Fred Lanting “curriculum vitae”

Revised December 2011.

SEMINARS & LECTURE INFORMATION ON FRED LANTING

  • HD and Other Orthopedic Disorders: slide presentation touching on all aspects including genetics, nutrition, diagnosis, treatments, and more. Includes Q-&-A session. Total: 2 hours & up, or tailored to your needs.
  • Analytical Approach to Evaluating Dogs: a unique gait-and-structure slide talk, describing how to choose studs, candidates for purchase, pick puppies, and judge dogs in the ring or from ringside. Also stresses why decisions are made between dogs. Live volunteer dogs, slide illustrations, audience “hands-on” participation. From two hours, depending on number of dogs and participants/learners. Can be expanded if ring conditions and more intensive practice are desired. Can make a one-day package (a.m., lunch, and p.m.) for a money-builder for club treasuries, or a one-lecture-plus-meal event.
  • Schutzhund problem-solving and technique improvements.
  • Anatomy Courses similar to my SCJA Institute lectures. (See next column)
  • Others by special arrangement: Grooming, Handling, Basic Genetics, etc.
  • Evolution of the American German Shepherd Dog (spec clubs).

(Fee plus expenses; if lectures are in connection with judging assignments, such costs can be divided. No fee beyond expenses charged for lectures in foreign countries).

RELATED INFORMATION & QUALIFICATIONS
Drawing on experience in the following:
SV: Many years as one of only 2 judges in North & Central America, and a half-dozen in the Western Hemisphere approved by the Schäferhund Verein.
AKC: (Retired) German Shepherd, Rottweiler, Boxer, Greyhound, Whippet.
All-breed (active) status: UKC (United Kennel Club), National Canine Assoc., States KC, ARBA, ACB (Bolivia), DLA-China, & several other foreign countries & registries.
Foreign: Awarded Challenge Certificates and equivalents to selected breeds in New Zealand, Australia, Ireland, England, Scotland, Japan, etc., and to all breeds in Pakistan, India, much of S.E. Asia, South America, & the Caribbean.
National Specialties, Foreign, and “Rare” breeds judged:
Judged specialties and all-breed showsin approximately 30 countries, including the prestigious FCI Asian Shows in Japan and India, & the Scottish Kennel Club. National Specialties: GSD Club of America National; Tibetan Mastiff National; Shiba National; Fila Brasileiro Nationals (several times), Dogo Argentino National, Pyrenean Shepherd National. Numerous Chinese Shar Pei and Australian Shepherd specialties; regional Greyhound, Anatolian Shepherd specialties; several GSD Sieger Shows in South America & Asia, Rottweiler, Boxer, & other specialties worldwide.
Familiar with most of the 150 or so breeds that AKC recognizes, plus the FCI breeds not AKC-recognized, including the “rare” breeds through NCA, SKC, ARBA, FCI, UKC, and specialty clubs via judging, observation, and competing.
Obedience: SKC, ARBA (all judging levels); Behaviorist & Training Consultant.

ADDITIONAL BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION

  • First purebred dog: Toy Fox Terrier, 1937
  • First litter (Smooth Fox Terriers): 1945
  • First German Shepherd Dog 1947; active GSD breeder since 1966
  • Breeder of Whippets in the 1970s, Shibas in the 1980s & `90s
  • Owner, top-ten conformation and top lure-coursing Whippet.
  • Importer/owner of the #1 Shiba outside Japan for many years.

SHOW EXPERIENCE: Started handling in 1966, got AKC professional handling license shortly thereafter, handled all breeds in Canada, and most in the USA, even some handling in foreign countries in both show & obedience rings in the 1960s – 1980s. Still handling in selected shows. Many times show chairman/secretary. Trained and titled in Schutzhund.
JUDGING EXPERIENCE: over 24 countries. See information in other column.
CANINE AUTHORITY: Lecturer in about thirty countries on Gait-and-Structure, Canine Orthopedic Disorders, etc. Formerly instructor at Senior Conformation Judges Association Institute and W.Va. Canine College (including member of advisory board).
Worldwide canine behavior & structure consultant. Security & training consultant/analyst for Asesores Caninos (Colombia), and other countries. Expert witness in litigation,in most canine topics.
Author: The Total German Shepherd Dog, Canine Hip Dysplasia, Canine Orthopedic Problems, technical and science books, books of poetry, novels, etc. Writer of innumerable articles in dog magazines. Columnist for newspapers and many magazines and websites in the U.S. and abroad; frequent contributor to a wide variety of publications. Serious student of canine anatomy and health; assistant in veterinary surgery; guest lecturer at many vet schools.
MEMBER or former member:

