spiritdogs
Posted : 12/25/2009 9:30:20 AM
AgileGSD
Maura
Collie means, literally, good farm dog. A good farm dog does not, unprovoked, go after other dogs in a neutral environment. A good farm dog can be called off of sheep, cattle, and dogs. There is a difference between preferring not to be around other dogs and attacking them. Picture this, you and your dog bring your flock to market in town. The sheep are put into a pen awaiting sale. You enter a room, possibly a pub, while you wait around. Meanwhile, your dog is waiting outside the door, or he is laying at your feet. When you are ready to go home the dog follows you. Now picture the poster's student dog waiting outside the pub and attacking everybody else's collie.
It is also hard to say how this dog would behave if it was a working farm dog and was raised as such.
I don't think you can always lay the blame on breeders. We do not know what this dog's early socialization history is with other dogs! Owners sometimes don't realize the importance of socializing early and often and on a continuing basis, especially with the herders or other breeds that are characteristically referred to as reserved or aloof. So, they think that because they took a puppy class or have one other dog at home, that was all they needed, or they may have waited until the dog was completely vaccinated at 16 weeks, which is IME way too late to start with these guys. Herding dogs, as a rule, are much less interested in play with other dogs after they reach about three years of age, but the well socialized dog will use an appropriate display to increase distance, not the kind of thing that tashakota described. I think it's a stretch to think that the dog is genetically unsound, when that may not be the case. I can't tell you how many clients I get with similar problems, and while it is poor breeding in some cases, the majority of the time it's just a bad match and an owner that didn't realize the importance of early training.
AgileGSD makes a good point - a BC that has a job is a much more stable dog sometimes. Also, if there's fault attributable to the breeder, we should also consider that perhaps it's just that they are not as well versed in behavior, or in matching pups to owners, as they are in breeding practices generally.