- Thread starter
- #301
Beekissed
Herd Master
I guess it depends on how you see grieving.
If I came to your house and bought a chicken would Jake or Ben know it?
Would they be frantic and upset that I bought the bird?
The nature of the LGD is to protect. Some are territorial bonders. Everything in the dogs territory is theirs and they own it and they protect it. However they do not cuddle nurture give commands etc like those that are herd bonders.
Not true. The patroller will go far from the herd etc that is what they do patrol and keep things from even coming in close. The watcher stays with. That is why teams are best. At night is when predators are most active. Patrollers are always on the move at night.
I've seen many LGDs with herds of sheep and didn't see a one of them get upset when a sheep was sold or removed from the herd for slaughter...I'm guessing they weren't bonded with their herds? As those sheep were loaded into my truck, they were just watching and wagging their tails.
My sister used to breed GPs and she also had goats they guarded but I don't recall any of her dogs getting frantic when a goat left the farm on a truck.
If getting frantic when a sheep leaves the herd when it's sold or trucked away is the definition of bonding, I guess I've never seen a LGD actually bonded with a herd in my life, though I've seen many on guard in the fields where they and the sheep lived together.
And...yes, Ben and Jake would absolutely know you took one of their chickens and would be following you with that chicken until they came up against their boundary and could go no further. They follow me in that same way when I remove a chicken and they ain't a bit happy about it. They aren't anywhere near what I'd call "frantic" but they are not at ease and they are certainly on alert and following that bird.