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Livestock
Livestock & Forage
Getting a dog to work properly.
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<blockquote data-quote="ladycrofter" data-source="post: 8158156" data-attributes="member: 616"><p>Similar here, she learned to push on hoggs which would move no problem! Then into wise old ewes with young lambs sqauring up to her, seriously charging and stamping.</p><p>I can put her back and forth and around them but they refuse still sometimes <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="🙄" title="Face with rolling eyes :rolling_eyes:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/6.5/png/unicode/64/1f644.png" data-shortname=":rolling_eyes:" /> It really confuses her wht they won't go. When she was younger she would snap a tup for doing the same!</p><p>I either wade in and smack them with the stick, or chuck something large stick, stone at them. </p><p>Works for both- as said, she sees "we're" getting tore in to them going, and often the ewe takes a telling and doesn't do it again, associates it with the dog. </p><p>Dogs are more literal thinkers than humans.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ladycrofter, post: 8158156, member: 616"] Similar here, she learned to push on hoggs which would move no problem! Then into wise old ewes with young lambs sqauring up to her, seriously charging and stamping. I can put her back and forth and around them but they refuse still sometimes 🙄 It really confuses her wht they won't go. When she was younger she would snap a tup for doing the same! I either wade in and smack them with the stick, or chuck something large stick, stone at them. Works for both- as said, she sees "we're" getting tore in to them going, and often the ewe takes a telling and doesn't do it again, associates it with the dog. Dogs are more literal thinkers than humans. [/QUOTE]
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Getting a dog to work properly.
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