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Frogwatch Frogwatch is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Sep 2006
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Default Mimicry and intelligence

On Jul 31, 12:20*am, Frogwatch wrote:
On Jul 30, 11:58*pm, Zombie of Woodstock wrote:



On Thu, 30 Jul 2009 20:32:03 -0700, "mgg" wrote:


"Wizard of Woodstock" wrote in message
.. .
On Thu, 30 Jul 2009 14:59:36 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote:


However, anybody with a dog will realize their pet is capable of some
sort of reasoning and intelligence.


I wouldn't say some sort - I would say that dogs are fully capable of
reasoning and even the average dog has innate intelligence.


When these discussions come up, I always point to my buddy Duke Doggee
Dog who was a blind Border Collie. *He had a vocabulary of 350 plus
words, he understood complex sentences and even offer an opinion from
time-to-time. *:)


Proof of the pudding that dogs can reason and even rationalize was
Duke and one other dog I had in the service - a Belgian Shepard named
Major. *Duke was blind, but I didn't know it until he was five - I
happened to notice calcium deposits in his eyes and took him to the
top veterinary opthamologist at Tufts Vet School who tested him and
calmly asked me if I knew he was blind. :)


Major could even read body language, had a similar vocabulary to Duke
and had an uncanny ability to work off leash to a complex set of hand
commands.


Even average dogs have 200+ word vocabularies - it's just a difference
in levels of intelligence.


Just like in humans.


I have a 7 year old German Shephard Dog, and I PROMISE you he is more
intelligent than some in this group.


Seriously though, I talk to him in sentances, not commands. He understands
just fine. I just wish he could talk.


He does - you just don't understand what he's saying. *:)


Duke was simply amazing at that - he had about eleven distinct
"sounds" and sometimes could link them together to make a "sentence".
I knew exactly what he was "saying" - others just heard noise.


Same with Major, but you have to understand that both of those dogs
were with me 24/7/365 - I knew the dogs behaviors as well as they knew
mine.


My son's dog is a "Calahu" (sp?) which were bred for herding Florida
Scrub cattle. *She has beautiful markings, brown, black and lighter
mix. *She desperately wants to herd stuff, unfornately she thinks
herding cars is good. *Somebody should start a place for herding dogs
where they can go and herd sheep till they tire of it.


OK, I meant "Catahoula" or "Leopard Dog" and she is just like the
stuff on google says, truly an independent character which is why I
like her I guess.