Following this thread since we are considering a small acreage and having a few alpacas as well as chickens - high predator area. Also have a five year old son and wouldn't mind feeling safer in bear country with a good guard dog. Can a pyrenees be walked by my son when he's a bit older and wants to hike out on local trails? (btw: my son sounds exactly like the descriptions of a pyrenees - hyper-intelligent and loving, wanting approval but with inbred genetics on both sides so that he's also hyper-independent and impossible to train upon command...).
I've been looking at Anatolians, Akbash and Pyrenees. The plan is to have a very small Montessori-based farm school with a few acres (2-3). That would include home, several out-buildings, garden areas, a few alpacas and chickens. Would this create too "busy" a yard for a large guard dog? If he has a few small flocks, would this prevent him enough from boredom? Children would be "introduced" but taught that like alpacas and chickens, the guard dog is loved but not suited as a "pet" for play-type handling. I would imagine that having regular children on the yard would place them in a bit of a "flock-relationship" with the dog as well. Is that legitimate?
Any thoughts on Anatolian vs Pyrenees?
One other note: we have a one-yr-old lab-husky runt (female) who is definitely a family dog, although we'd imagined her to be more outdoors once we got an acreage. She's very calm for her age and pretty responsive, but will her presence mess things up with a guard dog? She and her siblings were happy "accidents" who found good homes and we hoped to let her have a litter as well. Also being a runt, we don't want her spayed for a good while. Will having a pet dog on the same property as a guard dog mess things up? Should we make sure the guard dog is neutered or female or could we just let nature take its course for a litter? I was thinking of getting a male pup so we'd be alright for one or two more of our lab's heats. Don't want her pregnant too early. Kept her safe through first heat!
Thanks for any input!