johnnycake
WKR
I agree that lineage and breeding can help, insofar as that will predisposition the dog to certain personality and temperament traits that are favorable. For example, being bold and assertive are good things to have in a bear dog, and breeding will definitely help with that. Couple that with early exposure and training and you're doing the best you can to have the dog do what you are hoping for (which is also true for whatever skill you have in mind for the dog). But it's not a guarantee. Case in point, dogs fail out of law enforcement and military K9 training all the time for a variety of reasons, despite excellent breeding and solid handling. Anybody who thinks they can guarantee a result when it comes to dogs, is full of it.Depends on the dogs lineage and breeding , my dogs the brunt have all been exposed to grizzly, fresh scent and old, some have seen a grizzly at considerable yardage. Now we all know a grizzly will make short work of any dog, but knowing they will give their life so that you may save yours is reassuring.This dog shown below is the most dangerous we've ever imported and trained, he just recently went to US Border Patrol,two years with a tariner,he's 100% controllable and his bite is so ferocious we use a double sleeve when doing attack work, he was a high dollar dog, before leaving we bred him and froze semen for future breedings. A monster of a dog.He's waiting to attack now ,single sleeve he needs muzzled as his bite can be painful through a single sleeve, when doubled he's not muzzled.
My next door neighbor is a state trooper and has a retired K9 Czech import GSD and an active K9 Malinois. She regularly holds K9 trainings in her yard and up and down our culdesac. She came up to chat with me a few years ago to ask what I had been killing recently. Apparently her GSD would growl and back away whenever the wind was blowing from the south, and other officers' dogs had very interesting and unexpected results during some training sessions when my bear waders were airing out! I now know to give her a heads up when I've got serious brown bear stink going on in my driveway.
There's just something about grizzlies/brown bears that registers in dogs differently than any other N.A. animal I've dealt with (no experience with polar bears--yet). And until you put a dog in close contact with a grizzly, you just do not know what they are going to do or how they will act.
