Aidi breed photo

Aidi

The Aidi, also known as the Atlas Mountain Dog, is a primitive livestock guardian dog from Morocco's Atlas Mountains. This is not a 'pet' in the conventional sense - it's a working breed with retained hunting drive and intense territorial instincts. They were bred to guard nomadic camps from jackals and wolves, and to hunt alongside Sloughis.

2.2
GuardianWorking
Size
Large
25-45kg
Grooming
Regular Care
2-3x per week
Family
Adults Preferred
Better with older children
Supervision needed

The Honest Truth

Before you fall in love, know what you're getting into.

DealbreakerTerritorial Aggression

The Aidi views anything outside its family unit as a potential threat. This includes mail carriers, neighbors, and visiting children. Their default setting is suspicion, and they do not 'warm up' quickly.

DealbreakerSame-Sex Aggression

High propensity for intolerance toward dogs of the same sex, emerging at social maturity (18-24 months). Can escalate to serious fighting if not managed with strict separation. A male Aidi with another male dog is a ticking time bomb.

DealbreakerResource Guarding

As a survivalist breed from harsh environments, they may guard food, toys, or space with intensity. This is a genetic survival trait that makes them dangerous in households with toddlers.

ChallengeIndependence

They are not eager to please. If busy patrolling or investigating a scent, they will likely ignore you. They were bred to make autonomous decisions without human direction.

症状 罹患率(%)
Ask breeder for:
Genetic Testing (MDR1, PRA)Annual Ophthalmologist Exams (CERF)Hip EvaluationElbow Evaluation
Initial Cost
$1,000-2,000
BudgetAveragePremium
Monthly Cost
$150-250
LowModerateHigh
Estimated Yearly Cost
$2,000-2,500

Includes food, insurance, vet visits, grooming, and supplies

Living Situation

Apartment Living
Dealbreaker - they need territory to patrol
Work From Home
Suitable - will sleep under desk or watch window, but manage barking during video calls when delivery trucks arrive
Alone Time
High - 6-8 hours; content to guard house while you work if exercised beforehand
First-Time Owner
Better for experienced owners

With Other Pets

Dogs
May be selective
Cats
Generally unsafe - high prey drive; may view running cats as prey to flush or grab
Small Mammals
Unsafe - birds, rabbits, and rodents trigger prey drive
Birds & Reptiles
Unsafe - birds fluttering trigger chase instinct

Climate & Seasonal Care

Heat Tolerance 3/5
Cold Tolerance 5/5
Winter Needs
No gear needed
Summer Care
Limit exercise in heat
Seasonal Shedding
Extreme

Built-in parka for winter - no coat needed. Do not exercise in temps >25°C (77°F) without shade/water. Never shave coat - it insulates against heat and cold. Blow coat twice yearly - prepare for 'snowstorm' of hair.

Breed Origins

Origin
Atlas Mountains, Morocco/Algeria/Tunisia
Original Purpose
Dual-purpose: Livestock guardian protecting nomadic camps from jackals/wolves, and hunter working with Sloughis to flush and track game
Field/Working Lines
No distinct split - all Aidis should be considered 'working lines' with full intensity
Show/Conformation Lines
Breed is rare and mostly maintained by enthusiasts preserving original type

Living With a Aidi

Odor Level
Moderate (musky smell, especially when wet)
Coat Feel
Coarse, harsh - not soft/silky; not soothing for tactile sensitivity
Surrender Risk: High
  • He bit my friend who walked in without knocking
  • He keeps fighting with my other dog
  • Owners buy for 'rare' status or 'fluffy' look, ignoring 1000 years of jackal-killing programming

Exercise Menu

60-90 min/day
Physical
60 minutes
Mental
30 minutes
Hiking45-60 min
The ideal activity - they thrive on uneven terrain as mountain dogs
Perimeter Patrol20-30 min
Natural fence-line walking counts as exercise but manage barrier frustration
Flirt Pole10-15 min
Burns energy while practicing impulse control (Drop It/Leave It)
Scent Work15-20 min
Utilizes hunting heritage - hide treats or scents in yard
Place Training10-15 min
Teaching settle in specific spot while guests present - critical safety skill
Cannot crate 5 days and hike 2 days - they need daily perimeter checks and mental stimulation or will become destructive

Life Stages

Puppy0-12 months

Critical socialization window 8-16 weeks - if missed, dog will be reactive. At 18 months, guardian instinct activates; a dog that loved the dog park at 6 months may suddenly pick fights. Most surrenders happen during adolescence.

Adolescent12-24 months

Peak energy age: 2-5 years

Adult2-8 years

Prime years - energy stabilizes but remains active

Senior9+ years

Hips and knees first to go in this medium-large breed. Ramps for cars and non-slip rugs essential. May become more intolerant of disruption with age.

First Year Reality Check

7/10
Puppy Difficulty
Medium
House Training
Medium
Crate Training Success
6-18
Destructive Phase (months)
This breed commonly experiences adolescent regression - training may temporarily regress around 6-18 months

Travel & Adventure

Car Travel
Good
Hiking Companion
Camping
Suitable
Beach Friendly
No
Cabin Eligible
Too large
Hotel Friendly
May exceed limits

Excellent hiking companions - sure-footed mountain dogs. Keep leashed; recall unreliable if they catch scent. Crate in car for safety. Night barking can be nuisance at campgrounds.

Safety & Containment

Dog Park
Use caution
Off-Leash
Not recommended
Escape Risk
High
Min Fence Height
6 feet minimum, solid (not chain-link)
Resource Guarding
High
Small Animal Safe
Use caution

Electronic/invisible fences are useless - they will run through shock to chase threat and fear returning. Muzzle training highly recommended for vet visits and crowded spaces. Door dashing moderate risk - use baby gates.

Breeding Information

6
Avg Litter Size
(range: 5-8)
Low
C-Section Rate
Easy
Whelping Difficulty
Low
Puppy Mortality

Special Abilities

Training Guide

Recommended Method
Relationship-based positive reinforcement
Learning Speed
25-40 repetitions
Training Tips
  • Keep sessions short (5-10 mins) and varied
  • Use high-value rewards (liver, cheese) - moderate food motivation
  • Harsh corrections damage bond and trigger defensive aggression
  • Convince them obedience is in their best interest
Common Challenges
  • Do not obey for sake of obedience - must respect handler
  • Bore easily - drilling 'sit' 20 times results in walking away
  • 'What's in it for me?' is their motto

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Care Tips for Aidis

Tip #1

Provide 60-90 minutes of daily exercise through hiking, perimeter patrols, or purposeful movement - they are endurance athletes, not sprinters.

Tip #2

Brush weekly year-round, but daily during spring/fall coat blowing. Their thick double coat hides body condition - physically check ribs weekly.

Tip #3

Early socialization during the 8-16 week window is critical. If missed, you will have a reactive adult dog.

Tip #4

Train using relationship-based positive reinforcement. They do not obey for the sake of obedience - harsh corrections trigger defensive aggression.

Breed Characteristics

Trainability
Independent Spirit
Energy Level
Energizer
Grooming Needs
Regular Care
Size
Large
Hypoallergenic
No
Apartment
Not Ideal
Kids
Varies
Weight
25-45kg

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