A ton of work! He heels on the left and on the right! Training is incredibly good! (is this a Malinois and GSD cross, or a Dutch Shepherd?). Nice work and nice dog!
Big Roy was a mongrel like most BRN dogs, but most would consider him a Malinois. He was about 30” to withers and about 115 lbs, but had excellent athleticism. He rose to fame around 2013 and later sold to the commies. Biko probably has Dutch Shepherd, GSD, Malinois, Tervuren, Groenendael, Laekenois, and Beauceron somewhere or another in his blood line. Honestly going by Big Roy’s size probably Dane as well.
@@naturallycurlyhair4413 I agree with you. Judging by appearance and size alone, looks like a GSD crossed with a Malinois and Beauceron. The coloring suggests Beauceron and also the build and overall size, as they are bigger than German Shepherds. I think that the Tervuren is less likely, due to the very fine Collie like muzzle and lighter bone structure. The Dutch Shepherd is normally brindle and that is a dominant gene, so it's less likely in this dog, given no brindle in his coat. Great Dane, somewhere in the past is also possible because he is a very, very big Shepherd. Thanks for the reply. No matter how you slice it, a very nice dog. It is an ideal "type" of landrace Shepherd the way the used to be in the late 19th century.
It's definitely not great for the dog to never feel like it's really affecting the man so much because he just stands there while the dog is giving its best.. More theatrics would help towards more reality. And bolster the dogs confidence. Just a fact...
8:23, I’m surprised that he didn’t go for the hand with the weapon. Many dogs are trained to neutralize the threat by targeting the most threatening area (hand with the weapon). In this case, the assailant could have still beat the dog with the stick.
Jared Davis it depends what level of threat your dealing with..........regardless a face hit covers all bases,wepons or explosives and it neutalises the threat pretty fast too✌🏽
Vous avez un très beau chien
Hours and hours and hours of work. Great job, beautiful animal!!!!
A ton of work! He heels on the left and on the right! Training is incredibly good! (is this a Malinois and GSD cross, or a Dutch Shepherd?). Nice work and nice dog!
ooh its a mix breed..nice info
Big Roy was a mongrel like most BRN dogs, but most would consider him a Malinois. He was about 30” to withers and about 115 lbs, but had excellent athleticism. He rose to fame around 2013 and later sold to the commies. Biko probably has Dutch Shepherd, GSD, Malinois, Tervuren, Groenendael, Laekenois, and Beauceron somewhere or another in his blood line. Honestly going by Big Roy’s size probably Dane as well.
@@naturallycurlyhair4413 I agree with you. Judging by appearance and size alone, looks like a GSD crossed with a Malinois and Beauceron. The coloring suggests Beauceron and also the build and overall size, as they are bigger than German Shepherds. I think that the Tervuren is less likely, due to the very fine Collie like muzzle and lighter bone structure. The Dutch Shepherd is normally brindle and that is a dominant gene, so it's less likely in this dog, given no brindle in his coat. Great Dane, somewhere in the past is also possible because he is a very, very big Shepherd. Thanks for the reply. No matter how you slice it, a very nice dog. It is an ideal "type" of landrace Shepherd the way the used to be in the late 19th century.
@@alexands1261 ruclips.net/video/0kq8sqLxLoQ/видео.html Here’s a link to a video of Big Roy Biko’s sire
very clear headed
Awesome 🙏🏻❤️👊🏻
Long time no see miss you guys ❤️
Awesome dog
Top Dog
It's definitely not great for the dog to never feel like it's really affecting the man so much because he just stands there while the dog is giving its best..
More theatrics would help towards more reality. And bolster the dogs confidence.
Just a fact...
its a certification u cant reward the dog HEHEHE
Dutch Shepherds normally has got the tipical strips of dutch shepherd...he is a bit too dark to see them I guess.
The typical coat is called brindle, he’s a KNPV mongrel, so he only has them on his legs.
Hi
oui
👏👏👏👏
8:23, I’m surprised that he didn’t go for the hand with the weapon. Many dogs are trained to neutralize the threat by targeting the most threatening area (hand with the weapon). In this case, the assailant could have still beat the dog with the stick.
Jared Davis it depends what level of threat your dealing with..........regardless a face hit covers all bases,wepons or explosives and it neutalises the threat pretty fast too✌🏽