I LOVE this line...the picture in my mind is priceless of these crippled little raggedy poodles patrolling the property!
I've heard of the BoerBoels...that is one big hunk of burning love going on there! I can't imagine anyone or anything coming on your property,
Wlhtx...that would be a hard dog to train due to the pure size of him, I'm thinking.
A month or so back our neighbor brought a young GSD out for a visit and it was about dusk. She was really spooky shy but not scared..a very beautiful dog. It was clear to me that they had not done any obedience training on her whatsoever but that she was a pretty smart dog judging by her response to certain things.
Well, they wanted to see my newer chickens and so we walked up to the coop and I wasn't thinking a bit about their dog....some of the chickens were in the coop in preparation for hitting the roosts, so I turned on the light so they could see them better....well, that did it! That dog saw the birds and started running toward the coop, which scared the birds and they ran outside...and the dog gave chase. All the while her owners were screaming at the dog, trying to get her to come back..and poor Jake hit the ground like his butt weighed a ton and ducked his head...I started to laugh and told him, "Jake, don't worry! They aren't yelling at you!"
Meanwhile the young GSD came running by me and I caught her by the scruff and brought her to her owners. Made her lie down, which she did. But she was quivering all over with that excitement that live, running and noisy prey animals always bring to young dogs....you could almost see electric sparks shooting off her fur, she was that energized! So her owners held her there~she had no collar, mind you...who goes visiting other people with dogs and livestock that are free ranged and doesn't at least put a collar of some kind on their dog?
I caught up a chicken and brought it to her and when she tried to rise up to meet the bird, I did the Cesar Milan move of lightly jabbing her in the neck and used my "AAATTT!!!" (that's the bad word, by the way) at the same time. She ducked down and turned her head away. Smart dog with a perfect reaction. Then I waited a few moments for her to forget that moment and saw her eyes return to the chickens in the coop...so I turned off the light there so she couldn't visualize them. Then I brought the chicken down to her again and she started to quiver and advance from her position and I repeated the strong word and touch to her neck. She dropped like a stone and turned her head. After that,no matter what I did with the chicken in front of her face or near her body, she would lie quietly and turn her head away. She never once looked at that chicken. Good.
So I put the chicken away and let her get up. Then I turned on the coop light again and she showed an immediate interest in the coop, so I just said the strong word and tone again and she immediately returned to her owners and lay down, turned her head away from the coop. I think I could have trained that dog off of chickens right then and there, given a little more time. She was amazingly responsive to human correction.
All that time the owners just stood there...I couldn't tell if they were mad at me for correcting their dog or what..they never really said, but they left shortly thereafter. I think the dog was smarter than the humans and that could have been the trouble in that case, as the dog learned rather quickly but I know they will take that dog home and not train her any further because they just never train a dog...they tie them up in their yard and expect them to train themselves and then get rid of them, eventually, because they can't do anything with them.
The first time they saw me I was working with Jake on something with the new boundary and they asked me then if I was some kind of dog trainer...I just laughed and told them "no" but I look back on that and wonder~do they think that only trainers train dogs and that owners can't attempt it? Maybe that is their problem? They just are either too lazy to put in any work or they just can't fathom correcting a dog as it might hurt its "feelings"...not sure but I see it all over with people and their pets, that reluctance to train them so that they can live a good life among humans and other animals. Either way, I'd love to have that GSD for a little while and turn her into a good dog..she was super smart!