Shaun_17 Posted July 6, 2018 Report Share Posted July 6, 2018 I am training my one year old border collie and I am having trouble with him running through and splitting the sheep. This is my first dog and I don’t have any experience of training dogs. Thank you Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Smalahundur Posted July 7, 2018 Report Share Posted July 7, 2018 Hi Shaun welcome to the boards. Sadly stockwork discussion has been on the decline here last couple of years, so for lack of better handlers I'll give it a shot, I am going to assume your dog is bred from working dog stock, and therefor with the right kind of instincts in place. But at the moment he doesn't work, and obviously his current behavior has to stop. He is young, excitable, loves to chase, and has got some woolly victims to play with... I am also going to assume you are familiar with the basics of stockwork training. So how to fix this? I think a good place to start would be the "shark cage" method. Sounds more terrifying than it is. You put the sheep in a smallish round pen ( maybe 6 meter across or so) with the dog on the outside of the pen. You can be in the pen with the sheep. Now you can get the dog to head, and circle the sheep without being able to get at them. This should waken the heading instincts in your dog and the basics of flanking, downing on the balance point under controlled circumstances. That way you should be able to get a handle on your dog, and get his excitement down because he starts to realize how it works, and what is expected of him. You should ideally be able to move on to the open ( or a bigger round pen where the dog can be in with the sheep) pretty quickly. Because you have to get your dog to go around the sheep instead of through, and you have to get control asap. The longer your dog can get way with the behavior you describe the more difficult changing that is going to be. Couple of other factors that might play a role, are your sheep dogged? Especially very flighty sheep would contribute to your problem, with your green dog ( and handler ) There is also the possibility your dog is not mature enough for training , though at a year old he should, some dogs are later to "grow up". Putting him up for a while might help in that case. A bit more info about the dog, sheep, and your training facilities would help. Your description of what the dog actually does is rather short. Good luck with the training! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
denice Posted July 25, 2018 Report Share Posted July 25, 2018 Shaun Training a young dog is tough if you are trying to do it alone. There can be lots of reasons the dog is splitting the sheep - concern, not knowing what he should do, no confidence in himself or you, excitement, you are in the wrong place, asking for to much to soon... I would start with you and him in a round pen or horse stall type area with sheep who are calm and move nicely away from him. Where are you? Might be able to point you to someone who can help Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Shaun_17 Posted July 27, 2018 Author Report Share Posted July 27, 2018 I think this site is American but I am in Donegal, Ireland. Thanks everyone for your help and I will definetly be using it I need to get dogged sheep because mines aren’t dogged so will ask around. Thank you Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Donald McCaig Posted July 29, 2018 Report Share Posted July 29, 2018 There’s plenty of good Irish handlers. Find a trial at the isds website, attend, meet, learn. Donald Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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