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THE SHEPERDIST
GERRARD van Es: Breeder
Interviewed by -
Paul Howell
Von Gottsland Kennels
Gerrard Van
Es is owner of
the Kennel vom Haus
Antverpa N.V.,in
Zandhoven,
Belgium. He
breeds German Shepherds
exclusively for top
sports (Schutzhund,
KNPV, Belgium Ring
work). His wife also
breeds Malinios that are
used for police and
sport work. He has
successfully been able
to produce dogs that
compete at the highest
levels in these sports,
including KNPV, at which
very few Shepherds have
ever excelled.
Dogs from his breeding
are consistently seen at
all championship trials
throughout Europe.
Gerrard is a man in his
late 30's who has been
breeding and training
German Shepherds for
over 20 years. He has
also been a professional
horse trainer, training
horses in dressage, and
Olympic style riding.
Gerrard has some
definite beliefs in
breeding and training
dogs and seems to have
been quite successful
with them since
the last two world
championships have come
from his club as well as
the 1988 and 1989 WUSV
champions. |
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DSM:
Welcome to America,
Gerrard. Since this is
your first trip to
America, how do you like
it?
ES: I like it
very well, thank you. I
can't believe how cheap
everything is and how
slow the people drive.
Cars are so inexpensive
and gas is very cheap.
Also, everybody has so
many guns. You would
never see this in
Europe. It is unheard
of. (He had just been to
a pistol and gun club
shooting that day).
Housing and property are
so cheap.
DSM: You
have just seen the
Americans compete in
Europe at the World
Championships. What did
you think of our team
and our dogs?
ES: Firstly, I
would like to
congratulate your team
for doing such a fine
job. The handlers did an
excellent job. Of course
I don't know how good of
trainer they are but the
handlers were well
schooled. As for the
dogs, I do not know. I
only know they performed
good that day. |
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Favourite Sport
DSM:
Gerrard, you breed many
great dogs for many
sports, but which is
your favourite?
ES: KNPV is my
favourite sport. It is
much more real training
than, say, Schutzhund or
IPO. It has many more
exercises and it takes
much longer to train
dogs for this. The
training is much more
real. It is more suited
to police and street
work. But it is a sport
that is not suited for
every dog. The intention
of this KNPV is
different than that of
Schutzhund. Most people
that has a dog that will
work a little can work
in the sport of
Schutzhund or IPO at
some level. Most KNPV
dogs are sold to the
army or police. Most
Malinios are in KNPV.
This is not to say that
all Malinois are good
for KNPV, but certainly
more Malinois than
German Shepherds.
DSM: Why
are there not more
German Shepherds in
KNPV?
ES: In KNPV, you
must teach them a few
things that are hard
sometimes to explain to
the dogs. The dog must
stay with it's handler
without any leash. He
must work on his own.
Some of the exercises
are very hard and you
cannot teach him these
exercises by giving him
cookies. Sometimes you
must be hard with the
dog to teach him this
work, but in the end you
have a marvellous
working animal. The call
off is very hard. In
German Shepherds,
sometimes this
is very hard to do
because you must bring
the drive down and the
Shepherd sometimes
cannot bring his drives
high again like the
Malinois. |
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The Performance Secret
DSM:
Gerrard, you have
excellent luck with
German Shepherds in the
KNPV, like your famous
dog
Gento vom Haus Larwin
and many of his prodigy
who are working now in
KNPV with the highest
Metlauf scores. Why is
this so?
ES: When I bought
"Gento"
he had just got his IPO
1 and his former owner
was having problems with
the dog.
Gento is very high,
high, high drive dog and
he is very for real and
very, very hard.
I started to work him in
IPO, but thought it a
waste of a great dog, so
I took him to Holland to
work in KNPV and in a
few months had KNPV 1
with Metlauf scores.
DSM: Now
that
Gento is in America
with us I am sure you
will miss him. You bred
him many, many times
with excellent results.
I feel we are very
fortunate to finally
have such an excellent
stud dog in the United
States. People from all
of Europe bred to this
dog and it seems he
produced good with
anything you bred him.
What made
Gento such a good
producing dog?
ES: I guess you
can thank God for that
because that's what I
think he was born to do.
But really, it is
because of his pedigree.
