The Weimaraner
The Weimaraner, one of Germany's top sporting
dogs, dates back less than 200 years. The Weimaraner was meticulously developed
and jealously guarded by the noble sporting patrons at the court of Weimar. You
were in the court or you couldn't get your hands on one.
Bloodhound stock clearly played a large part at the beginning, as did a German
breed not known in this country, the Red Schweiss-hund. The Weimaraner is a
first cousin to the German Short-haired Pointer. The Weimaraner is the perfect
example of a highly refined breeding program that paid off, but did produce a
breed that is exactly right for some kinds of people and perfectly dreadful for
others.
The snobs of Weimar weren't entirely wrong in the degree to which they protected
this breed. The Weimaraner with its short, dense coat is a breed that simply
must have early obedience training or it is capable of being a first class pest.
It is headstrong, willful, adoring, incredibly intelligent, and responsive to
praise. When a Weimaraner doesn't know what it is supposed to do, it can be
counted on to do all of the wrong things. I have known Weimaraners whose owners
had not bothered to train them or teach them manners to go through a plate-glass
picture window because they had been left home alone too long and were bored,
bless them. I know of one that dragged a charred log from a fireplace and pulled
it from room to room chewing off charcoal as it went. It took a professional
cleaning service to repair the damage. It could have burned the house down. That
kind of flaky behavior must be seen in contrast to the well-managed dog,
however, or it gives a distorted picture.
A well-trained Weimaraner is a regal accomplishment of canine genetic art, and
as intolerably ill-behaved as a mismanaged specimen can be, that is how
extremely good, solid and reliable a properly raised example will be. It is one
of those dogs, and this is so often true of the sporting dogs, that is what you
want it to be. Few dogs can be more of a nuisance than an Irish Setter, a Vizsla,
or a Weimaraner that has had its vital energy levels, its need to perform, and
its exuberant love affair with life, ignored. They need to exercise, they need
training, and they need opportunities to participate in vigorous, ongoing
events. You ignore these facts at considerable risk to your property. I have
known very few sporting dogs that had anything wrong with them except their
owners.
" A Celebration of Dogs"
by Roger Carras