- Dec 9, 2008
- 538
- 2
- 139
They have an inward instinct to guard. You do not train that. If you go out there on your hands and knees showing the dog how to guard the flock then you would be the first. They do not have to be trained-- it is instinct. They do have to bond. If they are not bonded as YOUNG puppies to the flock then they will be more likely to hurt them. That is why you get them when they are eight weeks old not years old. In fact not all older pyrs would hurt them, but bonding occurs at a young age, so young puppies work out better in many instances.
I have yet to train a flock guardian. I couldn't do it. I can't teach them to love and protect their flock mates. It is instinct. If you want them to protect the goats, then put them with the goats to live early, so they grow up as a goat. If you want them to protect the family, then put them with the family. They are very protective and territorial by instinct. You don't teach that.
Now you do have to train them to know boundaries by using fences or invisible fences unless you have many acres. You do have to housebreak them, teach them to stay off the counter, out of the pickup, not chew up the deck, etc. But as far as teaching them to guard and protect? No. That is not correct. Guarding instinct is inbred in the breed.
I have yet to train a flock guardian. I couldn't do it. I can't teach them to love and protect their flock mates. It is instinct. If you want them to protect the goats, then put them with the goats to live early, so they grow up as a goat. If you want them to protect the family, then put them with the family. They are very protective and territorial by instinct. You don't teach that.
Now you do have to train them to know boundaries by using fences or invisible fences unless you have many acres. You do have to housebreak them, teach them to stay off the counter, out of the pickup, not chew up the deck, etc. But as far as teaching them to guard and protect? No. That is not correct. Guarding instinct is inbred in the breed.