His father is the famous
dog
Robby v. Glockeneck
and his mother is a
Sagus v Busecker Schloss
daughter, and of course
Greif zum Lahntal
Son. "Robby"
is such a top producer
of working dogs. And as
you know,
Gento is a very real
dog. He could be police
dog anywhere in the
world, as are almost all
of the sons and
daughters of
Gento.
Robby, as you know,
is an East German dog
and produces much
fighting drive in all of
his sons and daughters.
Also, "Greif"
is one of the greatest
producers of working
dogs ever to have been
in Germany. Now, all of
the Germans are coming
to Belgium to buy their
working dogs because we
breed dogs for working
first and all the rest
second. |
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Appreciated Too Late
DSM: You
once said to me that you
thought
Robby and
Greif were both dogs
that were very misused.
What did you mean by
that?
ES: I think that
the Germans did not take
advantage of these great
dogs when they could,
and now they come to
Belgium where we have
used these great dogs
for breeding to try to
buy this blood back now
to put in to their
breeding programs.
Robby and
Greif were never
used by the Germans when
they were in their
prime. Now everyone sees
what these great dogs
produced they think they
must do anything to get
these bloodlines back so
they can once again
produce great working
dogs. It is really a
shame that everyone
waited until the dogs
were dead to appreciate
them.
DSM:
Gerrad, I have known you
now for two years and we
do a lot of talking and
training together and
you offer many great
working dogs , but never
have I seen you with a
dog with any West German
show bloodlines
whatsoever. Why?
ES: I think you
should know why. You
only have to look at all
the shit dogs in the
world. They all look
alike. They are either
black and red, extremely
large and, for the most
part, so soft that it is
a joke. As far as I am
concerned, the German
Shepherd in West Germany
is no more. They breed
only for money because
they can sell these big,
pretty dogs to eastern
countries and America in
many thousands will work
good, but he will never
reproduce this when
breeding him. At best,
will produce dogs with
high, high, prey with
little or no fighting
drive. These dogs all
look like you have a
cookie cutting machine
and used it to make
them, they are so much
alike. Maybe these dogs
are good for some people
but never for the man
who wants to train dogs
for real working.
As you know many, many
people from Germany come
to Belgium to buy their
dogs for police or for
top sport. Many famous
trainers and judges have
dogs from us. The reason
is that they want dogs
who can do work with all
drives present and high.
They want dogs with
excellent hips and good
conformation and do not
worry so much about the
colour. I think within
two years the Germans
will come to America to
buy dogs for police.
They have sold most of
their working bloodlines
because all of the money
is in breeding the show
dogs. To the man who
loves German Shepherd
for working, this will
bring many tears to his
eyes and heaviness to
his heart. The German
Shepherd Dog that
started the sport of
Schutzhund in Europe is
slowly vanishing because
it is not profitable
enough to produce them.
It is truly tragic what
man has done to his best
friend. |
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"Very Scary Dog"
DSM:
Gerrad, you certainly
said a lot and I have to
say that I agree with
you. I even had a German
police man tell me the
same thing this year, at
this years National that
the Germans will soon be
buying police and
working dogs from
America. You mentioned
about East German dogs
and sable dogs. What are
your ideas on these two
dogs?
ES: I have talked
and read many things
Americans have said
about East German Dogs.
Most are wrong. I love
to use
DDR dogs in my
breeding programme. It
puts size, bone, drive
and much, much more into
your dogs. You don't
have to pick up their
tails to tell they are
males. You can tell
immediately on the
DDR dogs. The most
important I think, the
DDR dogs in is their
unbelievable ability to
produce enormous
fighting drives.
As far as sable dogs,
this has been argued for
many years in Europe. I
personally don't know
but I like them better.
It seems I find many
more good hard real dogs
that are sable than any
other colour. And I just
bred to the famous East
German male,
Zorro v. Laager Wall,
and believe me this dog
is more than hard. He is
a very scary dog to be
near and his puppies are
top for the sport of
Schutzhund and police. I
have never seen anything
like this. This dog is
amazing and he is
handled by a woman. He
is getting so many
breedings in Europe, you
would not believe. Also,
the East German dogs are
known for producing very
excellent hips, and as
you know, working dogs
must have excellent
hips. |
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His Western Lines
DSM: But
you do use some working
bloodlines from West
Germany don't you?
ES: Oh hell yes!
