Reba practices
My daughter-in-law's dog, a year-old smooth coat border collie.
Steve (sglwv) reminded me of this cartoon...you'll love it!
i.pinimg.com/originals/5e/f3/d6/5ef3d63f7e92026710c2683d6fad8797.jpg
Here is the one he sent me: onpasture.com/2013/10/14/sheep-conspiracy-theories
Steve (sglwv) reminded me of this cartoon...you'll love it!
i.pinimg.com/originals/5e/f3/d6/5ef3d63f7e92026710c2683d6fad8797.jpg
Here is the one he sent me: onpasture.com/2013/10/14/sheep-conspiracy-theories
Frans Schols, slgwv, Don Barrett (aka DBs travels), tiabunna and 4 other people have particularly liked this video
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Diane Putnam club has replied to Berny clubDiane Putnam club has replied to Sami Serola (inactiv… clubDiane Putnam club has replied to kiitiDiane Putnam club has replied to Keith Burton clubDiane Putnam club has replied to Jeff FarleyDiane Putnam club has replied to slgwv clubslgwv club has replied to Diane Putnam clubAmong the dogs who came to the herding tests were a couple of rough-coat collies, a dark sable and a blue merle. Beautiful dogs--but they didn't have a clue about what to do! So far have we come from the days of Albert Payson Terhune...
Diane Putnam club has replied to tiabunna clubI've only once seen real herding dogs work a flock and I was enthralled.
slgwv club has replied to Diane Putnam clubTerhune wrote a raft of novels about dogs in the early 20th century, mostly about rough-coat collies (he was a breeder), and many based on his own dogs--with some poetic license, no doubt! His most famous book was probably "Lad: A Dog", about one of his collies. My mom had liked the books as a child, and put me onto them, so I ended up reading a bunch of them too--at least those our local library had. Many are now available in Kindle editions--I picked one up recently that I'd remembered, "Gray Dawn", about a bumptious blue merle. The stories are still eminently readable, and provide an interesting window on early 20th century America as seen by a member of the upper crust, but some of the social attitudes are a bit dated! Alas, rough-coats these days bear little resemblance to Terhune's descriptions.
>I've read that working dogs have been "tainted" by lines bred for show. Their docile
>traits work their way into the working lines through careless breeding.
What often happens is that the breeds split into "show" and "working" lines. My folks raised and trained Labs for many years, and we sure saw this with them. People would bring their show Labs out to retrieving tests, and those poor dogs didn't have a clue! What really ruins a breed, tho, is popularity. There's just too much incentive to breed willy-nilly, while paying no attention to the traits that made the breed attractive in the first place. "Lassie" ruined rough-coat collies, and "Big Red" ruined Irish setters! Many members of the Australian Shepherd Club of America (ASCA) opposed AKC recognition of the breed back in the 90s for just this reason--it would make the breed too popular! They've definitely become more popular; the gal that ran our local rescue said there's no problem finding homes for them now. Just like Labs and other popular breeds, they get snarfed up first thing if they wind up at a shelter. I drove all the way to the Twin Falls shelter to adopt our new black tri last spring, and was lucky to get him. I think the only reason we did is that they posted a very unflattering photo! ;)
Diane Putnam club has replied to slgwv clubslgwv club has replied to Diane Putnam clubDiane Putnam club has replied to slgwv clubSign-in to write a comment.