yes my Caucasians took to watching over and staying with the grazers on their own. One cool story to share is looking out my back door and seeing my female CO laying out towards the back yard fence. Odd, but ok. But she never moved over hours, so I walked out to her to realize the fence panel had blown down and she was there stopping the animals from leaving that area. Things that you can't teach them she just did it herself. Am currently planning to import 2 or 3 more COs as my other CO's have past away. Been waiting on my presa pup to grow out mature to evaluate if she is a good canidate for adding to our group. Getting to 3 lol... she will be a good helper for new pups.
my favorite story for the Presas is a young female goat getting out of her pen and into the buck area (too young to be bred) it was total chaos. baby goat running, screaming and 8 males running after her. My presa's total grin on their faces lol and I put my hand up for them to wait stay where they were. Finally the baby stopped, all the males piled on top of her. Walked over reached in and pulled the female up into my arms. My male coco pops full bucked me in the gutt, then coco pops was gone, like vanished..... It was the pup on her own who ran in grabbed coco pops back leg and dragged coco pops out of the mob a good 10ft away and pinning him by his neck on the ground. The rest of the males fled lol... walked over and told her ok to let coco pops go. Wonderful thing is my girls did it on their own and worked with me with never having any direct training. Beautiful how fast she was when coco pops bucked me, and being able to reach into that mob and know which leg belonged to coco pops..
so cool ... to see how much natural instinct that is still in breeds when exposed to the opportunities.