Bird Dogs / Pointing Dogs / Weimaraner

Weimaraner

The Gray Ghost of Germany—a striking, athletic pointer with distinctive silver-gray coat and amber or blue-gray eyes

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23-27 inches, 55-90 lbs
10-13 years lifespan
Versatile all-around hunter

Training Approach

Weimaraners are intelligent and capable learners but can be stubborn and independent-minded. They require firm, consistent training with clear boundaries established early. This breed does best with experienced handlers who can provide confident leadership without being harsh.

Early socialization is critical for Weimaraners. Expose puppies to many different people, animals, places, and situations during the critical socialization window. Well-socialized Weimaraners are confident and adaptable; poorly socialized dogs can be fearful or aggressive.

Training should begin immediately when you bring your puppy home. Basic obedience commands, crate training, and house training should be established early. Because of their size and energy, allowing bad habits to develop in puppyhood creates significant problems in adulthood.

Training Milestones

8-16 Weeks: Foundation Period

Focus on socialization, crate training, and basic manners. Establish yourself as leader through consistent, fair handling. Begin impulse control exercises. Introduce to birds casually—no pressure.

4-6 Months: Basic Obedience

Master sit, stay, come, heel, and down. Work on loose-leash walking—critical for a strong breed. Begin formal field introduction with birds. Address any emerging behavioral issues promptly.

6-12 Months: Adolescent Training

Expect testing of boundaries during adolescence. Maintain consistency. Develop steadiness on point. Introduce gun fire at distance. Continue socialization. This is when many owners struggle—stay committed.

1-3 Years: Advanced Work

Polish field skills. Work on blind retrieves and advanced handling. Weimaraners mature slowly—don't rush the process. Full maturity typically reached around age 3.

Training Tips for Success

  • Be firm and consistent—Weimaraners test limits
  • Exercise before training to improve focus
  • Use positive reinforcement but maintain authority
  • Keep sessions short and engaging
  • Prevent separation anxiety with gradual alone-time training

Common Training Challenges

  • Stubbornness: Stay consistent; don't give in
  • Mouthing: Redirect consistently; teach bite inhibition
  • Counter surfing: Manage environment; teach "leave it"
  • Separation anxiety: Build tolerance gradually from puppyhood

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