The Weimaraner, one of Germany's top sporting dogs, dates back less than
two hundred years. It was meticulously developed by noble sporting
patrons at the court of Weimar. It was a snob sporting dog developed and
jealously guarded by one of the biggest collection of snobs the dog
world has ever seen. You were right or you couldn't get your hands on
one. Bloodhound stock clearly played a large role at the beginning, as
did a German breed not known in this country, the red schweisshund. The
Weimaraner is a first cousin to the German shorthaired pointer.
The Weimaraner is a perfect example of a highly refined breeding
experiment that paid off, but it did produce a breed that is exactly
right for some kinds of people and perfectly dreadful for others. The
snobs of Weimar weren't entirely wrong in the degree to which they
protected their creation.
The solid mouse to silver-gray Weimaraner with its short, dense coat is
a dog that simply must have early obedience training or it is capable of
being a first-class pest. It is headstrong, willful, adoring, incredibly
intelligent, and responsive to praise. When a Weimaraner doesn't know
what it is supposed to do it can be counted on to do all the wrong
things. I have known Weimaraners whose owners had not bothered to train
them or teach them manners to go through a plate-glass picture window
because they had been left home alone too long and were bored, bless
them. I knew of one that dragged a charred log from a fireplace and
pulled it from room to room chewing charcoal off as it went. It took a
professional cleaning firm to repair the damage. It could have burned
the house down.
That kind of flaky behavior must be seen in contrast to the well-managed
dog, however, or it gives a distorted picture. A well-trained Weimaraner
is a regal accomplishment of canine genetic art, and as intolerably
ill-behaved as a mis-managed specimen can be, that is how extremely
good, solid, and reliable a properly raised example will be. It is one
of those dogs, and this is so often true of the sporting dogs, that it
is what you want it to be. Few dogs can be more of a nuisance than an
Irish setter, a vizsla, or a Weimaraner that has had its vital energy
levels, its need to perform, and its exuberant love affair with life
ignored. They need exercise, they need training, and they need
opportunities to participate in vigorous, ongoing events. You ignore
those facts at considerable risk to your property. I have known very few
sporting dogs that had anything at all wrong with them except their
owners.