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I would have to disagree with this one. I don't believe it is unfair at all to expect a dog to go against its nature in many ways. Its in a dog's nature to jump up on people but we train that away, it is in a dogs nature to chase other animals (livestock, deer,cats, etc.) but we train that away. There are so many traits and natural instincts we can, and do, train out of our dogs so they can co-exist with other people and animals....why not this one? I think you get what you expect out of your animals. There are always the ones that do not respond to certain training...then you make your choices. But to just expect a dog to "just be a dog" is shooting kind of low. Why train one at all, for anything, if the expectations are so low?
I have a sister who has this same opinion....she maintains that ANY dog, at ANY given time, left alone with free ranged chickens, are going to kill them. Therefore, she doesn't even try to train her many dogs in this aspect. So, of course, when she can't keep an eye on these dogs 24-7 and they happen to meet up with her free ranged chickens, something dies, she loses money and she gets very angry. She makes no attempt to train. I even proved to her that it can be done, even with a bird dog/herd dog cross, with a very strong prey drive, 1 yr. old pup and she still maintains that it can't be done. She's right, if you keep your expectations low, it can't be done. It's not really a question of fairness to either animal, it is a question of what you expect out of the dogs you keep around to guard your property and livestock. They have a job to do....guard your chickens. If they can't be trained for something as simple as this then you have a choice. Get a dog who can be trained or deny yourself the dream of having free-ranged poultry. Why even have a dog if it can't earn it's keep?
My dogs all more than earn their keep, using their natural instincts rather than fighting them. Two are SAR dogs, one is a bird dog, and the fourth is my husband's cow dog. All four are hunting breeds.