gerbilgirl
Well-Known Member
For a few months now we had avoided the dogs escaping, at least more than one at a time. When one gets out we can usually get them back easily enough, just by leaving the front door open. But when two get out it's a different story and they will chase anything in sight.
Tonight I went to get Polo out of the pen outside because I was in the house on my own and thought I could give her a bit of attention when I had nothing else to do. As soon as I went to lead her out Lola appeared up behind her and growled as if to say move out of my road, Polo slipped the collar off and the two were tearing around the garden before I knew it. It just all happens so quickly. I opened the food shed, the front door and the patio doors, chased the cats into the kitchen but the dogs were already chasing the rabbit around the garden. But the rabbit must have gotten back into it's hutch because they started to head up the fields. Lola had seen the new cows in the field yesterday so she knew exactly where they were. And they're quite young ones so I really panicked. It was pitch dark and I was in the house on my own, no torch, no nothing. After about ten minutes I had an idea and shouted lets go to dog training. Polo arrived back down the field and straight up into the trailer. Even though she got loads of petting as a reward for coming back, things like that only work once with Polo. I put her back in the pen and went back round to find Lola sitting on the doorstep as if nothing had ever happened. I put her back in the pen and was like phew. I'm just so glad I was away all weekend and they're not fit otherwise they'd still be out chasing! Polo is a Husky x Collie so I don't think there's much we can do on the recall, but Lola has a brilliant recall until she fixes on something. Normally this is only big animals (cows, sheep, horses) and 99% of the time I can call her off a rabbit (which is good for a greyhound x Collie I think). But she seems to think it's her 'job'. Lola will herd them all up, move them through a gate and that's it. Polo just chases.
So has anyone any suggestions on how to stop them chasing?
And will a dog actually do any harm chasing cows (they're actually bullocks)?
Don't worry they didn't do any harm tonight, and my granda rents the field to a farmer so he won't be looking for trouble, but obviously it's much less bother for all concerned if the bloody dogs would learn to behave!
Tonight I went to get Polo out of the pen outside because I was in the house on my own and thought I could give her a bit of attention when I had nothing else to do. As soon as I went to lead her out Lola appeared up behind her and growled as if to say move out of my road, Polo slipped the collar off and the two were tearing around the garden before I knew it. It just all happens so quickly. I opened the food shed, the front door and the patio doors, chased the cats into the kitchen but the dogs were already chasing the rabbit around the garden. But the rabbit must have gotten back into it's hutch because they started to head up the fields. Lola had seen the new cows in the field yesterday so she knew exactly where they were. And they're quite young ones so I really panicked. It was pitch dark and I was in the house on my own, no torch, no nothing. After about ten minutes I had an idea and shouted lets go to dog training. Polo arrived back down the field and straight up into the trailer. Even though she got loads of petting as a reward for coming back, things like that only work once with Polo. I put her back in the pen and went back round to find Lola sitting on the doorstep as if nothing had ever happened. I put her back in the pen and was like phew. I'm just so glad I was away all weekend and they're not fit otherwise they'd still be out chasing! Polo is a Husky x Collie so I don't think there's much we can do on the recall, but Lola has a brilliant recall until she fixes on something. Normally this is only big animals (cows, sheep, horses) and 99% of the time I can call her off a rabbit (which is good for a greyhound x Collie I think). But she seems to think it's her 'job'. Lola will herd them all up, move them through a gate and that's it. Polo just chases.
So has anyone any suggestions on how to stop them chasing?
And will a dog actually do any harm chasing cows (they're actually bullocks)?
Don't worry they didn't do any harm tonight, and my granda rents the field to a farmer so he won't be looking for trouble, but obviously it's much less bother for all concerned if the bloody dogs would learn to behave!