Badger & New Buckling

Southern by choice

Herd Master
Joined
Jun 11, 2012
Messages
13,336
Reaction score
14,682
Points
613
Location
North Carolina
Today I happen to go out and The "baby" buckling was jumping all over Badger. Badger LOVES the babies. Of course I run into get my camera... come out and they both see me and come running. Missed all the good shots. :(
A few minutes later I peeked out the door and saw this... so I zoomed in... not the best shots and not as cute as before but still wanted to share.

Badger and our 2 weeks old Lamancha Buckling

Copy of SAM_6419.JPG


"I wanna play"
Copy of SAM_6420.JPG


Determined
Copy of SAM_6421.JPG


Maybe I should jump on you
Copy of SAM_6422.JPG


Badger the kind patient babysitter
Copy of SAM_6423.JPG


How about a nuzzle at least
Copy of SAM_6424.JPG


Of course wherever the "baby" is Badger follows him... he is THE baby daddy. He loves the baby goats so much and he is so good with them. The kid can resist Badger... he is a baby magnet.:)
 

Womwotai

Ridin' The Range
Joined
Jan 31, 2014
Messages
140
Reaction score
92
Points
73
Love that story! My dog (border collie/lab x) is besotted with our new little lamb too. Every morning while mum is eating her grain, I catch the little lamb and hold her. I want her to be a little more handleable when she is older so I'm making her submit to handling now in the hopes she will be. Anyway, Sammie, the dog, has been beside herself since the day the lamb was born, so each morning I let her come in with me and while I'm holding the lamb, I squat down and let Sammie sniff her all over. She is so gentle with the lamb and stays right there as long as I can stay squatted down.
 

Southern by choice

Herd Master
Joined
Jun 11, 2012
Messages
13,336
Reaction score
14,682
Points
613
Location
North Carolina
@Womwotai I love that ... rare too in a bordie collie/lab mix.

My old GSD was the guardian of EVERYTHING. When we started our farm she was very old but we told her... these are my babies... she would love and guard anything that was a "baby".
As she grew up with my children they were her "flock" and stayed with them every second... One time we had a neighbor with a baby about 24months... they were playing with her and kinda lifting her in the air and swooping her down, she was squealing with happiness but the squealing did not go over with my 2 GSD's (my old girl being one) and they were freaking out to protect the baby, they thought the "adult" was harming the baby. Had to pull them from the fenceline and put them in the house.

There is nothing like a great dog.:)
 

Womwotai

Ridin' The Range
Joined
Jan 31, 2014
Messages
140
Reaction score
92
Points
73
I agree! I didn't realize the BC/Lab combo was not likely to produce a dog good around baby animals. We adopted this dog at 8-9 months of age, and she is now 3 ½. The only other baby animals she's had exposure to since we've had her are the poultry and she is so good with them - she will lie still and let chicks crawl all over her. She would never deliberately harm them, though I could see it accidentally happening because she is all retriever and ball obsessed. If someone were to throw a ball - or even a stick - in the vicinity of the poultry, she would be so focused on retrieving it, she might incidentally hurt a bird. For that reason we have a rule about no throwing sticks or balls around the birds :)

I've considered trying to train her as a LGD to some extent, because she already acts in lieu of one around here. She and our other (also poultry safe) dog sleep in a dog igloo in the chicken yard at night, effectively deterring predators just by their presence. The other dog is more of a patroller, and I've seen her get into the sheep pasture and go trotting around the perimeter fence, stopping now and then to smell things. I let her do this, figuring that having her scent around the perimeter is something I want.

Unfortunately, neither is a big dog - around 40lb. The BC/Lab (Sammie) is the size and physique of a BC, but with lab coloring and fur (and a retriever, not a herder).

