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Post by Bolushi on May 28, 2023 22:39:53 GMT
Well I haven't tried to look, so you might be right. I do agree I've seen far more intense wolf fights, but there still wasn't impressive fighting ability. There was great fighting ability, not in that video ophio sent but in the videos I sent. Its just usually territorial disagreements do not end up in those fights. Territorial disputes do though. When 2 wolves are serious about fucking each other up they fight like gsds. No better no worse.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on May 28, 2023 22:46:06 GMT
There was great fighting ability, not in that video ophio sent but in the videos I sent. Its just usually territorial disagreements do not end up in those fights. Territorial disputes do though. When 2 wolves are serious about fucking each other up they fight like gsds. No better no worse. I can actually agree since many time from what i’ve seen German Shepherds use their size as a factor too. Im curious about how Continental Herders are seen here. Territorial disputes may end up in these fights since the two wolves are just like “you’re 5 feet from your land, go there and i’ll stop biting you”
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Post by Hardcastle on May 29, 2023 0:11:21 GMT
Im curious about how Continental Herders are seen here. They're bad at fighting, BUT in my experience if your dog does have a scuffle with a continental herder the chances of it recieving a nasty wound are greater than just about about any other dog. They can do damage quickly with their snapping bites and long teeth. The only time my childhood dog took damage in a fight was with a black herder (not sure if dutch or black GSD). He beat the hell out of it, but upon his initial lunge it bit him deeply in the chest and the wound went on to become infected and make him sick. I do see them as very similar to wolves, continental herders, more so than any other type of dog. And yeah a wolf would be a like a "super" continental herder whose snapping defensive bite can do even more damage. In a sense I see these snapping bites as more like a fight-avoidance technique than a real fighting technique, but they are effective and damaging.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on May 29, 2023 0:20:55 GMT
Im curious about how Continental Herders are seen here. They're bad at fighting, BUT in my experience if your dog does have a scuffle with a continental herder the chances of it recieving a nasty wound are greater than just about about any other dog. They can do damage quickly with their snapping bites and long teeth. The only time my childhood dog took damage in a fight was with a black herder (not sure if dutch or black GSD). He beat the hell out of it, but upon his initial lunge it bit him deeply in the chest and the wound went on to become infected and make him sick. I do see them as very similar to wolves, continental herders, more so than any other type of dog. And yeah a wolf would be a like a "super" continental herder whose snapping defensive bite can do even more damage. In a sense I see these snapping bites as more like a fight-avoidance technique than a real fighting technique, but they are effective and damaging. I’d say more so with German Shepherds. If you look at Malinoises they are more similar to Pastoral herders in being small and quick. Where as continental herders, gripping dogs, mackenzie valley/northwestern wolves, and even eurasian wolves have problems with evasion. They can’t run that fast and mostly have slow-twitch muscles. German Shepherds are large and that gives them a lot of advantages, so I could see that point.
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ophio
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Post by ophio on May 29, 2023 0:54:00 GMT
Post some better wolf fights then. Yes because this is totally normally how wolves fight, even though if they fought like this regularly, the leading cause of death for wolves wouldn’t be other wolves and I don’t even know what wolves would be. Aside from sarcasm I don’t see how anyone sees this as how wolves fight. The video ophio posted is wolves throwing bites at each other and toppling on top of each other, not with any grit or energy, it didn’t even seem intense. Do you know in the instances of wolves actually dying, how many of them were dead at the hands of multiple wolves rather than one.in your video, it seems like the wolves like ganging up on weaker wolves in a pack fight
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on May 29, 2023 0:55:31 GMT
Yes because this is totally normally how wolves fight, even though if they fought like this regularly, the leading cause of death for wolves wouldn’t be other wolves and I don’t even know what wolves would be. Aside from sarcasm I don’t see how anyone sees this as how wolves fight. The video ophio posted is wolves throwing bites at each other and toppling on top of each other, not with any grit or energy, it didn’t even seem intense. Do you know in the instances of wolves actually dying, how many of them were dead at the hands of multiple wolves rather than one.in your video, it seems like the wolves like ganging up on weaker wolves in a pack fight I read about it all the time in scientific studies but you are correct I have never seen a video of such.
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