DumDog
Posted : 1/30/2010 11:43:01 PM
Maura
The show collies have been bred with Borzoi. Yes, a herding dog with a sighthound bred to grab an animal by the throat and hold it there. The reason was to get the razor sharp head of the borzoi
wait, i heard the opposite,. that they bred the sight hounds with collies to get a thicker winter resistant coat. maybe i read it wrong. its been several years since i've read about either one.
i wont say my way is right or wrong, but we have had mostly good luck in regards to health problems in our dogs. we've never "paid" a breeder... but we have found people who happened to have a puppy and we were in the right position to get one. my mom and i were at a feed store, several years ago, and saw an ad selling goats, and under that "puppies free to good home, border collie x sheltie" .. my mom is a huge collie fan so we drove out to have a look. what we saw was silly... the mother was a sheltie but the owner claimed she was a border collie. yeah i dont know how you can confused the two if you've ever seen one or the other!! and the father looked like an English shepherd.. marked like Lassie, but short, stocky, didnt have a snippy nose, and wasnt overly fluffy..
and this was what the result grew up to look like....
I never had to deal with tangles in her hair, she shed but not horribly so, and thats saying something because we live in Florida with hot AND humid summers. her temper was decent though she was nervous around strangers and strange situations, but that was MY fault because we did live on a farm.... the dogs never left the property for anything. the vet came to them for vacs. and worming. but she was very much glued to your side..... in other words she was a needy dog lol and she barked a LOT - which i think might have come from the Sheltie background - but she had ways of communicating to you just by giving you look. oh... and she also howled like a wolf. strange dog.... but a good one! If i told her to do something she would comply willingly.
Anyway my amateur advise is to look around whenever you get there, talk to local ranchers and farmers, see the dogs for yourself, look at the parents and pups and any ancestors or previous litters if you can.... dont set your sights on anything fancy with papers and titles a mile long unless you have plans to do something with them. in fact you would probably be wise to go to a collie rescue or animal shelter and have a look around there. they get all varieties! health in dogs is a gamble these days no matter what you do. from what i can tell its just roll the dice and hope you get a winner!! like i said, WE have been lucky with most of our dogs. my mom's first collie dog was a farm collie mixed with spaniel. he was a good all arounder(she lived on a farm too) and very loyal