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While I agree with what you posted, I beg to differ about that statement.
My big ole Lab may be the dumbest dog that I've ever owned, AND also the most "prey/fetch" driven, but he DEFINITELY knows the difference between frizbees and chickens.
Again, I'm not saying you should encourage prey games of fetch with a LGD, no way. I totally agree about not encouraging those things....just sayin if my dumb dog can figure it out, surely your "smart" LGD can
Prey drive is a real drive of any wild canine. Its what tells them to seek and destroy in order to get food. Play drive is what a dog uses to play with a toy, its mostly a learned behavior. I'll explain further. The urge to chase and bite another animal is a deadly and serious drive. It's still in most breeds of dogs we see today. In different degrees its either bred out or exaggerated. Early puppy drive to fetch and play is what a lot of people carry over into saying prey drive, early in the dogs life it started out as the budding prey drive but switched in a lot of dogs to a toy obsession.
Play or toy drive is really the underdeveloped prey drive but is changed by when people teach and encourage the dog to play. However serious a dog is about a ball it will not look at the ball as true prey, just an object it is seriously obsessed with, or in some cases mildly interested in. When a dog chases a ball the dog is not in the deadly seek and destoy mode. Its in play or "ball" drive. Also called the retrieval drive. Play drive isn't something that comes into wild canine's lives on a regular basis, its basically an exceptionally long-lived puppy behaivor. Domesticated dogs don't normally mature mentally as wild canids do, that is how we get this life long play/ball/retrieval drive behavior.
In REAL prey drive the dog is in essence huting and killing or attempting to do so.
I will agree totally that the LGD that will be left alone to do its job really shouldn't be encouraged in a lot of play drive behaiviors because inevitably the dog, being unsupervised and bored when young, will attempt that play behavior on other animals. Often what starts as innocent puppy like fun turns in to a deadly game. Even when a dog doens't switch into real prey drive often the "living chew toy" will be killed.
While I agree with what you posted, I beg to differ about that statement.
My big ole Lab may be the dumbest dog that I've ever owned, AND also the most "prey/fetch" driven, but he DEFINITELY knows the difference between frizbees and chickens.
Again, I'm not saying you should encourage prey games of fetch with a LGD, no way. I totally agree about not encouraging those things....just sayin if my dumb dog can figure it out, surely your "smart" LGD can

Prey drive is a real drive of any wild canine. Its what tells them to seek and destroy in order to get food. Play drive is what a dog uses to play with a toy, its mostly a learned behavior. I'll explain further. The urge to chase and bite another animal is a deadly and serious drive. It's still in most breeds of dogs we see today. In different degrees its either bred out or exaggerated. Early puppy drive to fetch and play is what a lot of people carry over into saying prey drive, early in the dogs life it started out as the budding prey drive but switched in a lot of dogs to a toy obsession.
Play or toy drive is really the underdeveloped prey drive but is changed by when people teach and encourage the dog to play. However serious a dog is about a ball it will not look at the ball as true prey, just an object it is seriously obsessed with, or in some cases mildly interested in. When a dog chases a ball the dog is not in the deadly seek and destoy mode. Its in play or "ball" drive. Also called the retrieval drive. Play drive isn't something that comes into wild canine's lives on a regular basis, its basically an exceptionally long-lived puppy behaivor. Domesticated dogs don't normally mature mentally as wild canids do, that is how we get this life long play/ball/retrieval drive behavior.
In REAL prey drive the dog is in essence huting and killing or attempting to do so.
I will agree totally that the LGD that will be left alone to do its job really shouldn't be encouraged in a lot of play drive behaiviors because inevitably the dog, being unsupervised and bored when young, will attempt that play behavior on other animals. Often what starts as innocent puppy like fun turns in to a deadly game. Even when a dog doens't switch into real prey drive often the "living chew toy" will be killed.