The Dog Behind The Human

Built to Hunt, Dressed to Sit: The Real Story of the Poodle

37 min · 13 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Built to Hunt, Dressed to Sit: The Real Story of the Poodle

Descripción

The Poodle has a reputation problem — not because of what it does, but because of what we decided it looked like. For most people, the word triggers pom-poms, bows, and a dog that rides in a handbag. That image took root in the French aristocracy of the 18th century and never fully left, even as the dog underneath it remained one of the most capable working breeds ever produced. Its name comes from the German Pudelhund — splashing dog. It was a cold-water retriever built for the marshes of Central Europe, diving into freezing rivers to retrieve waterfowl. The iconic Continental Clip was originally field engineering: shaved hindquarters to reduce drag, fur left over joints and organs to protect against hypothermia. Function disguised by centuries of fashion. In 1994, Stanley Coren ranked 138 dog breeds by working and obedience intelligence. The Border Collie placed first. The Poodle placed second. It learns new commands in fewer than five repetitions and obeys known commands at a 95 percent or better rate. That same intelligence is the source of its most common behavioral problems. A Poodle in an under-stimulating environment doesn't get bored — it gets anxious. It reads the emotional state of every person in the room, amplifies what it finds, and fills any vacuum of structure with behavior the owner didn't ask for. This episode also covers the Poodle's hidden role in the designer breed industry — how the genetics that everyone wants in a Goldendoodle or Labradoodle came from a breed people still dismiss as too fancy — and what it actually takes to give a Poodle the life it needs in a Manila condo, a Batangas heat wave, and a household run by a yaya who may not know what she's looking at.

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10 episodios

episode The Smartest Dog You Can't Keep: The Real Story of the Border Collie artwork

The Smartest Dog You Can't Keep: The Real Story of the Border Collie

The Border Collie tops every "smartest dog" list on the internet. It learns commands in under five repetitions, obeys on the first try, and can learn the names of over a thousand objects. That is not an exaggeration. A Border Collie named Chaser did exactly that, under controlled scientific conditions, published in a peer-reviewed journal. The intelligence is real. What the headline leaves out is the other half of the sentence. That intelligence was built for a job. The Border Collie was forged in the hill country between Scotland and England to move sheep across open terrain all day, reading the flock, making split-second decisions without being told, running on a brain that was never designed to sit still. When you take that brain and put it in a home with no work, it does not turn off. It finds something else to do. That something is usually your furniture, your kids' heels, or the shadows on the wall. In this episode of The Dog Behind the Human, Coach Francis breaks down the full picture. The real history of the breed from Old Hemp in 1893 to the founding of the International Sheep Dog Society. What Stanley Coren's famous intelligence ranking actually measured, and what it missed. The genetic conditions every prospective owner needs to know before they commit. And the specific reason Border Collies flood rescues, not because they are bad dogs, but because someone saw "smartest dog in the world" and thought that meant easy. The dog is always right. We just have to learn to read it.

9 de jun de 202624 min
episode The Wiener That Hunts: The Real Story of the Dachshund artwork

The Wiener That Hunts: The Real Story of the Dachshund

The Dachshund is one of the most recognized dogs on the planet and one of the most misunderstood. Somewhere between the viral videos and the Halloween costumes, people forgot what this breed actually is: a working scent hound developed in Germany over centuries to track, dig, and confront badgers underground — an animal that can weigh as much as the dog hunting it and is far more aggressive. That history didn't disappear when the Dachshund became a household pet. It just went unread. In this episode of The Dog Behind the Human, Coach Francis goes deep on the Dachshund. We cover the breed's actual origin — not the cute version — and why its body was engineered for a job most owners never think about. We look at the behavioral profile that comes with that engineering: the independence, the vocalizing, the prey drive, the intense loyalty that tips into resource guarding when boundaries are absent. And we address the elephant in the room — IVDD, the spinal condition that affects up to one in four Dachshunds, and how the way owners manage the fear of it often makes the dog's behavioral problems worse. The Dachshund is not stubborn. It is not aggressive. It is not a lap ornament shaped like a sausage. It is a hunter in a small body — and when we treat it like anything else, we fail it. This episode is about getting it right.

21 de may de 202624 min
episode The Clown with a Broken Heart: The Real Story of the Boxer artwork

The Clown with a Broken Heart: The Real Story of the Boxer

The Boxer is one of the most recognizable breeds in the world. It currently ranks among the top twenty in AKC registrations and has held that position for decades. It became a cultural fixture in the 1950s when a Boxer named Bang Away — the great-great-grandson of dogs that a German breeder had sold abroad to prevent them from starving in wartime — won Best in Show at Westminster and became the first dog of any breed to achieve 121 Best in Show wins. That story goes deeper than most people know. The Boxer's path from a medieval hunting dog in Germany to the dog in your living room passes through one of the most remarkable figures in the history of any breed: Friederun von Miran-Stockmann, a sculptor who fell in love with a Boxer named Pluto and spent sixty years keeping the breed alive through two World Wars, Nazi interference, near-starvation, and the loss of dog after dog to combat. She fed her remaining dogs by cycling miles to source cow intestines and rummaging in military dumpsters. When she could no longer sustain them, she sold her best dogs to America. They became the genetic foundation of every Boxer alive today. The Boxer is no longer primarily a working dog in the way it once was. The German Shepherd and Belgian Malinois have largely taken over modern police and military roles. But the Boxer remains a working dog in police forces across Europe — particularly in Germany, where the breed originated — and its working drives are fully intact in every dog sitting in a living room anywhere in the world. And inside those working drives, in a significant proportion of the breed, is Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy — ARVC. A hereditary heart condition that replaces normal cardiac muscle with fatty tissue, generates dangerous arrhythmias, and in its most extreme expression causes sudden death with no prior warning. At any age. In dogs that appear completely healthy.

1 de may de 202639 min
episode Built to Hunt, Dressed to Sit: The Real Story of the Poodle artwork

Built to Hunt, Dressed to Sit: The Real Story of the Poodle

The Poodle has a reputation problem — not because of what it does, but because of what we decided it looked like. For most people, the word triggers pom-poms, bows, and a dog that rides in a handbag. That image took root in the French aristocracy of the 18th century and never fully left, even as the dog underneath it remained one of the most capable working breeds ever produced. Its name comes from the German Pudelhund — splashing dog. It was a cold-water retriever built for the marshes of Central Europe, diving into freezing rivers to retrieve waterfowl. The iconic Continental Clip was originally field engineering: shaved hindquarters to reduce drag, fur left over joints and organs to protect against hypothermia. Function disguised by centuries of fashion. In 1994, Stanley Coren ranked 138 dog breeds by working and obedience intelligence. The Border Collie placed first. The Poodle placed second. It learns new commands in fewer than five repetitions and obeys known commands at a 95 percent or better rate. That same intelligence is the source of its most common behavioral problems. A Poodle in an under-stimulating environment doesn't get bored — it gets anxious. It reads the emotional state of every person in the room, amplifies what it finds, and fills any vacuum of structure with behavior the owner didn't ask for. This episode also covers the Poodle's hidden role in the designer breed industry — how the genetics that everyone wants in a Goldendoodle or Labradoodle came from a breed people still dismiss as too fancy — and what it actually takes to give a Poodle the life it needs in a Manila condo, a Batangas heat wave, and a household run by a yaya who may not know what she's looking at.

13 de abr de 202637 min