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James Freyr wrote:Hi Delyla, welcome to Permies!
Great post and I love the picture of the adorable pups. My wife and I are beginning farmers, and we talk about getting one or two LGD's. While we currently only have chickens, we do plan to add cows, pigs and goats as time goes forward. (In fact, just this morning I watched from the kitchen window a coopers hawk navigate my overhead fishing line around my chicken coop and fly off with a 12 week old leghorn). Can you please offer some insight on what's involved with training LGD's to recognize what is "family" and is to be defended? If I raise pups with a flock of chickens, then in a year add cows, and a year later add goats, will the adult dogs recognize the new livestock additions as part of the family and know to protect them along with what they grew up with? Could you elaborate on how much is instinct and how much training is required from a homesteader/farmer? And one more thing, are there added benefits to having a pair of LGD's compared to a single dog? Thanks!!
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"Where will you drive your own picket stake? Where will you choose to make your stand? Give me a threshold, a specific point at which you will finally stop running, at which you will finally fight back." (Derrick Jensen)
Devin Lavign wrote:Something to remember about LGDs is barking is how the keep predator away.
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Lynne Loglisci wrote:I have a three year old granddaughter and a one year old grandson my three-year-old granddaughter needs a pet just like her parents did when they were little all of my kids had pets and they were big dogs not small something that would love them and curl up with them and make them feel safe at night when they had hard time sleeping just like my granddaughter does they wake up and feel safe and it also was safe around my horses and chickens and all the other wild animals that came to visit his visit us including the deer I need to find that for my granddaughter and I don't know where to turn
~Karen Lee Mack
Moving to south Georgia FALL 2024!!
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Delyla Wilson wrote:The problem Elle faced with their first LGD is why I stress good breeding. Humans have an amazing ability to breed instinct right out of dogs as we breed them toward being pets instead of partners. This is why a dog raised with livestock can be terrible while one raised as a house dog can turn into amazing guardians. I don't believe we can teach them to be guardians - they either have the inherited ability or not - what we teach them is how to live with us.
And Andrew's concerns about barking are one of the major challenges faced by folks with small farmsteads, neighbors who don't want to listen to a dog bark all night. One of the reasons I am in love with Karakachans is that, due to the nomadic nature of the peoples that bred them, they are significantly less barky than our sweet GP even though she raised him so I though he would surely follow her lead.
“The beautiful thing about learning is that nobody can take it away from you.” – B.B. King
"Where will you drive your own picket stake? Where will you choose to make your stand? Give me a threshold, a specific point at which you will finally stop running, at which you will finally fight back." (Derrick Jensen)
Melonie Corder wrote:
While we would love a LGD for our chickens and rabbits back there, I run them in tractors, we just assumed our one acre isn't enough. In the future we may have livestock on acreage away from our home and may want them there. Is it possible to have a happy LDG in a half acre backyard at night? During the day they would have access to the other half in the front as well but we have an alley running through our land so fence will need closed.
"I think that I shall never see A poem as lovely as a tree." Joyce Kilmer
Kris Winter wrote:
Melonie Corder wrote:
While we would love a LGD for our chickens and rabbits back there, I run them in tractors, we just assumed our one acre isn't enough. In the future we may have livestock on acreage away from our home and may want them there. Is it possible to have a happy LDG in a half acre backyard at night? During the day they would have access to the other half in the front as well but we have an alley running through our land so fence will need closed.
Just chiming in as we had a similar set up, and chose to get an Anatolian. He was very unhappy without something more to do, and took up barking and running at cars along the road. Maybe a breed without as much human aggression would have done better, but he did deter some human predators, so it wasn't horrible for us, and he definitely kept the wolves, bears, and lions off. The dog would have preferred four-footed charges and a teammate and another 2-3 acres, however, and developed some separation anxiety, which was sad because he didn't do well in town. He loves people but he wants to make friends with dogs, and they are intimidated and it doesn't go well. So again, maybe two dogs would have been better. We've just moved and hopefully we'll be getting another dog and more work for the old boy. He's a great dog.
“The beautiful thing about learning is that nobody can take it away from you.” – B.B. King
Melonie Corder wrote:
Our problem is other dogs, foxes, coons and weasels of variety. Maybe a skunk or possum that get hard up.
"I think that I shall never see A poem as lovely as a tree." Joyce Kilmer
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John F Dean wrote:To build on the previous post, the dog normally only has to be a deterrent. I have seen a herd of Rat Terriers keep much larger predators away.
“The beautiful thing about learning is that nobody can take it away from you.” – B.B. King
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