brookcove
Posted : 2/8/2009 12:25:51 AM
Hi Double Barrel! Do I know you from somewhere?
I have yet to meet with an unsound Maremma in this country. The natural selection genetics is still very strong in the breed - heck, they have a low incidence of parasites, even. I was shocked when my rescue girl turned out to be flea-infested - but she was a youngster and had been literally starving to death for six months before I got her.
So the question that should be more uppermost in your mind (hmm, thinking that's not very good English) - what has this dog been doing before he was put up for sale and why is he now for sale?
The answer to the first question should be, guarding livestock in a very similar situation to yours - similar stock, similar environment, similar predators. The reason for this is, that if you are new to this, it will be difficult for you to know whether any problems you meet up with, during the transition to his new situation, are temporary or related to his not meshing well with your operation.
The answer to the second question should be something along the lines of, we are getting rid of all our sheep and are reluctantly in need of finding a new home for our wonderful, well-trained Maremma. Pretty much. Be suspicious if they are selling him on and replacing him with another type of guardian, another dog, or already have another dog. Very few people will sell a dog worth keeping. Again, if you haven't kept LGDs before, you don't want to be caught in a situation where you are troubleshooting.
In general, I prefer Maremmas because they are among the most people-oriented of the LGD breeds, but not so much that oversocialization can be a problem as with the Pyrenees.
Most have a high degree of stock attentiveness, meaning that they not only guard territory, but they also directly act to ameliorate other problems in the flock. Some examples are locating better graze, leading the flock away from perceived danger, alerting when sheep are in trouble such as illness or injury, and assisting ewes in difficult labor with comfort and keeping a firstborn lamb dry and warm while a second or third is being delivered.
Many breeds operate in the latter method, but will have little to do with people and some can even be aggressive. Others swing the other way and are more interested in guarding territory than tending the stock within it. Maremmas as a breed tend to chart the middle course.
Good luck! I love my LGDs - but don't tell my Border Collies . . .