The Boxer dog

 



 

 

 

 

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Click below for the Authoritative, Preeminent book on Boxer Dog Training
Boxer Dog Training Secrets

 

The early weeks are critical for developing the behaviour of your Boxer dog. Like all dogs, there are certain techniques that are used to effect the behavior of your Boxer. With a firm and educated plan for development, you can have your Boxer dog fully integreated into the family as a well trained, diciplined, gentle, loving family member.

Boxers are the perfect dog for children. They are incedibly patient and will let little children crawl all over them, pull their jowels and ears, tug and claw and the Boxer will just sit there with a funny slightly anoyed look on their face, but they never ever bite.

They are extremely playful and love to run and romp around. They love to play tug of war with just about anything. growling and snarling like some killer beast, but its all in the best of play with a boxer.

The boxer loves to lick and if given a chance will lick every square inch of your face Leaving you all slimy, so be careful.

A boxer dog is without a doubt, the worlds best begger. They are capable of creating a face that is so pathetic, it will make you feel like this poor dog has lived a terrible life and if you dont feed me some of that yummy food right now, it is quite possible I will drop dead right here and now. It is absolutly hilarious.

Discover How You Can Make Your Boxer Dog A Happy, Loving Dog Alive, Running Healthily With You… And You Are Able To Train Your Boxer Dog To Do The Tricks You’ve Always Wanted It To Do Like Sit, Roll, Fetch And Many More, Easily And Quickly Today!

The history of the boxer

This beautiful dog, the Boxer. The best companion dog in the history of dogs without a doubt. Well, I have had nothing but Boxers my entire life, so I have to admit I am a bit partial. I can tell may stories of the joy my boxers have provided through my life. They can allways put a smile on my face. I dont know if it is the pug nosed fleshy jowled face that I find so beautiful, or there personality, disposition,or more likly it is all of the above. They are so playful in the way they are ready to play in a second with a piece of rope or a romp around the grass. Attentive in the way they are with you everywhere you go, because that is where the action will be and they need to be part of it. Effectionate, they crave physical contact and petting. they are never bashful about climbing into the sack with you at night and are a great heat source on a cold night. Loyal in that they are engaging and personable, but will jump to defend you in a snap with a tenacious presence. Boxers are obedient and gentle, the boxer is very accepting of children and babies. You know how children are with the ear pulling and grabbing. That irratates some dogs. Boxers take all this in stride unlike any dog I have ever seen. Simply the best family dog imaginable.
where does this breed come from? How did the boxer we know and love today come to be? It was a cross between a couple different dogs, but I wanted to look into its heritage and see for sure. This is what I came up with.

The name for the Boxer is commonly thought to stem from the way that a boxer plays. It rears back on its hind legs and comes at you with its paws swinging, sort of like a pudgelist. You have to watch out, because they will land a couple arm scraping blows quickly, thus the need for training your Boxer. However this explanation is not correct.
Actually, the name "Boxer" is taken from an ancestor, the smaller BullenBeisser(Barbanter) that were known as "boxel". The name "Boxer" is thought to be a corruption of that name that has passed through time.
The boxer started out as a cross between the German Bullenbeisser and the English Bulldog. The German Bullenbeisser was a big sized hunting dog for hundreds of years. It was commonly used when hunting big game like deer, bear and wild pigs. Its primary purpose was to run down wounded prey and hold it until the hunters came.
A common feature of many boxers is the cropped pointed ears. I thought this was just for show, but it actually had a practical purpose related to their use as hunting dogs. When tracking and holding wild animals, the dogs would often suffer severly torn ears. They began cropping them to avoid this problem.
As time passed, dogs of smaller stature came into favor and the German Bullenbeisser was purposfully bred smaller and smaller. This smaller version of the German Bullenbeisser was then named the Bullenbeisser(Brabanter).
In the late 19th century, the Brabanter was bred again with the English Bulldog. This would start the line that would become today's Boxer. in 1894, the breed was stablized and exhibited in 1895.
The story of the dogs involved in the early genealogy is rather interesting. An intreaging tale of breeding and selection.
A gentleman from Munich Germany, George Alt mated a brindle-colored bitch Brabanter named "Flora" with a local dog of unknown ancestry named "Boxer". This resulted in a fawn and white pup they named "Lechners Boxer". When he matured, "Lechner's Boxer" was mated with his mother "Flora" and one of those puppies was a bitch called "Alt's Schecken". "Alt's Schecken was registered as a Bierboxer or Modern BullBeiser. "Alt's Schecken" was then mated with a English Bulldog named "Tom" that produced a puppy named "Flocki", the first boxer entered into the German Stud Book.
"Flocki's" sister, the white "Blanka von Angertor" was then bred with "Piccolo von Angertor" the grandson of "Lechners Boxer" to create "Meta von der Passage". It is "Meta Von Der Passage" that would have a huge impact on this breed. She is considered to be the mother of the modern breed of Boxer dog. "Meta von der Passage" went on to give birth to a line of sires that definded the future of the Boxer to the current day.

Boxer Dog Training Secrets

 

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