Archive for May, 2010

Proton’s first building drive and focus session

Posted in Proton's Journal on May 11, 2010 by kwdogs

Today was a lovely home day with all the pooches.  We dissembled the whelping box that has been living in the bedroom since March 1st and cleaned up the kennel where the pups had been living for the last 2.5 weeks they were here.  So the kennel is set up for adults hang out once again.

Proton was in the middle of all the action while I was using the power drill on the whelping box and the vacuum to clean up the shavings.  She was interested and never flinched at any of the noise either made.

This late afternoon we had our first building drive and focus session with the little piece of cloth tied to a cord and bamboo stick, until the pup is really obsessed with it I soak half the cloth in some chicken or beef juice.  She was  super interested for the entire 5 minutes that I played with her.  This is a method that was long invented before I was born— the trick is do you know how to make that little piece of cloth make chipmunk-like movements, make the right noises, and know how to give and take when the pup is tugging on the cloth and know when to quit on a high note— that’s the where the art is.

5 minutes of this primal play and she slept for 2.5 hours!

Hanging and driving

Posted in Proton's Journal on May 9, 2010 by kwdogs

Today was a fairly low key day around here for Proton.  We took Jana to the Pine View Bakery for Mother’s Day breakfast.  Proton road in the crate behind my seat munching on a marrow bone.  Ha! That bone occupied her the entire 90 minutes we were out and about. Given what a windy day it was the pigeon race that we had was a real fast one! 67 mph was the average speed of the winning bird! And we won….hmm, perhaps this little pup brought me some luck?!  So for several hours Proton, Maya and Quax all hung out with me while I sat in the yard waiting for the birds to come in.  They all rolled around, played and slept a bit.  Every time a bird came in I ran over to the loft to see the time and Proton got up and followed me up and back each time.  Then she and I picked up grandpa and went up to the club house to calculate the speeds for the races.  She got the meet the feather heads as I call them.  She walked around a bit then just plopped down next to me while I worked on the computer.  We got back home around feeding time and she loves her meals! So I placed her, two chicken thighs, shredded sweet potato and flax seed oil in the crate in my office.  Proton has a full belly and lots of good dreams to wrap up another day.

A quiet, clean night…. thank goodness

Posted in Proton's Journal on May 9, 2010 by kwdogs

Well it’s a good start to the day!  We went to bed at 11pm and woke up at 5:45am to no puppy messes! I decided to give Proton the same freedom as the night before only because she seemed to be so focused on lying on the dog bed in the back office room, from where we can see each other in bed.  I sprung out of bed and coached her outside where she popped a squat and peed out a puppy gallon.  We all went back inside and did the morning raw chicken/sweet potato feeding routine.  Once everyone had full bellies I decided to hop back into bed to have some puppy time myself.  So I pulled Proton up on the bed and she excitedly licked Jana’s face for a few minutes then migrated over to me and Maya where she did her little playful wiggle dance for awhile.  After that we all got up to start our day……..

Safe Mountain’s 1st Generation

Posted in Kyle's Family on May 8, 2010 by kwdogs

From left to right: Slam, Quax, Xavier and Lee.

Quax is the father and Lee is the mother to the two brothers— Slam and Xavier.

Today’s family adventure

Posted in Kyle's Family, Proton's Journal on May 8, 2010 by kwdogs

Today was a very busy and exciting day home on the range! After playing tug-of-war with my PJs for 10 minutes— we got the day started.  Proton and I ran some errands in the morning— went to the bank, got gas and dropped off a deposit to the caterer for the wedding (on June 12th!).  She road shotgun around town and to home again.  She played out in the yard with all the dogs, of course her and Maya are pretty tight but Xavier and Xila often play with her too.  Slam and Quax will go and engage when they are in their playful states. And of course everyday when I get home I have to take down Hazel and Rogue’s plywood painted sign at the head of the driveway that says, “GSDs free to ANY home!”

We decided to take a family hike— Jana, me and all 9 dogs went over to our very special local getaway in Lake Hill, NY.  What a beautiful, relaxing, heartwarming family activity.  The dogs were totally in heaven and Proton hung pretty close to me and followed me everywhere.  During the last third of the hike she was venturing out more to engage with the other dogs.

This property is great because it has huge fields, a dense pine forest and a quiet meandering stream that’s great for pups because the depth ranges from inches to 2.5 feet.  So after using downed trees of various sizes as hurdles we zigzagged back and forth across the stream, Proton had her momentary stressful fits before making a decision to follow where I had gone but her angsting never lasted longer than 30 seconds.  The deepest she crossed was about half way up her body.  We romped through the woods for a solid 30 minutes or more.  It was a very fun hike that was both physically and mentally draining for her.  This is really the absolute maximum that I would physically push a pup at this age of 8.5 weeks.  The terrain though challenging was all flat.  You can certainly push a puppy too much and 30 non-stop minutes of hiking with mental energy being burned up is plenty!  She slept for several hours after that and was rearing to go again by mid-afternoon.  She was out in the yard rolling around with Maya for nearly an hour and a half.  Really adorable play with both of them lying on their sides just hanging out, while I was up in the pigeons coops preparing for shipping the birds to the races.

