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what to look for in a collie?


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for me there's a list and if it's all not there then it's no good for me, I want good stamina and recovery, a good brain but highly driven, with alot of fire in there belly, great feet, and most of all worked, not so much on sheep but on actual quarry, on testing ground. would of wanted it to of been ferreting and lamped hard to test the collie under pressure and most of all season after season. my dam to my first x had all the above apart from she also went around sets with the old man as she would even draw. with collies I think it's the most important breed that needs to be tested to the max as if you find a food hard collie there really hard to beat

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because they have been worked over a period of years and any faults genetic or mental would of been known by then, breeding of a worker your more likely to get a worker breeding of a pet your more likely to get a pet that could have undesirable traits. Seen a lot of nervy collies and a lot of hyperactive collies, i would think a collie with a steady level head would be best and these are usually working collies.

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Just ask - what does a working collie bring to the cross that a non worker doesn't?

I thought collies were used to add some brain to the speed. Would you not still find that brain in a non worker?

Would think you wouldn't want your lurcher herding bunnies ;)

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for me there's a list and if it's all not there then it's no good for me, I want good stamina and recovery, a good brain but highly driven, with alot of fire in there belly, great feet, and most of all worked, not so much on sheep but on actual quarry, on testing ground. would of wanted it to of been ferreting and lamped hard to test the collie under pressure and most of all season after season. my dam to my first x had all the above apart from she also went around sets with the old man as she would even draw. with collies I think it's the most important breed that needs to be tested to the max as if you find a food hard collie there really hard to beat

 

So you don't think the life of a good hill farm collie is hard or testing enough season after season being worked on livestock day in day out?

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Is it not hard to find a proper farm bred collie nowdays?

Wouldn't some of the collies used for stuff like agility bring the same to the mix?

 

Trained a few Raiye, especially the waggerland line, they are very hyper and over excitable and imo a calmer farm dog would be a better proposition to base a lurcher on............

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