I use many Busecker
Schloss dogs, as well as
dogs from "Drigon",
a little bit "Enno",
a little bit
"Karthargo," but a whole
lot of the old West
German working lines. I
use some Korbelbach, but
you must be very careful
of teeth and soft ears.
But really, I use many
West German working dogs
from former times in my
bleeding because I
produce many litters in
one year.
DSM: Now
that
Gento is in America,
what type of dog will
you replace him with?
ES: I would hope
to find a
Gento son and buy
him back but no one
wants to sell them, they
all bite so good. My new
dog, whatever I get,
will be at least one -
half East German, and
from the other half will
be nothing but working
bloodlines, and he must
be a very real dog for
all situations. So, I
guess I will just try to
find a young
Gento, but this will
be an almost impossible
task.
DSM: The
dogs from Belgium have
been winning the World
Championships for the
last few years. Why do
you think they are
having so much success?
ES: Belgium is a
very small country and
has less people than
Germany and has much
less dogs but the skill
of the handlers from
Belgium is very high.
Recently when we did not
win, we would come in
second. This is not
because other countries
have bad trainers, but
in Belgium we start with
dogs that are bred to
work. I guess you tired
of me saying this, but
we think you must breed
excellent working dogs
before you can train
them. No matter how
great the dog, he must
have a good handler,
too. Everyone that I
talked to thinks that
the Belgium dogs bite so
much better, but this is
not really 100 percent
correct. It is more the
way we train in Belgium.
We do not train only
Schutzhund bitework, we
train our dogs to bite
in KNPV clubs as well as
the Ring Clubs, so they
get much more for - real
situation bite - work,
and this only goes to
help on the Schutzhund
field. We, for the most
part, like a little more
civil, more aggressive
dog than some of the
other European
countries. |
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Let The Dog Relax
DSM:
Gerrard, you have sent
many dogs to America in
the last few years and
they are starting to win
in this country. The
North American
Championships in
Georgia, the Police dog
that won was a dog we
got for Deputy Greg
Mominee, the dog Orthos
"a
Uwe son". Greg also
came in second with the
same dog at the USA
Nationals. This is a dog
that you and I got for
Greg. What one thing
would you tell people in
America about getting
dogs from Europe?
ES: The most
important thing that I
must tell to all is give
your new dog some time.
I cannot believe how
some people know so
little about dogs. You
send them a dog on an
aeroplane that has been
with another owner for
some years, and the dog
is a little bit strange
from the aeroplane
flight. He is in a new
world, new sounds, new
smell, new everything,
and they want to take
him out and work him
that day or the next.
This is very wrong.
People who care for a
dog and know to train
dogs will never do this.
I would not want a dog
who would come out of
the box and would work
immediately. This type
of dog is usually only a
dog that works from his
prey drive. We in my
country, call them
prostitutes because they
care not who they are
with. I really think
there are some good
trainers in America and
some excellent dogs, but
some people still need
to learn some things
about the dogs like I
have just mentioned.
Even if I buy a dog in
my club that I know this
dog every day, I will
not work him for at
least two weeks until he
gets to know me. This
for sure is the only
thing to do with a new
dog. |
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Free Advise
DSM:
Gerrard, is there any
advice you could give to
us in America on our
dogs? You have seen most
of the dogs advertised
in the magazines in
America. What do you
think of them?
ES: Well, one
thing, I think if the
Americans want to
continue to compete at
high levels, they must
work together more. I
noticed from talking to
Americans in the last
weeks I have been here,
that they are not so
helpful to each other in
their training. They all
want to be the tops in
the sport but want to do
it alone. There has
never been a champion
that was made a champion
by only his handler. He
must have help from his
club and his agitators.
I talked to American
handlers when they were
in Germany and nost were
very excellent handlers,
they just need to work
together as a team, that
is all.
As far as the dogs in
your magazines I see, I
never knew one country
could have so many
Rottweiler dogs. They
are so expensive in
America but this is also
true in Europe. The
market is just too much
for them. But the German
Shepherds I saw ads were
mostly for show dogs and
this scares me al little
bit. I would hope to see
more people in America
with working bloodlines
dogs. You need many more
Schutzhund clubs in
America. In a town the
size of yours, and it is
a very small town, in
Germany or Belgium you
would have four or five
clubs. This way your dog
can work with different
helpers and on different
grounds.
DSM: Well
Gerard, it has been a
pleasure training with
you and working with
you. |
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