Jana got to puppy-sit while I was up at the club house from 5-10pm.  She had no accidents in the house and played tug with a rag like psycho-puppy so I was told.  When I got home I brought her out twice and went to bed.  Last night was her first night in the house and I decided to see what would happen if I gated her in the kitchen/bedroom/office area with us (plenty of crates and dog beds to chose from).  Well— she peed 4x in the kitchen….. bummer.  We will see how tonight goes……

Proton’s first day as an individual

Posted in Proton's Journal on May 7, 2010 by kwdogs

Today we finally sent the remaining pups to their new homes.  I was the last one to get my pup so to speak….. since I could not really spend time with her individually because of the demands of the litter (and the 8 other dogs on the property…hehe).

Right after the last pup left the house around 12:30pm— I ran around the yard with just Proton outside spewing girly squeaking inviting noises….. real alpha…ha! She chased me around for a minute or two then she latched onto my pant leg and with that she was growling and tugging intensely.  I told her “good girl!” in a high pitched tone that would maintain her excited state for awhile.  After a minute or two I picked her up and blew her kisses in her face and she licked me back over and over….. and over and over….. and over and over as we walked down to the house.

Mid-day today we hung out in the house for awhile and she ate a chicken thigh for lunch with a little ground beef.  Around 2pm we went over to hang out with grandpa for an hour or so.  The ride is about 15 minutes and she got to ride shotgun.  I also brought Maya, Quax and Xila along for the ride.  My grandfather and I hung out in the back yard talking about dogs and pigeons while Maya, Quax, Xila and Proton ran around the with Sumo (my grandparents GSD from our last litter— Quax & Lee).  They all had a blast running around 2 acres.  Proton then collapsed at my feet for the last 20 minutes of the visit.

We then loaded up in the truck and headed down the road a piece to one of my dog hiking/search training locations.  I took all of my GSDs and went for a 20 minute walk through the woods.  The three adults were running and romping all over the the place having a grand time.  My attitude on the walk was that everything is cool and Proton was along for the ride, not the center of attention.  Every so often I’d bend down and give her encouragement with a few pats on her side and continue our walk.  She stayed next to me the entire time and thought about drifting off with Maya and Xila ahead a few times but didn’t.

She happily trotted along with me over minor natural obstacles such as— very shallow drainages, quarry mounds and downed trees 18 inches in diameter.  When we went over the trees I never helped her per say.  The more the dog does on their own the more confident and independent the dog will become in a good day.  The way that I would assist Proton, was if she was trying to climb over a tree and it was just too big for her to get over physically then I’d post my hand rigidly, acting as a branch for her to push off of so essentially from her perspective she did it herself.  I did not lift her up at all or give tons of encouragement to coax her over.  As she was successfully conquering each new thing I would praise her very much but only when she was completing her challenge, not during.  The timing of this praise promotes independent thinking and decision-making confidence in the pup.  I remember with Proton’s mother, Maya, the first time we were in the woods on a hike and we came across this 2 foot high ledge that she was apprehensive about jumping down.  It was a long ledge so she really could not avoid it.  I hopped down off the ledge and she was teetering on the edge for a good long minute making every kind of vocalization know to dog…..worried, frustrated, scared, angry, you name it.  She finally just did it and I praised her tremendously.  You have to be able to read your dog.  These mental/physical challenges will stress your dog but you do not want the stress to last long nor the challenge too ridiculous a request either.  While Maya was having a cow, over her proposed “little” jump, I was sitting about 3 feet away from the ledge below just hanging out looking all around in a totally calm absorbing state.  After she did it and was rewarded, she acted as if she had always been doing jumping like that.  You have to sometimes put the dog in a position that will force it to make a decision and depending on the degree of training, a bond with the handler and ability to independently think will increase it’s cavalier personality.

Once we arrived back at the truck, we play musical doggy chairs and I placed Proton in the crate behind my seat in the truck.  This is the first time that she has ever been closed in the crate by me and left there.  She screamed for about the first 7 minutes of a 15 minute car ride back home.

When we got home she hung out in the yard with the other 8 dogs playing for around 30 minutes then she went inside and took a nap for a bit.  When she awoke I fed her (and everyone else there dinner).  She got one chicken thigh and a bit of ground beef.

After dinner— Proton ran around the pigeon coops while I was cleaning, feeding and watering my birds.  From now until we went to bed she was just hung out with Jana and I.  When she has to eliminate she has been vocalizing and starts dancing around so anticipating her makes it pretty easy at this time.

We are concluding our night on our Swedish Tempurpedic bed to watch our first of many movies together before going to bed.

Klaus vom Schutzberg safely arrives in Baton Rouge, LA to greet his family

Posted in Safe Mountain Pup Updates on May 7, 2010 by kwdogs

Larry and Klaus

Meagan and Klaus

Zeus vom Schutzberg goes to his new home

Posted in Safe Mountain Pup Updates on May 7, 2010 by kwdogs

Kate, Monica and Zeus all smiles

K9 Triton of the Ulster County Sheriff’s Department

Posted in Safe Mountain Pup Updates on May 7, 2010 by kwdogs

Ulster County Sheriff’s newest addition

TRITON VOM SCHUTZBERG

Deputy Chad Storey and K9 Triton in his new spaceship

Four of Ulster County’s finest— Chad Storey with K9 Triton and Wallace Fulford with K9 Drago getting acquainted

Both proud owners/handlers of Safe Mountain GSDs

No denying that this is one very happy deputy with a very bright future.

Congratulations! I know you will make vom Schutzberg proud!

Noble vom Schutzberg goes to his lovely family

Posted in Safe Mountain Pup Updates on May 7, 2010 by kwdogs

Pat and Karen say hi to their new little man Noble

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