We often try and workout a dogs worth in monetory terms. Once you have had a trained dog you realize that no money can replace your dog. Here are some feedbacks of what a working dog can do for you.
REDDERSBURG.
A Venterstad farmers experience with his first two dogs makes him excited about the prospect of his third dog. With the first dog (not fully trained or well trained) the dipping time for sheep for paralysis tick was shorten from a day and a half and six labourers to a day. Having gained experience in training his first dog he now has a better trained second dog to help. The time was shortened to half a day and four labourers. Then the dogs got better and the job is now finished by 11.00 o’ clock with two labourers and their biggest task is to mix the dip and to top up the dip tank.
A Maclear Farmer, states that his dog is worth four men at the point of the race when working cattle.
In Bredasdorp there is a farmer who can manage his flock of 1200 stud ewes, the replacement young ewes and all the rams being prepared for sale with his dog and one assistant.
The experience of a Colesberg Farmer.
He has four shepherds each with their own group of about 1000 sheep to look after. Three of the shepherds have dogs to help them. The shepherds collect the ewes with lambs running in flocks of about 150 so that he can count & examine the stock and finishes each group in a morning. With the shepherd without a dog, it takes all day. The sheep have to be regrouped repeatedly because there is no dog to hold them. Which he finds greatly aggravating and frustrating to work this group of sheep.
Down Bedford way there is a farmer who runs 1000 head of Damara sheep, 750 angoras, 150 head of Nguni/Tuli/Boran cross cattle with two labourers and his dogs. There was a time when there were thirteen labourers.
My own experience is that at shearing time I can move 2400 sheep to and from the shearing shed with my dogs. Many of the flocks have 2mnth old lambs at foot. I travelled 388 km this year during the week of shearing. Although my dogs are taken to the camps they then collect the sheep and drive them home. I do alternate dogs and save them where I can. This year there was extra work the week immediately after shearing. We needed to move sheep to camps with more shelter with the forecast of rain and cold weather and did another 147 km of travelling. Here I want to add this cannot be done if the dogs have not been prepared before hand. They need to be fit and their feet need to be hardened by having done a lot of work or (road work) running. Our dogs gather all the sheep for counting twice a week on the farm. They also help in the kraal filling the race. They make the loading of stock onto or off-loading a truck a simple quick task.
Small tasks that have to be done like collecting a small flock of ewes lambing out of season makes the task so simple to gather and check on them. Spotting a sheep with wire in its wool can be caught in the veld and the wire removed. When there is blowfly strike you can treat the sheep in the camp. There are numerous tasks these dogs’ help you accomplish daily on the farm.
The following was an article in an Australian working dog magazine. A farmer would bring in a dog that had been injured either from a fall off a bakkie or some other accident to be put down. Then two days later the owner rushed in inquiring whether his dog was still there? The Vet from experience knew the worth of a working dog and had gone ahead and operated on the dog. The owner had found out after a few days he could not cope without his dog was then prepared to spend the money for the surgery.
It is taxing to dogs to work these long hard hours and they need all the energy they can get. If they are not to start flagging and still be sharp to your commands (and the cattle’s kicking feet) they need to be in tip top physical condition. So to have a well conditioned working machine you need to make sure your care is first class.
Carnarvon: Vir die laaste tien jaar doen dié boer al sy vee werk met sy honde. Die gemiddelde kamp grootte is 1200 Morge. Te perd en met sy honde sal hy vanaf die Huis ’n half uur ry na die kamp. Met tye sal sy vrou hom ook help met ’n perd en ’n hond. Om die trop van +-350 Dorpers met lammers bymekaar te maak en na die krale te neem duur so ongeveer twee uur. Dan is dit weer half uur huis toe die bakkie kry en die werk gaan doen in die krale. Hier werk die honde weer. Die dip van 250 Angora bokke word man alleen gedoen met die hulp van twee honde. Die een hond is ook sommer waghond by die Voordeur. (en bewaar die siel wat daar kom.)
Below is a picture taken of a Kelpie filling the shearing pens. A task which is exhausting for a human. It a case of pushing and shoving and making noise to try and get the sheep into the pens. The dog does it quickly and efficiently. Notice the picture of a lure sheep on the right hand side. This picture of a sheep makes the first sheep going into the shed easier.