The site was last updated on
24 Aug 2000
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There are
three levels of the Schutzhund test:
For Schutzhund
I the dog must be at least 14 months old and pass an initial
temperament test by the judge. The dog must heel on the leash and off,
demonstrate the walking sit, the walking down, and the stay tests, as well as
the send-out. It must retrieve on the flat and over a hurdle. In tracking, it
must be able to follow a track laid by its handler at least 20 minutes earlier.
There are also protection tests.
For Schutzhund
II the dog must be at least 16 months old and must already have
earned its Schutzhund I degree. It must
again pass all of the obedience and protection tests required for the Schutzhund
I degree, but those tests, for Schutzhund II,
are made more difficult and require greater endurance, agility, and above all,
control. There is an additional retrieve required over the six foot slanted
wall. In tracking, the Schutzhund II
candidate must be able to follow a track laid by a stranger at least 30 minutes
earlier.
For Schutzhund
III, the master's degree, the dog must be at least 18 months old and
must have earned both the Schutzhund I
and
the Schutzhund II titles. Again, the tests
now are made far more difficult. All exercises in obedience and protection are
demonstrated off leash. There is the addition of a walking and running stand. In
tracking, the dog must follow a track that was laid by a stranger at least 50
minutes earlier. The track has four turns, compared with two turns for Schutzhund
I and II, and there are three
objects, rather than two, that must be found by the dog. The picture of
obedience, strength, eagerness, and confidence presented by an excellent Schutzhund
III team is a beautiful illustration of the partnership of human and
dog.
In addition to the Schutzhund
temperament tests, the Schutzhund Club of Israel offer three training degrees:
the FH, an advanced tracking degree; the B, a basic obedience degree for
traffic-safe companion dogs; and the WH, or basic protection degree which
includes basic obedience.
Schutzhund Around the World
The first Schutzhund
trial was held in Germany in 1901 to emphasize the correct working temperament
and ability in the German Shepherd breed. Originally, these dogs were
herding-dogs, but the industrialization of Germany encouraged breeders to
promote the use of their dogs as police and military dogs. The Verein für
Deutsche Schäferhunde (SV), the parent club, became concerned that this would
lead to careless breeding and undesirable traits such as mental instability, so
it developed the Schutzhund test.
Since then, many other
countries and working dog organizations have also adopted Schutzhund as a sport
and a test of working performance in dogs. International rules have been
established, and they are administered by the Verein für Deutsche Hundesport
(VDH).
In 1970 the first Schutzhund
trial in the U.S. was held in California. In 1987, the Schutzhund Club of Israel
alone sanctioned nearly 300 trials with a total entry of about 1,800 dog/handler
teams. More than 17 countries sent teams of competitors to the World
Championship for Schutzhund dogs from the World Union of German Shepherd Clubs.
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