OSS Training Solutions
Basic Obedience
Provide your Dutch puppy with the right foundation and head start by adding Basic Obedience. FCI Dutch Shepherds are not like German Shepherds or KNPV Dutch Shepherds and do best when trained by those who are familiar with the breed. For this reason, we give our clients the opportunity for their puppy to receive training prior to leaving our facility. This training includes: potty training, crate training, sit, down, heel, stay, touch, and place.
Advanced Obedience
Advanced obedience elevates your dog to the next level. In addition to Basic Obedience, our Advanced Obedience package adds a whole new level of experience to your Dutch. Out, leave it, and off-lead training along with the option for e-collar training truly enhance your relationship and experience with your Dutch.
Service Dog Training
Our Dutch's who pass the temperament reqirements to be service dogs, are truly unique and well qualified to take on many tasks. Due to the nature of each client's circumstances we encourage you to reach out to us directly to discuss Service Dog Training.
We provide specially curated resources and OSS Member Benefits for our Service Dog clients. After all, if you're in need of a service dog, it is safe to assume that life has brought a few challenges your way. Our aim is to make this step in your journey a special one.
Dual-Purpose Working Dog
A dual-purpose working dog, such as those used in police or military work, typically refers to the ability of the dog to distinguish between different stimuli or situations. This can include recognizing specific scents, identifying threats, or responding to various commands.
Key factors in training these dogs include:
Socialization: Exposure to diverse environments and people to ensure balanced behavior.
Scent Discrimination: Training to differentiate between various odors, crucial for detection work.
Aggression Control: Teaching the dog when to display aggression (e.g., in apprehension) and when to be calm.
Obedience Training: Ensuring reliable responses to commands, which is essential for safety and effectiveness.
Effective training and clear communication are vital to maximize the dog's potential while ensuring it can operate safely in complex environments.
Multi-Purpose Working Dog
A multi-purpose working dog is trained to perform various tasks, often combining roles such as protection, detection, and assistance. These dogs are typically used in law enforcement, search and rescue, military, and service work.
Key Characteristics:
Versatility: Capable of switching between tasks, such as tracking, detection (e.g., narcotics, explosives), and apprehension.
Intelligence: Highly trainable, able to learn and execute complex commands and tasks.
Strong Drive: Exhibits high energy and motivation, essential for engaging in different working scenarios.
Physical Fitness: Well-built and agile, enabling them to perform demanding tasks effectively.
Socialization: Balanced temperament, allowing them to interact appropriately with people and other animals.
These dogs are invaluable in various roles, demonstrating loyalty, courage, and an innate ability to work in challenging situations.
Home Defense
A home defense dog is specially trained to protect a residence and its occupants, acting as both a deterrent to potential intruders and an active protector in emergencies. These dogs are highly valued for their loyalty, alertness, and carefully trained responses.
Key Characteristics:
Protective Instincts: Naturally cautious around strangers, with a strong drive to defend their home and family.
Specialized Training: Trained in both obedience and protection to respond appropriately to threats. This includes alert behaviors like barking and, when necessary, physical intervention.
Loyalty: Forms a deep bond with family members, which enhances their protective instincts.
Balanced Socialization: Well-socialized to distinguish between routine and threatening behaviors, ensuring they remain calm around friends and family while staying alert to danger.
While these dogs can provide a strong line of defense, proper training and socialization are crucial for them to react appropriately across various situations.
Home Defense Dog vs. Family Protection Dog
Although the terms "home defense dog" and "family protection dog" are often used interchangeably, there are subtle distinctions.
Home Defense Dog:
Primary Role: Focused on deterring intruders and safeguarding the home, often by alerting owners to potential threats.
Training: Primarily trained in obedience and alert behaviors, such as barking at strangers, with a focus on home security.
Temperament: Typically more vigilant around strangers, with a strong emphasis on guarding property.
