Bravo’s reclamation tour began this morning. We moved both of the imminently-lambing ewes from the pasture to the barn yesterday, so there should be no lambs to temp him until some time in May. But when I released him from the tether he’d been on since last Monday, he immediately started chasing the flock; he clearly needed some kind of supervised parole.
Bravo seemed anxious to show me that fences — even 5-foot electrified fences — couldn’t contain him when he first arrived on the farm. He was jumping over effortlessly, and digging under almost as easily. A number of friends with guardian dog experience suggested that he needed to pull something heavy for a while, until he developed more respect for boundaries. I was a little uneasy with this solution (cruel?), but desperation led me to get him a tire. He was strong enough that the tire barely cramped his style, but it did put an end to his Houdini act. I unshackled him after a few weeks, and he’s seemed happy to stay in with the sheep since then. So today I redeployed the tire drag, hoping that it will slow him down just enough to keep the sheep out of his reach…
Tagged: bravo, drag, Hollow Oak Farm, livestock guardian dog, maremma, pasture, sheep, tether, tire