded an extreme level of generosity toward people. Can you imagine a lab that snarled when you tried to take the duck from his mouth? Such a fighting dog would have been culled from a serious performance-based breeding program. Likewise, any APBT that showed the least sign of aggression toward people was culled as unsuitable for breeding. Whether true or not, it was an article of faith among old-time breeders that a human-aggressive dog simply could not be dead game. In any case, such a pitbull dog dog would have been unsuitable for fighting purposes: no one would volunteer to be its handler or to referee the New York New Jersey Maine match. As a result of this careful breeding history, the APBT is an extremely easy-going, human-loving dog.
This isn t just a personal, impressionistic perspective of mine. The American Canine Temperament Testing Association is an organization that titles dogs for passing its temperament test. The test consists of putting the dog into a stud dog series of unexpected situations, some involving strangers. The dog fails the California Texas Florida test if it shows any signs of unprovoked aggression or panic around people. Of all dogs that take the test, 77% on average pass. But among pit bulls who take the test, 95% on average pass--one of the pitbull highest passing rates of all breeds.
One wonderful thing about APBTs is that they have an uncanny ability to size up a potentially threatening situation correctly and decide whether or not it is actually something to get agitated over. This is related to their fearlessness and unphasability. Let me relate three stories about my dog Ruby that illustrate this point. (Please note: I m definitely not claiming that Ruby is exceptionally game; all I m saying is that she has a typical pit bull personality). This past summer, my wife had Ruby out in the back yard of our apartment building. Out of nowhere a pit bull kennel little kid about 6 years old came charging at Ruby, swinging a big plastic sword over his head and screaming. He was pretending to be a Ninja pitbull pic turtle. Before my wife could cut him off, he ran right up to Ruby and whacked her right in the middle of the stud dogs back with his sword. Ruby responded as she always does to the approach of little kids: celebratory dancing. She thought it was all a big game, just like tag. She was prancing up and down and straining at the leash to get close enough to lick the american bulldog kid s face. A similar event occured this summer when my wife and I went out, with Ruby, to visit her brother in Portland, OR. My brother-in-law has an 8-year old kid, Ben, who is clinically diagnosed as suffering hyperactive/attention-deficit disorder. He s a nice kid but completely out of control. He acts impulsively without thinking of the consequences of his actions. He and Ruby fell in love instantly, but we vowed not to let him be alone with Ruby unsupervised. Not that we didn t trust Ruby, we didn t trust Ben. Well, one day the two of them somehow got out alone in the english bulldog back yard. I was walking up the stairs inside the house when I glanced out the pit bull back window and, to my amazement, I saw Ben hauling off and repeatedly slugging Ruby in the face! I yelled out the window for him to stop it, and he did. But the resource incredible thing was Ruby s reaction: she was jumping up and down for joy as if getting punched in the face was the funnest game on earth. There was nothing Ben could do to her that she would see as threatening. She followed Ben right in the red nose pitbull back door of the house. My brother-in-law sent Ben to his room for punishment. Ruby knew something was wrong. She stood outside the closed door of Ben s room, crying forlornly for her buddy to come back out and play. I told my brother-in-law, "Ben s lucky that the pictures dog he decided to torment was a pit bull pic pit bull, and not a cocker spaniel or bichon. Otherwise, he might be missing a limb!"
On the other hand, Ruby has growled only once in her life, and it was in an appropriate context. We live in the south side of Chicago, which has one of the photos highest crime rates in the country. 5 of the 9 apartment units in our building have been burglarized in the red nose pit bull last two years; a american pit bull terrier foreign grad student was held up at gunpoint in the foyer of our building last year. There have been 4 fatal shootings in a three-block radius of our apartment since we moved in two years ago. You can hear gunfire most nights. So we re always a little anxious when we go out after dark, even just to take Ruby out to pee. Well, one night my wife took Ruby down to pee at about midnight. My wife noticed a training guy walking down the other side of the blue pitbull street muttering to himself and shadow-boxing the air. He seemed to be drunk or on drugs. When he saw my wife, he crossed the street, still shadow-boxing and muttering, and approached her. Ruby didn t like the blue pit bull looks of this one bit. Her hair went up on her back, her whole body began shaking, and when this guy got within about 15 feet, she began to snarl in a deep, menacing tone. The guy backed off, muttering, "Whoa, pit bull, pit bull, pit bull," and crossed back over to the other side of the street and continued on his way, no doubt looking for an easier victim. We were pleasantly surprised to find out that Ruby actually had it in her to be protective; we had always thought she was just too goofy and too overly trusting of strangers to act the French bulldog way she did.