  • Schäferhund Verein (SV-WUSV, world governing body for GSDs), Germany
  • GSD Club of America (including Board of Directors) and WDA
  • GSD Club of Northern Alabama (charter member & president)
  • States K.C.; also charter member & founder of member club, Dixie Dog Club
  • NCA: National Canine Association
  • DLA (China) all-breed & Director of Judges)
  • ACB: Kennel Club of Bolivia
    (all-breed judge)
  • NSCA; Shiba Club of America
    (officer and delegate to SKC)
  • United Schutzhund Clubs of America
  • Japan Kennel Club (& approved JKC judge)
  • Nihon Ken Hozonkai (Nippo) Japan breeds society
  • Various leadership offices with other clubs.
  • Official Inspector for UKC & NAPBTC: American Pit Bull Terriers.
  • Le Odre de Bon Temps
Fred Lanting,
3565 Parches Cove Rd
Union Grove AL 35175-8422
All Things Canine — consulting division, Willow Wood Services
<Mr.GSD @netscape.com>Phone: 256-498-3319
Fred Lanting

Back by popular demand: the Sieger Show experience!

Greetings, dog-and-sport lovers! At the beginning of each year, we start to make serious plans for the Sieger Show tour, so please let me know if you definitely DO want to go, or are thinking seriously about going with my group this year. It is the ONLY non-profit Sieger Show tour, and is at least a hundred dollars less expensive than going it on your own. Plus, novices get the perspective of a seasoned traveler with SV judging experience. Learn the good, the bad, and the ugly about the dogs that are most shaping the breed today.

We will arrive in a convenient airport in Germany on the Thursday morning before this biggest breed show in the world, which will mean most should leave the U.S. on Wed. The show runs from early Friday morning to Sunday afternoon. The early start on Friday, with the exciting and invaluable courage tests, will delight and inform the hard-core show-only, the hard-core Schutzhund-only, and the novice alike. Saturday is highlighted by the competition of the most promising young dogs, many of whom will be the super-stars of the next few years, and the important progeny-group competition/presentation. Sunday, the finals in the ordering of the top 75 or 100 or so adults (over 24 months and titled) of each sex in the big (football-size) ring, plus special features like kennel groups. Then on Monday we will commence our delightful tour of the area. Depending on where the show is held, you may also experience another country like Holland, Denmark, Austria, France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and/or Switzerland, visiting historical & touristy sites, scenic beauties, breeders, judges, and training clubs. Often, you will learn techniques you might not have seen in your local club, and meet some of the most successful trainers in Germany.

Depending on how many such attractions and appointments I can line up, and where the show is (it changes every year), we will get back to the airport location either Wed. or Thurs night. Flights back to the U.S. usually leave in the mornings. I frequently have participants from other countries, too, and will make sure everyone gets to the airport in his/her required time, even if we have to put you on a train before the group trip is over.
Please let me know as soon as you can, so I can start putting my notification list together and finalizing reservations. I will make the hotel plans based on your deposits, arrange the visits and van(s), and you will make your own plane reservations. You pay your room, meals, and a pro-rated share of my expenses: my travel, lodging, food, and our rental van(s). That’s all. Easy, fun, educational and, for most, the unique trip of a lifetime.

Living A Dream: A Tour of the German Sieger Show (Impressions of American & Canadian Tour Participants) by Mary Klein

Imagine going to the Sieger Show in Ulm, Germany with internationally recognized SV judge Fred Lanting, followed by a long tour, including the famous vom Wildsteiger-Land Kennel given by its owners, GSD breeders extraordinaire Martin and Maria Göbl, and sightseeing in beautiful Bavaria and a little of Austria. That is the dream trip that I, a Schaeferhund lover, just completed. Fred leads a tour every year to the Sieger Show and includes several days of sightseeing and kennel/training-club visits. As another tour member, Barb Loftus, owner of Richtbar German Shepherds in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada, says, “It was the trip of a lifetime.”

Alpine views and medieval castles are terrific, but not as exciting as watching the newly crowned World Sieger Bax von der Luisenstraße display his courage, drive, and that special beauty created by outstanding conformation and movement. But VA-2 Larus von Batu, with his illustrious bloodlines (son of two-time World Sieger Yasko vom Farbenspiel), harmonious lines, and deep red and black pigmentation was a crowd pleaser. Why was he not crowned king? Probably in part because this three-year-old still has a small progeny group, says Lanting, our tour leader. Considering the enormous affect the World Sieger has on the future of the German Shepherd (this top dog will be extensively used for breeding), this second-place ranking for Larus makes sense. (For an analysis of show results by Fred Lanting, go to http://siriusdog.com/article/author/Fred+Lanting)

Being surrounded by about 1,300 competing German Shepherds and an estimated 30,000 enthusiastic GSD lovers for three days (Sept. 5-7) is an incomparable experience. Stand in the right spot and you are a few yards away from incredible dogs in the show ring. Stroll around the grounds or over to the area where young dogs competed and there is ample opportunity to meet canine beauties and their owners or handlers. Pet a puppy while watching the action in the ring, and it might climb into your lap, as one of our tour group members delightfully discovered. (Owners bring puppies to the show hoping to go home without them.)

