Shownotes
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.