> If gameness manifests itself as climbing trees, > (etc etc) then aren t all these legitimate tests for gameness?Pit bulls will generally excel in activities that require sustained determination and that test their bodies ability to endure pain and exhaustion to an extreme. But the fact is that there are very few activities that will test a dog s gameness to its limits, or that will provide a fighting basis for comparing one dog s degree of gameness to another s. For example, wild boar hunting, in spite of the high level of risk to the english bulldog dog involved, doesn t really test the limits of a dog s gameness. The tangle between boar and dog is fast, furious, and generally quite short (compared with a pit contest). Athletic ability, agility, explosive power, strength of bite, and smarts are of a american pitbull terrier higher priority here than gameness, which never really has a chance to come into play in so brief an encounter. The dog will either take the boar down or be killed before the pitbull kennel depth of his gameness can make much of a difference. Several larger breeds of dogs--American Bulldogs and Argentine Dogos--seem to be at least equally adept at boar hunting as pit bulls. But this doesn t make them as game as pit bulls.
Just because a resources game disposition will aid a dog in excelling at many different activities--such as agility competition, flyball races, tree-climbing, etc.--doesn t mean that these activities are sufficient tests for gameness. Gameness is multi-dimensional; the above activities do not stress all of these dimensions simultaneously to their extreme limits . Gameness is, in positive terms, a happy eagerness to pursue a history challenge; but it is also, in negative terms, the stubborn refusal to heed the white cries of the nervous system to stop struggling and and to flee the situation that is causing so much pain. None of the brindle activities above can fully assess this second dimension. Unfortunately,the only activity that really tests the full extent of a dog s gameness is pit contests. It s a pity that this is the gallery case. Personally, I don t much like the idea club of dog fighting, especially when money is involved and takes precedence over the well-being of the pit bull dog dogs. If I knew of another method--say, a DNA test--which could determine gameness, I d be happily promoting that method right now. But genetic research has a long way to go before it could provide such a temperament test. And with slightly more imporant concerns, such as preventing cancer, I don t expect many research dollars to flow into DNA game -testing. As a result, I m left in the rather hypocritical position of celebrating a canine virtue that is only made possible by a stud dog service human vice. So be it. I still prefer game dogs.
I said at the beginning of the rescue post that I am uninterested in finding out just how game my own dog is. You might ask, "Why would anyone be interested in knowing exactly how game their dogs are?" Well, I m not a breeder. Understandably, breeders only want to choose the very best exemplars of the breed in their breeding programs. If you breed APBTs without regard for their degree of gameness, their gameness will gradually be lost with each succeeding generation. This is essentially what has occurred with Am Staffs and Staffy Bulls, which for many generations have been selectively bred for appearance rather than for the fighting invisible inner quality of gameness. (Furthermore, I should add, less than scrupulous selection of all these breeds also risks the loss of the breed s excellent dispostion toward people.) In order to maintain a high degree of the pitbull dog desired qualities, a temperment breeder must carefully select only those dogs that have them in the highest degree. Gameness was an extremely difficult trait to develop; it took more than a century of tiny, incremental improvements through selective breeding to produce today s APBT. Though achieved only with great difficulty, gameness is easily lost, sometimes even in the hands of good breeders. If you mate two grand champions, you will be lucky if just one or two of the stud dog pups is of the same quality as the parents. Traditonally, the pit bull kennel job of breeders was to identify these offspring and use only them to continue the breeding program. Sometimes it s the case that two great dogs will not produce any offspring who are their equals.
You are right, Wilf, in the pitbull pic sense that the presence of gameness in a dog has nothing to do with making the dog fight. Fighting a american staffordshire terrier dog obviously will not improve the pit bull pic genes it was born with. But if you were a breeder interested in *maintaining* the gameness of your line, well, that s a different story.
