A recent comment from a good blog friend in Michigan reminded me that not everyone at Northview Diary can read the column I write for the Recorder, the Farm Side, thus not everyone has already been bored to death with our three border collies.
Let me rectify that situation. Mike was my first border collie dog. I bought him from a local breeder, who has since moved to the left coast. Mike Canaday also sold me Gael, who was out of the same dam, Floss, and sired by his open trial dog, Robin. I liked Mike so much that I bred Gael to Bill, Mike's sire to get my young dog, Nick. Floss and several other dogs in the pedigrees of the three collies were actually imported from Scotland.
Mike (the man, not the dog) once brought Robin to the farm with some sheep and another fellow, his dogs and a horse, to practice for the national sheepdog trial. He just let the sheep out of the horse trailer and turned them loose. The darned things bolted for the barn and raced down the cow barn driveway towards the road. Sheep are fast. My heart was in by throat. I was envisioning carnage with wool and lawsuits and jumping up and down, when Mike released Robin and whistled something. Within seconds, literally seconds, even though Robin had never seen our farm before and hadn't seen the sheep go, I was pinned against the gate by a milling, wooly flock. He had gone over the bank, through the creek, and down below the sheep to fetch them back. Those open trial dogs are plumb amazing!
Border collies of the real sheepdog persuasion, as opposed to AKC, where good looks are all important, can have any length of hair and be just about any color you can imagine. As long as they work, it is all good. Mostly black dogs are pretty much preferred because sheep can see them better and don't mistake them for other sheep. Two of our dogs, Nick and Gael, are of the shortcoated sort; Mike is a pretty boy. They never need grooming, he requires frequent unraveling.
All three dogs work. Mike as a young dog was quite talented, although he has retired himself now at almost twelve. However, they have no where near the skill level of dogs like Robin or even nursery trial dogs. This is my failing as a trainer, not theirs as dogs, although Gael is a bit weak for a cow dog. Training sheep dogs is the hardest thing you can imagine....like parenting with sheep.
Read Mike's Ten Tips page for a little insight into getting a Border Collie puppy started.
Websites about working Border Collies.
United States Border Collie Handler Assoc.
American Border Collie Assoc.
Thank you for sharing a bit about your dogs with us .. :) We have a new baby coming next week! We are looking for a name.
ReplyDeleteCheers!
Yay, excellent post and I had forgotten that about differing coats. I spent many formative years in Scotland, my mom has sheep and I well recall some of the excellent working BCs we had...old-timers in the Highlands and islands take their working dogs very, very seriously! So if yours came from original working stock that goes a long way to explain why they're so good. :)
ReplyDeleteI tried one of my Rotties on geese (starter animals for puppies at some training places)and then sheep, but he wasn't really a natural and the only place I could find was 80 miles away to train at.
BCs are such AWESOME smart dogs!
If you want to read something truly hilarious, go to laughingdogpress.com (I think) and read the Border Collie description. It's priceless.
sue, saw your pics on old green bus. That dog is beyond cute! What a little sweetie...
ReplyDeleteCarina, how I envy you having seen dogs working in Scotland. Amazing level of skill over there...a lot of trial judges here come from there.
Too bad you had to go so far to train. I was lucky to find a truly gifted local trainer, who became a good friend, who patiently helped me through a level of stupidity and ignorance that must have scared her sometimes.
Love the BC thing on laughing dog!
Somehow your blog on your Border Collies came through on my computer without the photos of the dogs.
ReplyDeleteHi there, wanderer, this post didn't have any pictures although I posted a couple several posts ago. did you get to see those? And thanks for visiting. Hope your computer is going again.
ReplyDeleteWanda and I were seriously considering border collies as a pet. If the "beagle sisters" had not been given us we probably would have one (or two). They really are a wonderful breed. And of course the Scotland connection is near and dear to me.
ReplyDeletemacbean gene, the Scottish link is important to me too, as my folks do a lot with Clan Montgomery. That said, BCs are wonderful dogs as long as you keep them busy, but the beagles sisters and your big visiting hound dog seem like terrific dogs too.
ReplyDeleteThey sound amazing. They are actually pretty common down here, although I've never owned one.
ReplyDeleteGuess I shall have to go looking for the collie photos. I did miss them. (No, our main computer is still in the land of repair. No word from the shop. Sigh!)
ReplyDeleteFour or five posts down....Sorry about the computer. What a bummer.
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