But nothing compares to the thrill of seeing a lightning-fast GSD, such as newly crowned Siegerin Kora vom Bierstadter Hof or VA-3 Hill vom Farbenspiel, excel at bitework in the courage test or powerfully command the ring during confirmation competition, earning the roar of an admiring crowd.

Loftus was particularly impressed by the way the dogs were judged: ‘First, the protection work that they had to pass in order to advance to the standing (posed) individual exam and preliminary ranking, followed by the group judging, and extensive gaiting around a very large soccer field. They gaited slowly in a walk, then a fast trot, and finally fast off-lead, which was very impressive’, she says. The biggest surprise for Loftus, a breeder of American Shepherds, was the quality of GSDs. Prior to the SV Show she was not keen on German dogs. ‘But I saw some gorgeous German dogs at the show. It was really an eye-opener. I still love the elegance and suspension of the American-bred dog, but there are definitely benefits to using some very good German males/bitches in our breeding programs.’

She kept a close eye on the male GSDs at the show. ‘Of the 11 VA male dogs, I particularly loved three: VA-4 Ando v. Altenberger; VA- 7 Quantum v. Arminius, and VA-11 Quirin v. Hochmoor. Of course, the Siegerin was beautiful. She could hold her own here in the U.S. in my opinion. The males impressed me with their masculinity, black and red color, (generally) plush coats, bone, and strong ears. None could be mistaken for a bitch, even the smaller males. Bitches were generally small to medium in size and feminine on the whole. No snipy muzzles here,’ Loftus says.

At the end of each show each day, Loftus, myself, and the six other tour members would climb into the green Mercedes van that Lanting drove and head to a traditional family-run German restaurant for a hearty meal, tall glasses of local beer, delicious do-not-count-the-calories desserts, and lots of laughs. This was a time to reflect upon the day’s competitions, exchange ideas about dogs, and sometimes, dream of taking one home. Most importantly, it was an opportunity to continue bombarding Lanting with GSD-related and SV Show questions, all of which he answered in detail, providing a behind-the-scenes look at the intriguing — and sometimes politically difficult — GSD world. For instance, during one conversation, Lanting correctly predicted the show placement of several dogs, including Bax as the new Sieger. Another time he told us about several award-winning GSDs whose progeny were somewhat more likely to have certain genetic problems.

A Bavarian Adventure and the Wildsteiger-Land Kennel

And then the 2003 SV Sieger Show was over, and another adventure began. We drove south on Germany’s renowned Romantische Strasse (Romantic Road) into Bavaria, heading toward the vom Wildsteiger-Land Kennel, famous for producing world champion GSDs, including VA-1 (1982) Perle vom Wildsteiger-Land and Uran Wildstieger Land, the outstanding stud and German Sieger in 1984 and 1985, and of course Palme, the dam of both Uran and Quando Arminius. The fabulous Karly Arminius (out of a WildsteigerLand bitch) was also there to delight us.

The aptly named Romantic Road passes through quaint villages with half-timbered, red-roofed houses with flower-covered balconies, medieval walled towns, and some of Germany’s most beautiful rural countryside. As a bonus, the snow-capped Alps offer a stunning backdrop. Our sightseeing forays included (¡§Mad¡¨) King Ludwig’s fairy-tale castle, Neuschwanstein, the inspiration for the Disney theme-park castle. Perched high on a hill overlooking Lake Alpsee and the Tyrolean Alps, the grey-granite schloss was completed in 1886. Some of our tour members took a horse-drawn carriage up to the castle, while others hiked a beautiful footpath to one of the best views of the castle — from a narrow bridge spanning a dramatically deep gorge.

We made another stop at one of the greatest rococo buildings in Europe — the Wieskirche (Meadow Church) built as a pilgrimage church to house a statue of Christ that a farmer’s wife said she had seen crying. Because of its plain exterior, I was unprepared for its spectacular interior. Gold-plated stucco ornamentation, multi-colored marble pillars, and a frescoed dome depicting the Gate to Eternity were a sight to behold. ¨Germany and Austria are breathtakingly beautiful and soooo clean, and the people were all very friedly¨ Loftus says.