Interestingly, while Sammie has never shown an inkling of threat towards any of the animals here, when a wild rabbit makes its way onto the property, it is fair game. I'll never forget watching her chase a rabbit around last summer. As the rabbit zigzagged through my free-ranging flock, so did Sammie, in hot pursuit. Birds were flapping and scattering in all directions but Sammie remained focused on the rabbit. I figure if anything was going to swing her towards chasing birds, that was it, so if she didn't then, she probably never will. She also goes after squirrels that come into our yard. And, when we go to our barn to ride the horses, she has many times chased deer and - more to the point - when we flush a coyote, she will take off after it in hot pursuit. She has chased numerous coyotes off the barn property. My concern there is that she is roughly the same size they are. One on one, she chases and they run, but I'm concerned if she encountered a pack of them and they ganged up on her, she would be vulnerable. However she has the speed of a greyhound too, so maybe she could outrun them? I dunno….:idunno

In any case, it is sweet to see how excited she is by the lamb. And this morning she will get to meet a new one. I looked out the window and minute ago and another ewe has lambed. I have yet to go down and see this one - my coffee was still hot after all - but I will head down there soon to check it out.:)[/user]
 

babsbag

Herd Master
Joined
May 10, 2010
Messages
7,886
Reaction score
9,317
Points
593
Location
Anderson, CA
A BC/lab combo that is ok with poultry is amazing. BCs are just so active and into herding things and the lab, well, they are BIRD dogs, I am surprised that she doesn't constantly bring you the chickens totally proud of herself. Good dogs !!!!
 

Womwotai

Ridin' The Range
Joined
Jan 31, 2014
Messages
140
Reaction score
92
Points
73
We had a new lamb born overnight and this morning DH took pics of me introducing the lamb to the dogs. Sammie is the black one who wants to accompany me every time I go to the see the lambs. The tri color is less enamored but was willing to sniff the new arrival this morning anyway. I was in the nursery pen holding the lamb while his mother ate her grain, and the dogs were just outside it.
100_0477.JPG
 

jodief100

True BYH Addict
Joined
Apr 22, 2010
Messages
4,017
Reaction score
709
Points
258
Location
N. Kentucky
What a sweet lamb! Pretty baby!

Both of my male Pyrs I have had always let the babies crawl and bounce all over them. I always thought it was a male Pyr thing. Is it common? Do you see it happen with females?
 

bcnewe2

Loving the herd life
Joined
Mar 19, 2013
Messages
474
Reaction score
79
Points
103
Location
Union, MO
I'm not referring to your dog Sammie but thought I'd mention a few things I've found over the years of owning and training border collies. Which btw are totally different than an LGD. Not even close to the same type of anything.

My border collies are trained to work livestock. It is something that is born in them that I harness not teach. Same with the respect they have for new born anything, a good border collie is born with it. You can see in my avatar that Dew, one of my border collies is letting a lamb sniff all over her. But this is not love for Dew. It is respect for babies and something she can't help herself with.
There comes a time when the lambs grow up and they become just another sheep to be moved.

My dogs aren't mean to the sheep, they harbor no ill will but they have a firm need to control them. Some will bite as youngsters not knowing anything else to do but normally border collies aren't really all that grippy to livestock.

I do wonder a bit if your Sammie is really just watching the lamb like my dogs watch lambs. I'm sure I could confuse the behavior with love, if I didn't know them so well and train livestock work in the manner that I do. They will also lick lamb bums, tasty stuff comes from there. But, it's not kisses, it's hoping for a tidbit of poop.

I hope your dog stays as loving as you say, but watch as your livestock grows, things might change.

My dogs also don't see poultry, or not all of them do. It's just something they were born with. They will work them if I tell them to but in day to day life my chickens can walk over my dogs and the dogs don't do anything. I didn't teach it. it's the same thing as "not seeing" lambs as something to work.

Ducks however bring out a different instinct compared to chickens. Ducks flock and move differently so they will work them quicker than chickens but again they won't work any thing that's a baby.

Hope that makes since. just wanted to put that out there so you are aware to keep watch as your lambs grow. And a personal warning to not count your labXbc cross to be a reliable LGD. Only a true LGD can be trusted to guard your animals in a manner that is what we all are looking for.
 

Latest posts

Top