I appreciate your kind heart and humanity Canadian Buckeye. However over the last 30 years my farm has gone from being an isolated, rural location to being literally surrounded by housing developments. My losses of chickens, sheep and pigs are approaching 100 animals and thousands of dollars. Dogs don't come once and take what they need to eat... they come again and again and kill for fun leaving carcasses everywhere. I actually live in harmony with a mother coyote and her annual pups. If I fail to do my job she will take the occasional chicken or piglet to feed her pups but it's a fair fight. Dogs have no boundaries unless their owners maintain them. I don't blame the dogs but rather their irresponsible owners. But in their irresponsibility the owners never pay up. I've been thru the court system and ultimately my only recourse for collection would have been to put a lean on their house. I opted not to bother for a $4000 bill that I might collect in 20 years.
The rest of that story is that I went to their door and made the owners come watch as the pigs lay bleeding and dying. The woman cried and begged for me not to take it out on the dog and promised to pay. The dog was back the next day at its usual time. I caught it and called animal control. The dog was bailed out and back again two days later. I shot it. The owners had to appear in court a month later. They had replaced the dog, and it was already coming to my farm. They stood there and lied to the judge saying they had a fence which I knew they didn't. A few weeks later they were gone and the house abandoned.
This is only one account among many over the last thirty years, and it is severely abridged leaving out many waisted calls to animal control and the police. I intend no offense to animal control workers and police... their hands are usually tied by laws enacted by toxic nurturers. Dogs have been my bane since a cockapoo broke into a pen and killed my pet guinea pigs when I was a teenager. So to wrap up my rant, once a dog has crossed my property line... the only good dog is a dead dog.
I'm all for eradicating the problem. And don't tolerate even a single offense. I've found nothing can come close to taking care of an issue before it becomes an issue than a very good livestock guardian dog. It must be a breed bred to take care of livestock and preferably born and raised around the type (s) of livestock he must protect.
Nothing else comes close.