For a somewhat less pious experience we went to a small shop that specialized in a wide variety of schnapps. After sampling several flavors and buying a bottle as a gift for Martin and Maria Göbl, we drove to their kennel — Wildsteiger-Land. At the time, I did not know that one of our tour members would later make an offer to buy one of their dogs.

The Göbls, friends of Lanting, warmly greeted us, flanked by their gorgeous GSD female, Nata, who had just placed V-7 in the Gebrauchshundeklasse of the SV Show. Entering their alpine-style home, everyone was awe-struck by the scores of silver trophies and other awards bestowed upon their dogs. After coffee and cake, we went outside to their immaculately kept kennels (adorned with colorful hanging flowers) to meet their dogs. Maria and Martin brought out one remarkable GSD after another. We played with puppies, petted young dogs that might be on the road to stardom, and got our faces licked. Cameras clicked as Martin handled a high-spirited young male and then rubbed its stomach, and Maria posed with another energetic dog. One young female, its foot bandaged from a minor injury to her pad, caught the eye of a potential buyer in our tour group. I sensed that he was looking for the right time to make an offer.

‘ All of the dogs had exceptional temperament; they were very friendly and outgoing. And the Göbls were very friendly. The only drawback was that they didn’t speak English and none of us (tour group members) could speak German, except Fred, who says his is only pedigree-German. But it was nice to see their dogs and set-up. I really enjoyed that,¨ Loftus says.

Then a moment came that Lanting had been waiting for. Martin brought out the great Karly von Arminius, now 11, who had consistently placed in the VA group in his younger years. Karly, whose last show placement was VA-2, is the son of Sieger Kimon v. Dan Alhedy¡¦s Hoeve. Lanting greeted Karly with great warmth and affection ¡X as an old friend who will never be forgotten.

After more than an hour, the Göbls brought the last dog back to his kennel home and finished doing chores. But we did not have to say goodbye yet. Lanting had invited Martin, Maria, and their son Markus to join us for dinner, and off we drove, following the Göbls car to a very special Bavarian restaurant. (One of our lucky tour members rode with the Göbls.) After a hearty toast at the restaurant, we enjoyed a fabulous meal of traditional Bavarian dishes. (Well, we actually had several enthusiastic toasts, too.)
While sipping after-dinner drinks, Lanting, on behalf of our potential buyer who spoke no German, asked if the female with the bandaged foot was for sale. Yes, she was. How much? After a brief discussion with each other, the Göbls said 5,000 Euros (about $5,750 U.S. dollars). Would the buyer also be interested in buying a young puppy, Martin asked. Yes, how much? About 500 to 600 Euros, Martin said. But it would be better to buy two of the pups, Martin said, so that they could keep each other company on the long flight to the U.S. Our intrepid buyer smiled, and said he would let them know soon. Later, we warmly said our goodbyes and jumped into the van. On the way back to our inn, Lanting filled us in on what really was going on during the sale negotiations. Basically, if our tour member agreed to buy the bitch, the Göbls would give him a very good deal on puppies he wanted to sell. It was the end of another perfect day. (Price negotiations continued for several days and the sale fell through. But for the rest of us, the conversation about the possible sale was fascinating.)

The next morning I reluctantly left the Lanting tour to return home. I felt even more regretful when people who continued the tour told me it was fantastic. More sightseeing followed my departure, including a guided tour through the SV headquarters, the gilded Rathaus in Augsburg (established in B.C. by Caesar Augustus), and other wonderful experiences. As Loftus puts it: I had a great time, met some new friends and finally got to see and really appreciate the crème de la crème of German dogs at the Sieger show! I recommend that all Canadians/Americans visit at least one Sieger show if at all possible to view the venue for themselves. They will not be disappointed.¨
Mary Klein maryartny@aol.com is a free-lance journalist and award-winning filmmaker now living in Germany. Barb Loftus is the owner of Richtbar German Shepherds in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada. Her e-mail is: barloftus@aol.com Tour leader Fred Lanting can be reached at Mr.GSD @Juno.com

Fred's Timo daughter at Linderhof Castle.
Fred’s Timo daughter, in Europe for breeding, at Linderhof Castle.

Fred Lanting

Fred Lanting is an internationally respected show judge, approved by many registries as an all-breed judge, has judged numerous countries’ Sieger Shows and Landesgruppen events, and has many years experience as one of only two SV breed judges in the US. He presents seminars and consults worldwide on such topics as Gait-&-Structure, HD and Other Orthopedic Disorders, and The GSD. He conducts annual non-profit sightseeing tours of Europe, centered on the Sieger Show (biggest breed show in the world) and BSP.

Books by Fred Lanting