Family Protection Dog:
Primary Role: Trained to protect family members both inside and outside the home. This includes responding to threats during family activities.
Training: More extensive training that includes protection work, obedience, and socialization. They must discern between real threats and normal situations.
Temperament: Balanced demeanor, able to interact positively with family, yet still ready to defend when needed.
In summary, while both types of dogs provide security, family protection dogs have a broader scope of training and are designed to engage with family members in various settings, while home defense dogs primarily focus on protecting the home environment.
Executive Protection
An executive protection dog is a highly trained canine specifically designed to provide security for individuals, often in high-profile or high-risk situations. These dogs are commonly used by executives, celebrities, and public figures to enhance personal safety.
Key Characteristics:
Advanced Training: These dogs undergo rigorous training in obedience, protection, and threat assessment, enabling them to respond effectively in various situations.
Protection Skills: Trained to detect and deter potential threats, including personal attacks or unwanted intrusions.
Calm Demeanor: Socialized to remain composed in public settings, allowing them to interact with people without displaying unnecessary aggression.
Versatile Roles: Capable of functioning in different environments, whether in transit, at events, or during daily activities.
Executive protection dogs serve as both a deterrent and a physical line of defense, ensuring the safety of their handlers while remaining discreet and professional in public situations.
Personal Protection
A personal protection dog is a specially trained canine that provides security and protection to an individual, ensuring their safety in various environments. These dogs are often used by individuals who may face personal threats, such as celebrities, business executives, or anyone requiring enhanced security.
Duties of a Personal Protection Dog:
Threat Detection: Trained to identify potential threats in their environment, including suspicious individuals or situations.
Physical Protection: Capable of intervening physically to protect their handler from attacks, whether by deterring or engaging an aggressor.
Alerting: Trained to alert their handler to potential dangers through barking or body language.
Crowd Control: Able to navigate crowded environments while maintaining focus on their handler’s safety.
Companionship: Provides a sense of security and companionship, often forming a strong bond with their handler.
Key Traits:
Obedience: Highly trained to follow commands reliably.
Loyalty: Develops a strong protective instinct towards their handler.
Calm Temperament: Must remain composed in various situations, including stressful or public environments.
Personal protection dogs offer both a physical presence and a psychological sense of safety for their owners.
Search
A search dog is a specially trained canine that assists in locating missing persons, detecting substances, or finding specific objects in various environments. These dogs are invaluable in search and rescue operations, law enforcement, and disaster response.
Types of Search Dogs:
Search and Rescue (SAR) Dogs: Trained to find missing persons in wilderness, urban, or disaster scenarios. They use their keen sense of smell to track scents and locate individuals.
Cadaver Dogs: Specialized in detecting human remains, often used in investigations or recovery operations.
Detection Dogs: Trained to find specific substances, such as drugs, explosives, or contraband. Their ability to identify particular scents makes them crucial in law enforcement.
Key Traits:
Strong Sense of Smell: Dogs have a highly developed olfactory system, allowing them to detect scents at extremely low concentrations.
Trainability: They undergo extensive training to learn specific tasks and commands related to search operations.
Endurance: Often required to work in challenging environments for extended periods.
Search dogs play a critical role in various operations, significantly enhancing the effectiveness of search efforts.
Suspect Apprehension
A suspect apprehension dog is a specially trained canine used primarily in law enforcement to assist in the apprehension of criminal suspects. These dogs are trained to engage and subdue individuals who pose a threat or are fleeing from law enforcement.
Key Functions:
Apprehension: Trained to chase and physically restrain a suspect, using controlled biting techniques if necessary.
Search and Tracking: Able to track scents and locate fleeing suspects, often in various environments.
Alerting: Trained to alert handlers to the presence of a suspect, providing crucial information during operations.
Deterrence: The presence of an apprehension dog can deter criminal behavior and encourage compliance from suspects.
Key Traits:
Strong Drive: High energy and motivation to engage in chase and apprehension scenarios.
