CANIS PANTHER
This breed was developed in the USA in the 1970s by Mr. Cleotha " Scorpio " Jones, Mr. Michael Stratten, and
Mr. Lucas Lopez by using the Black Great Dane, Black
Labrador,
Doberman
Pinscher, and the Staffordshire Terrier. Today
the Canis Panther breeds true. We have established bloodlines and
multi-generation pedigrees. The Canis Panther is a very
sensitive and loving animal to its family pack. They are very intelligent, easy
to train and extremely loyal. They excel in obedience, agility and personal
protection. They are very good guard dogs. They are very defensive of their
territory. He should be well socialized, preferably
when young with both dogs and people, especially with children, as the breed
tends to be naturally wary of strangers, though he is very friendly with those
he knows. In order to successfully keep a Canis Panther the family must
achieve
a pack leader status. It is a natural instinct for a dog to
have an order
in their pack. When we humans live with dogs, we become their pack.
The entire pack cooperates under a
single leader. Lines are clearly defined and rules are set. Because a dog
communicates his displeasure with growling and eventually biting, all other
humans MUST be higher up in the order than the dog. The humans must be the ones
making the decisions, not the dogs. That is the only way your relationship with
your dog can be a complete success.
Height,
Weight
Height: Males 27-30 inches (68-77
cm) Females: 24-27 inches (62-68)
Weight: Males 120-140 pounds (54-63 kg)
Females 85- 105 pounds (38-48 kg)
Mr. Lucas Lopez by using the Black Great Dane, Black
Labrador,
Doberman
Pinscher, and the Staffordshire Terrier. Today
the Canis Panther breeds true. We have established bloodlines and
multi-generation pedigrees. The Canis Panther is a very
sensitive and loving animal to its family pack. They are very intelligent, easy
to train and extremely loyal. They excel in obedience, agility and personal
protection. They are very good guard dogs. They are very defensive of their
territory. He should be well socialized, preferably
when young with both dogs and people, especially with children, as the breed
tends to be naturally wary of strangers, though he is very friendly with those
he knows. In order to successfully keep a Canis Panther the family must
achieve
a pack leader status. It is a natural instinct for a dog to
have an order
in their pack. When we humans live with dogs, we become their pack.
The entire pack cooperates under a
single leader. Lines are clearly defined and rules are set. Because a dog
communicates his displeasure with growling and eventually biting, all other
humans MUST be higher up in the order than the dog. The humans must be the ones
making the decisions, not the dogs. That is the only way your relationship with
your dog can be a complete success.
Height,
Weight
Height: Males 27-30 inches (68-77
cm) Females: 24-27 inches (62-68)
Weight: Males 120-140 pounds (54-63 kg)
Females 85- 105 pounds (38-48 kg)