Jump to content

Breaking patts to sheep, horses etc?


Recommended Posts


No replies as yet so to add reason for asking this: the permission i have is a working farm and the last thing i want is him worrying the livestock, the few meetings hes had with sheep and horses resulted in him chasing the sheep but not attacking and he just beyed the horse which luckily wasnt bothered by him and didnt throw the rider off!

Link to post
Guest markbrick1
you wont break some lines of black stuff to stock no matter how hard you try, =@ cant even let the little b*st*rds off the leads but got to ask yourself,- "would they be as useful to ground,if they wasn,t so game".

sorry mate but that one i dont beleave,my 6 month old nuttal eats food with chickens and sheep in the stables doesnt look at any livestock at all as dont any of my dogs,mark

Link to post

i think another read of bitches post is due markbrick1 as he says [you wont break some lines of black stuff to stock no matter how hard you try] he did not say any ,but bitches second comment about gameness do you think lads will give there dogs such a hard one correcting the livestock thing that they do knock a bit out the dog ?

Link to post
you wont break some lines of black stuff to stock no matter how hard you try, =@ cant even let the little b*st*rds off the leads but got to ask yourself,- "would they be as useful to ground,if they wasn,t so game".

 

 

I beg to differ, ANY dog can be broke to stock if done from a pup.

Link to post
you wont break some lines of black stuff to stock no matter how hard you try, =@ cant even let the little b*st*rds off the leads but got to ask yourself,- "would they be as useful to ground,if they wasn,t so game".

 

 

I beg to differ, ANY dog can be broke to stock if done from a pup.

 

Quite agree, and being tough on a dog when it comes to chasing livestock won't hurt its spirit when it comes to the real game: there is a big difference between being hard on the dog for chasing sheep and being a cruel b*stard all the time. Dogs aren't stupid and even a hard black terrier (which are generally pretty intelligent as a type) can learn what not to go after. Endless exposure to the stuff they musn't chase and as much exposure as possible to the stuff they can chase is the best way. My dogs are for earth work, but they work cover and fields in the off season and have more fun and reward hunting cover than they would chasing sheep! Get the dog out and about as much as you can and it will learn, providing you tell it, what it can and can't go after. You didn't say how old the pup was by the way.........

Link to post

Hes 6 months old and seems very inteligent so i dont see any reason why he cant be broke to stock given the right training/discipline. Im going to make the effort to introduce him to sheep as much as possible and hopefully see a result even if just small one. Not that it will help but this is him!

 

Thanks.

post-10681-1189519070_thumb.jpg

Edited by will777
Link to post

Walk him on a long lead, (about 6 foot to begin with) towards the sheep, the minute he lunges towards or even pricks his ears at the sheep jerk him off his feet and shout NO in a really angry voice. Don't praise him for not looking at them or not chasing them: you want him to ignore them completely AND you have to be really relaxed at the same time or he'll sense your tension and think there is something to kill/chase/be edgy about. Just walk back and forwards as close as the sheep will allow you to get without running to start with. I know he's a terrier, and most people don't train their terriers to retrieve, but if you can get him to chase a ball and grab it while still being on the lead you can praise hiim for doing that, and it helps with the distraction from the sheep.

Once he's doing that and ignoring the sheep on a short lead then put him on a longer line and do the same thing letting him potter about: keep calling him back for praise and a game and a bit of a fuss.

Good luck: by the way, I've always found it easier to stock break terriers to sheep than lurchers!!

Link to post

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.

×
×
  • Create New...