Silverwolf German Shepherds

Silverwolf German Shepherds Silverwolf German Shepherds is a small breeder of German Shepherds near Bloomfield, IA.

We have dogs of all differnet colors, but generally only raise 1 or 2 litters per year.

05/12/2026

LOCK HIM UP: What Mark Hamill Posted about President Trump Was Absolutely Unacceptable! Threatening the life of the president is a serious offense, and needs to actually be prosecuted, in this case and others!

For reference, Hamill posted a picture of a tombstone with the president's name written on it, and the president's co**se underneath it, and captioned it, “If Only- He should live long enough to witness his inevitable devastating loss in the midterms, be held accountable for his unprecedented corruption, impeached, convicted & humiliated for his countless crimes. Long enough to realize he’ll be disgraced in the history books, forevermore.”

Firing back online, the Trump White House said, "Mark Hamill is one sick individual. These Radical Left lunatics just can’t help themselves. This kind of rhetoric is exactly what has inspired three assassination attempts in two years against our President."

05/12/2026
03/16/2026
02/26/2026

Last night (February 23, 2026), I was sitting in my garage when four men suddenly stormed in and attacked me, demanding my car keys.
It happened fast. Too fast.

One minute it was quiet. The next, I was on the ground, disoriented, trying to protect my head while they shouted for my keys. Through the chaos, I told them the keys were inside the house — hoping it would buy me a second to think.

They rushed in.

What they didn’t know… was that inside my home were my two German Shepherd boys.

My dogs aren’t just pets. They’re rescues. Once overlooked. Once labeled as “too intense.” Once judged for needing an experienced owner.

But that night, they were everything.

The moment those men crossed the doorway, my German Shepherds stepped forward — calm, focused, disciplined.

Guardians by instinct.
Loyal by nature.

They didn’t panic.
They didn’t hesitate.

They positioned themselves with purpose — strong bodies squared, ears high, eyes locked with unwavering intensity. One deep, commanding bark rolled through the house like a warning siren.

It wasn’t chaos.

It was authority.

The kind that says: “This ends here.”

The men froze. You could see the shift — they weren’t expecting two powerful, highly intelligent dogs standing their ground with absolute confidence. Within seconds, they backed up.

Then they ran.

And my dogs?

They didn’t pursue.

They came straight back to me.

They stood close — one pressed against my side, the other watching the door — until my breathing slowed and the shock began to fade.

My face was bruised. My hands were shaking.

But I wasn’t alone.

Because the two rescue dogs some people once doubted were the same ones who just stood between me and something far worse.

German Shepherds aren’t just working dogs.

They are protectors.
They are fiercely devoted.
They are willing to stand in the space between danger and the people they love.

And sometimes… they are the reason you get to see another sunrise.

Rescue dogs aren’t “less than.

I bared my teeth at a human child today. In the world of family dogs, that is the unforgivable sin—a one-way ticket to t...
02/01/2026

I bared my teeth at a human child today. In the world of family dogs, that is the unforgivable sin—a one-way ticket to the pound. But looking at my boy trembling on the grass, I knew I’d do it again in a heartbeat.

My name is Koda. I am one hundred and ten pounds of German Shepherd. Basically, I look like a wolf that learned how to live in a house. My entire life, my training has been centered around one word: Gentle.

"Gentle, Koda," Sarah would coo when I took a treat. "Gentle," she’d remind me when her son, Leo, tugged my ears with his sticky toddler fingers.

I learned that being a "Good Boy" meant being a rug. It meant absorbing chaos with a wagging tail. I thought my job was to be soft. I didn't realize my job was actually to be a wall.

It happened at the neighborhood park—the one that smells like cut grass and other dogs' business. Leo is ten now. He’s small for his age, with a heart too big for his ribcage. Sarah, his mom, was on a bench about fifty yards away, reading a book. She trusts us. She trusts me.

Leo was flying a cheap foam glider, the kind you buy at the dollar store. He was happy.

Then, the Bigger Kid showed up.

I didn't like his smell. He didn't smell like dirt or sweat; he smelled like trouble. Sharp. Sour. He walked up to Leo and snatched the glider out of the air.

"Nice toy," the kid sneered. Snap. He broke the wing. Just like that.

I lifted my head from my paws. My ears perked up.

"Hey!" Leo said. His voice was shaky. "Please don't do that."

Please.

That’s what Leo was taught. Be polite. Use your words. Don’t cause a scene. Leo was doing exactly what he was told. He was being "Gentle," just like me.

The Bigger Kid laughed and shoved Leo hard. Leo stumbled backward, tripping over his own sneakers, and hit the ground.

"What are you gonna do about it, shrimp?" the kid asked, stepping closer. He raised a foot, aiming a kick at the broken toy right next to Leo’s hand.

Something inside me clicked. It was a sound louder than a whistle, older than the leash.

I saw Leo flinch. I saw him prepare to take it, to shrink into himself, to accept that his kindness made him a victim.

No.

I didn't run. Running is for chasing squirrels. I flowed. In two bounds, I covered the distance. I didn't jump on the kid. I didn't bite. I simply inserted my massive, powerful body into the space between them.

I planted my feet. I stood over Leo, a living shield of black and tan fur.

The Bigger Kid froze. He was suddenly looking up at a dog that weighed more than he did.

And then, I broke the rule. I didn't wag. I looked him dead in the eye, lowered my heavy head, and let it out.

Grrrrrrrrrrr.

It wasn't a bark. It was a vibration. A low, subterranean rumble that started in my chest and shook the ground beneath his sneakers. It was the sound of a limit being drawn in the dirt. It said: The line is here. You do not cross it.

The kid turned pale. He dropped the broken foam wing and scrambled backward. "Crazy dog!" he yelled, turning and sprinting toward the parking lot.

The silence that followed was heavy.

I stopped growling immediately. The red haze lifted. I looked down at Leo. He was staring at me, wide-eyed. Then, I looked toward the bench. Sarah was running toward us.

My heart sank. I dropped my ears. I tucked my tail. I had been "Bad." I had been aggressive. I prepared myself for the scolding, for the leash to be clipped on tight.

Sarah skidded to a halt in the grass. She didn't look angry. She grabbed my massive head in her hands and pressed her forehead against mine.

"Good boy," she whispered fiercely. "Good boy, Koda."

I thumped my tail, confused.

She turned to Leo, pulling him into a hug. "Leo, listen to me. Koda is the gentlest soul in this world. But he knows something important."

She looked at her son, her eyes intense.

"Koda didn't bite. He didn't attack. But he didn't stay silent when you were being hurt, either. He showed his teeth to protect what he loves."

She smoothed Leo's hair.

"You don't have to be a rug, Leo. Being kind doesn't mean you have to let people walk all over you. Your body belongs to you. Your space belongs to you. And just like Koda, you have permission to show your teeth if someone tries to take that away from you."

Leo looked at me. I licked the dirt off his cheek. He buried his face in my mane, his small hands gripping my fur. I felt him stand a little straighter.

We walked home together. I was still the loyal guardian, the watchful shadow at his side. But the world looked different now.

We learned a lesson today, my boy and I.

True kindness isn't the absence of boundaries. It’s the courage to defend them.

12/16/2025
10/28/2025

I have someone who has a 4 year old female that they are needing to rehome- kirksville mo.

09/06/2025

They can understand

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Bloomfield, IA
52537

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