Intelligence: Quick learners, able to respond to commands and assess situations rapidly.
Controlled Aggression: Trained to use aggression appropriately, ensuring they act only when necessary.
Suspect apprehension dogs play a vital role in law enforcement, enhancing officer safety and effectiveness during apprehension operations.
Tactical Patrol
Tactical dog training involves specialized training for dogs to perform in high-pressure, operational environments, often alongside law enforcement or military personnel. This training equips dogs with the skills necessary to assist in various tactical scenarios, including apprehension, detection, and crowd control.
Key Components of Tactical Dog Training:
Obedience Training: Establishing a solid foundation of commands and discipline, ensuring the dog responds reliably in any situation.
Protection Skills: Teaching controlled aggression, bite work, and how to engage or apprehend suspects as directed by handlers.
Search and Detection: Training dogs to locate specific scents, such as explosives or narcotics, which is crucial for tactical operations.
Tracking: Developing the dog’s ability to follow scents over various terrains, which is essential for locating suspects or missing persons.
Socialization: Exposing dogs to different environments, sounds, and situations to ensure they remain calm and focused under pressure.
Scenario Training: Conducting simulations of real-life situations, such as building searches or active shooter scenarios, to prepare dogs for tactical deployment.
Tactical dog training is intensive and ongoing, designed to prepare dogs and their handlers for effective teamwork in high-stress situations, enhancing overall operational effectiveness.
Tracking (Deer)
A tracking dog is a specially trained canine that uses its keen sense of smell to follow a scent trail left by a person or animal. These dogs are often employed in various scenarios, including search and rescue operations, law enforcement, and hunting.
Key Characteristics:
Exceptional Sense of Smell: Dogs have a highly developed olfactory system, allowing them to detect and differentiate scents even at low concentrations.
Training: Tracking dogs undergo extensive training to recognize and follow specific scent trails. They learn to focus on the scent of a particular individual, ignoring other distractions.
Persistence: These dogs are trained to stay focused on the task, often working for long periods without losing the scent trail.
Command Responsiveness: They must respond reliably to their handler’s commands and cues during tracking missions.
Common Uses:
Search and Rescue: Locating missing persons, particularly in wilderness or disaster scenarios.
Law Enforcement: Assisting in criminal investigations by tracking suspects or missing persons.
Hunting: Helping hunters track game animals.
Tracking dogs are invaluable in various fields, utilizing their unique abilities to enhance safety and efficiency in search and apprehension efforts.
Trailing (Blood)
Blood trailing dogs are specifically trained to track wounded deer or other game animals by following the scent of blood. This type of training is crucial for hunters who need to recover game after a shot. Here’s an overview of their training and capabilities:
Key Aspects of Blood Trailing and Deer Tracking Training:
Scent Discrimination: Dogs learn to identify the unique scent of blood, distinguishing it from other smells in the environment.
Tracking Skills: Training focuses on following a blood trail, which can include small drops or large pools, across various terrains.
Persistence: Dogs are trained to remain focused on the trail, even when the scent is faint or the environment is challenging.
Command Training: Handlers teach dogs to respond to specific commands, guiding them during the tracking process.
Search Techniques: Dogs learn to work in a systematic manner, covering areas where a deer might have traveled after being wounded.
Socialization: Exposure to different environments, sounds, and situations helps dogs remain calm and focused during tracking missions.
Recovery Process:
Assessment: After a shot, the hunter assesses the situation and, if necessary, calls in a trained blood trailing dog.
Tracking: The dog is led to the last known location of the deer, where it begins to pick up the scent.
Recovery: Once the dog locates the deer, it can indicate the find by staying close or returning to the handler.
Blood trailing dogs play a crucial role in ethical hunting practices, ensuring that wounded animals are tracked and recovered efficiently, minimizing suffering.
Remote Training
Interested in training and are not in the area, or have other limitations that keep you from training in person?
We have the answer! We offer Remote Training!