Hey all, this is Ava (tan) and Evangeline (black). They are 5 month old (I was told) Akbash Tibetan Mastiff cross. The mother is definitely an Akbash as I saw her when I picked them up, but the more time I spend with them, the more I’m convinced the father was a rez mutt.
I want to start by saying I have trained many MANY dogs from Anatolian Shepherds to hunting dogs, to my medical alert dog… so when we developed a problem with our neighbor’s German shepherds coming over and killing our sheep, it seemed right to add livestock guardians in with our donkey and the flock as they would split up and our donkey was struggling to handle them both.
A close friend bred and raised akbash dogs and so I was familiar with the breed and thought I would be ok adding a couple to our farm. LORD HELP ME WAS I WRONG!! These girls have absolutely ZERO respect for anything. NOTHING keeps them contained. They will not stay in with the sheep which is a mix of cattle panel and pallets. They will not stay in welded wire, they will not stay in chain link, they will not stay in a wire kennel, they won’t even stay in my stock trailer without jumping up and out through the vents! Why am I locking them up you ask? Good question reader! You see, when we are not with them, they enjoy wandering. Now while I understand that is part of this job, they have been shown the perimeter 2x a day every day since we brought them home (6 weeks ago). Do they respect this perimeter? NO! Why is that a problem? Well 1) we live near a gravel company and their large semis travel past our farm frequently. Our neighbors with the murdering shepherds also hate up and will 100% shoot them should they step a paw on their property (which unfortunately is their right in our state). 2) these monsters that I call dogs have developed a taste for poultry. Chickens, chicks, ducks, guineas, doesn’t matter. If it has wings they kill it. We have tried everything including but not limited to: adding a net over the poultry run (they broke it down), lead line training around the chickens (they rip free of their collars and bolt… we’re working on that), holding the chickens when they are out and about to show the dogs they’re friends, tying one they killed to their collar until it falls off (friend’s suggestion), and e collars. After they killed 3 chickens last night and attacked and severely injured two ducks today, I laid on them and shaved a spot on their necks (holy adventure and drama Batman) to get a good connection as I thought (maybe their coat is just too thick even for the long prongs). When they took off for the coop, I attempted their recall and nothing. I went from the audial beep, to the vibration, to the shock. There was ZERO reaction from either of them. I ended up throwing a stick at them to distract them enough for their recall to kick in.
3) I want them IN with the flock to better protect them. How are they going to prevent an attack if they’re off killing chickens?
Please help… I’m at my wits end with these two, and as much as my husband loves them, I’m ready to take them out behind the barn
I want to start by saying I have trained many MANY dogs from Anatolian Shepherds to hunting dogs, to my medical alert dog… so when we developed a problem with our neighbor’s German shepherds coming over and killing our sheep, it seemed right to add livestock guardians in with our donkey and the flock as they would split up and our donkey was struggling to handle them both.
A close friend bred and raised akbash dogs and so I was familiar with the breed and thought I would be ok adding a couple to our farm. LORD HELP ME WAS I WRONG!! These girls have absolutely ZERO respect for anything. NOTHING keeps them contained. They will not stay in with the sheep which is a mix of cattle panel and pallets. They will not stay in welded wire, they will not stay in chain link, they will not stay in a wire kennel, they won’t even stay in my stock trailer without jumping up and out through the vents! Why am I locking them up you ask? Good question reader! You see, when we are not with them, they enjoy wandering. Now while I understand that is part of this job, they have been shown the perimeter 2x a day every day since we brought them home (6 weeks ago). Do they respect this perimeter? NO! Why is that a problem? Well 1) we live near a gravel company and their large semis travel past our farm frequently. Our neighbors with the murdering shepherds also hate up and will 100% shoot them should they step a paw on their property (which unfortunately is their right in our state). 2) these monsters that I call dogs have developed a taste for poultry. Chickens, chicks, ducks, guineas, doesn’t matter. If it has wings they kill it. We have tried everything including but not limited to: adding a net over the poultry run (they broke it down), lead line training around the chickens (they rip free of their collars and bolt… we’re working on that), holding the chickens when they are out and about to show the dogs they’re friends, tying one they killed to their collar until it falls off (friend’s suggestion), and e collars. After they killed 3 chickens last night and attacked and severely injured two ducks today, I laid on them and shaved a spot on their necks (holy adventure and drama Batman) to get a good connection as I thought (maybe their coat is just too thick even for the long prongs). When they took off for the coop, I attempted their recall and nothing. I went from the audial beep, to the vibration, to the shock. There was ZERO reaction from either of them. I ended up throwing a stick at them to distract them enough for their recall to kick in.
3) I want them IN with the flock to better protect them. How are they going to prevent an attack if they’re off killing chickens?
Please help… I’m at my wits end with these two, and as much as my husband loves them, I’m ready to take them out behind the barn
