You are, of course, entitled to your opinion, but you are mistaken in thinking
I was trying to generalize about any breed. I have had dogs for all of my
52 years, and I know individuals can occur in any breed. I used to raise
Siberian Huskies, far down on Cohen's list at 45. Loved them but would
never own one again. I wasn't looking for you to endorse the book, I was
throwing it out there as possibly of interest to Plazul or anyone else thinking
of getting a dog.
And I have to say... I know of NO dumb GSD's. Not a single one. I find it
extemely sad to believe you can only count on appearance and health
problems. (This is not to generalize and say there ARE none, just that
I know lots and don't know any dumb ones, so at least the incidence
must be very low!)
Months to teach a lab to sit? I wouldn't spend months teaching any dog
to sit. In the unlikely event I couldn't teach even an Afghan Hound to sit, I
would hike my butt to a professional trainer.
I must have missed the post where Plazul said he had adopted the dog.
Last thing I read, he only said he was "giving it some serious thought".
I am glad you seem to enjoy your cocker spaniels. Plazul asked, of course
tell him your experience, just like the rest of us have.
Yes, "different breeds suit different people's lifestyles and needs". That is
why I got a GSD instead of one of the 2 higher breeds on the list, Border
Collie or Poodle.
But think of this, there are no cocker spaniels at Guide Dogs For the Blind.
All of those dogs have to be smart enough to practice "intelligent
disobedience"... i.e., if the blind person gives them the command "Forward"
and there's a big hole in front of him, the dogs have to be smart enough
to ignore the command.