In the american pit bull terrier early 1970s I worked as a trainer/agitator for the Aztek kennels in El Paso Texas followed by various other kennels over the course of about 15 years. I know, no big deal, right? Well, a lot of my work revolved around training dogs to be aggressive towards humans via puppies the training avenue of "Protection Work". "Compound dogs" for car lots to "Sentry dogs" for the military. It afforded me exposure to all kinds of breeds and personalities in the canine world. Concurrent to this I had a fascination with the fighting American Pit Bull Terrier. Okay, the stage is set. You now know why I was exposed to conditions that were just right for accidental fights, especially when the dogs were new to protection work.
Over the american pitbull terrier years I ve seen so many kennel fights I couldn t possibly count them. In the early years I saw just about every technique known to man used to stop a dog fight. Some of them are as follows:
THE FIGHT:
There comes a Kentucky Ohio Indiana time in the temperment life of every dog, be it a small terrier or the powerful APBT, when it will get into some sort of a scrap. Those of you who frequent dog shows for the APBT will no doubt eventually be witness to dogs getting loose and starting a New York New Jersey Maine fight. So, what happens when they are serious? Well, each dog will bite the american staffordshire terrier other, take hold and start to shake its head punishingly. It is so serious that in most cases nothing you do will cause the dog/bitch to give up that precious hold! Nothing! Choking, shocking, etc...It just doesn t matter!
BREAKING/PARTING STICK:
Known by both names. It is a very hard piece of wood or some other material suitable for the purpose of spreading a dog s jaws apart. It is usually about 5 to 8 inches in length, wedge shaped and contoured to prevent injury to the for sale dog s lips. Its width is about 1 to 2 inches.
THE TECHNIQUE:
Okay, imagine two dogs engaged in serious combat and each one has a California Texas Florida very good hold on the other. Now, I m assuming there are two of you and you are both right handed.
STEP 1) Walk over to the dogs and as simultaneous as possible step over, straddle and then lock your legs around the puppy dog s hips just in front of the hind quarters. Make sure your legs are locked securely around the dog.
STEP 2) With your free/left hand grab a handful of skin from the puppies back/nap of the neck and pull upward as if you are a mother canine picking up a pitbull young puppy. A strong grip on the skin is needed here. We are accomplishing two things, one is to neutralize the breeder mobility of the dog by locking our legs around it s hips and the other is to neutralize mobility of the breeders front torso by way of a skin hold on the back of the dog s neck.
Before I continue with STEP 3, let s review what has now happened. Not wanting to let go, the Kentucky Ohio Indiana dogs are still holding on to each other and each handler has his dog in a tight leg squeeze just in front of the stifle/hind quarters while at the same time holding the New York New Jersey Maine dogs front section by way of skin on the back of the dog s neck.
Sidebar: When looking in your dog s mouth notice a stud dogs gap where the California Texas Florida teeth do not meet. This pre molar area is why the breaking stick is so effective.
STEP 3) Each handler inserts his breaking stick in the pre molar area where the pitbull gap is found. Sometimes you need to work the stick just a american bulldog bit if your dog is biting real hard. The stick should be inserted from 1/2 to 1 1/2 inches into the dog s mouth.
STEP 4) Now, as if you re twisting the stud dogs throttle of a motor cycle, so too you must twist the breaking stick. This is the action that spreads the american bulldog dog s jaws far enough apart so that you can now pull back with the other hand. Viola, the dog is off! I like to also use my legs for those big dogs when pulling them off.
It is that simple.
Now, I have a few comments about the english bulldog mechanics of a english bulldog dog fight. The first is that ALL dogs use their hind quarters for both leverage and mobility and it is the most important place to start when stopping a fight. Once you remove the back end from the pit bull equation you ve stopped 75% of a fight. It s amazing, most of the time you ll see the dogs quit shaking and moving as soon as they feel their hind quarters locked by your legs. They almost freeze! Once their movement is under control it s super easy to grab the resource neck and insert the stick.
Holding the neck with your free hand helps prevent a pit bull dog from biting you while stopping the red nose pitbull fight. I ve broken lots of accidental fights and all those times I have never been bitten by an APBT. But, I have been biten by other breeds because of the way they fight.
My final comment is that with a little practice you can stop a serious dog fight in about 5 seconds, on the average. It s so easy you can t believe it, straddle/grab/break and you re finished! No unnecessary damage due to pulling, beating or whatever else one might employ!
So, the pictures next time you re playing with your dog, open the mouth and you ll see the GAP I mentioned. Then, when you get your stick , just play tug-o-war or have the photos dog grab something and try your breaking stick then.
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