I don't personally have any dogs, but occasionally see a couple of Great Pyrenees roaming around on our property, especially at night. I also see fox, coyotes, coons, possums, other dogs and cats on my game cameras.
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I have had two Anatolians and now have three Great Pyrenees I raised from puppies. None ever killed a chicken and I had them with chickens beginning at 12 weeks old, no supervision nor training needed. I also presently have 4 mutts from 25 to 70 lbs. I have had many other mutts in the past. My mutts run the gamut from hound, retriever, feist, Border Collie mix, 1/2 Pitbull - all former strays. None ever killed a chicken. You’ve got to know your dogs! Dogs not killing chickens is the rule and I guess the exception would be ones like you describe. I’ve owned chickens all my life and I’m 58 years old. I had them when I was 5. My dogs (mutts) didn’t bother them then.although i have only owned chickens for 14 weeks, my family has owned chickens in the past, my grandfather even owning a farm. in my experience, i witnessed his dogs attack the chickens when he wasn't looking. ive known several people who have had entire flocks wiped out by "loyal" guard dogs. no matter how trained they are, dogs still have a natural urge to slaughter anything that moves, wether for food or for fun. my advice is that you shouldn't use mutts to guard your flock. intead, try something without any predatory urges that will get along with your flock. geese and emus, for example, are loving flock members that will ruthlessly defend their flock. trust me, it would be more natural and effective for an vegetarian emu to defend a chicken flock than a carnivorous wolf to defend a chicken flock.
I have had two Anatolians and now have three Great Pyrenees I raised from puppies. None ever killed a chicken and I had them with chickens beginning at 12 weeks old, no supervision nor training needed. I also presently have 4 mutts from 25 to 70 lbs. I have had many other mutts in the past. My mutts run the gamut from hound, retriever, feist, Border Collie mix, 1/2 Pitbull - all former strays. None ever killed a chicken. You’ve got to know your dogs! Dogs not killing chickens is the rule and I guess the exception would be ones like you describe. I’ve owned chickens all my life and I’m 58 years old. I had them when I was 5. My dogs (mutts) didn’t bother them then.
I never said no dogs ever kill chickens. In fact, domestic dogs are the number one killer of chickens. I will say that it is not in every dog’s DNA to kill chickens. Domestic dogs might be descended from wolves but they are certainly not wolves anymore. I also have a friend with a true wolf hybrid that does not kill her chickens. What is annoying is when people infer that most dogs are chicken killers, which my own experience contradicts. I’ve always spent a lot of time with my dogs. Every dog I have owned always wants to please. Sometimes I’ve thought it is simply a matter of them “knowing” that killing the chickens would make me unhappy. For whatever the reason, none of my dogs have ever killed a chicken. My mostly Border Collie mix will chase and kill squirrels. He got one today. So my dogs have high prey drive but not for chickens.even though all of your dogs have never killed a chicken doesn't mean they won't. like i mentioned, dogs are technically domesticated wolves, and their instinct to kill is still in tact, if not strengthened by genetic manipulation. your dogs may never attack a chicken, but there are many reported incidents of long-term family dogs suddenly snapping and attacking other pets, livestock, and people out of the blue. even if you are able to monitor the dog and train it to guard, it's still a big risk to take. like i mentioned, i like to play it safe and stick to using gentler guard animals like geese and emus. also, the best protection method for your flock is an electric fence to truly keep predators out. i just want to give advice in order to ultimately protect other member's flocks, and using dogs may be even more dangerous that using no protection at all.
sounds good. also the invisible fence won't keep the fox off your property.although i have only owned chickens for 14 weeks, my family has owned chickens in the past, my grandfather even owning a farm. in my experience, i witnessed his dogs attack the chickens when he wasn't looking. ive known several people who have had entire flocks wiped out by "loyal" guard dogs. no matter how trained they are, dogs still have a natural urge to slaughter anything that moves, wether for food or for fun. my advice is that you shouldn't use mutts to guard your flock. intead, try something without any predatory urges that will get along with your flock. geese and emus, for example, are loving flock members that will ruthlessly defend their flock. trust me, it would be more natural and effective for an vegetarian emu to defend a chicken flock than a carnivorous wolf to defend a chicken flock.