IF
YOUR SHELTIE IS LOST
Shelties are known to
run when they are in a strange location or with strangers. They may not even
respond to their owner once they start running. Be careful if you are keeping a
Sheltie belonging to someone else, or for the first month that a adult or older
puppy is in a new home. Keep the Sheltie away from doors that open onto unfenced
yards. Take her out only on leash for the first month. Make sure all fences are
secure: no holes, gaps between gates, or placed where they can easily dig under.
If your Sheltie runs away, do not chase him. Walk away from him to see if he
will follow you. Call from a squatting position, which is non-threatening. If
this fails, try to keep the dog within your sight and quietly corner him.
If your Sheltie disappears from sight, you must act quickly. Go to as many
houses as possible in the area where you last saw the dog and ask the residents
to watch and call you if he is spotted. Instruct them not to try to catch the
dog, but rather to call you if he is sighted, and not animal control. Strangers
chasing a Sheltie will make him disappear quicker than anything.
Call local humane shelters, Sheltie rescue, and the
local radio station to notify them of your loss. If the dog was recently
purchased, by all means alert the former owner if they live nearby. The dog may
respond better to them, or he may try to find his former home. Run an ad in the
local newspaper offering a reward and describing the dog (“resembles a small
collie”). State his color, sex, age, call name, location lost, and your phone
number. Finally, call all veterinarians in the area. Let them know if the dog is
tattooed or has a microchip. Tack up reward posters with a photo of your dog in
an area encompassing several miles from where he disappeared. Then go home and
wait. If your dog is lost for several days, keep repeating your calls to all
sources to let them know that you are still looking. Searches such as this are
generally successful. Shelties are intelligent and hardy and can survive amazing
odds. Eventually they will look for food.
PERMANENT IDENTIFICATION
Microchips have replaced tatooing as the
preferred method of permanently identifying pets. You should be aware that there
are many, many manufacturers of microchips and identifying organizations. Not
all are equal. The only national programs that are accessed by most veterinary
hospitals and shelter organizations are The AKC CAR Program and the Home
Again identification program. Registering your dog’s microchip number
with these programs probably guarantees the best chance that he can be located
outside your immediate vicinity.
article
by Betty Jo McKinney
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SHELTIE EAR SET
The correct Sheltie ear
is beautiful. It contributes to a soft, intelligent expression and gives an
alert look to the entire dog. It is set high, opening forward, semi-erect. The
top third of the leather breaks forward with no inclination to turn to the
sides. The ear itself is small in relation to the head; the leather strong, yet
flexible, and medium in thickness.
Shelties have one of the more functional types of ears
in dogdom. The semi-erect ear is useful as well as being aesthetically pleasing.
The erect base of the ear works as a scope to trap sounds, providing very acute
hearing. The set of the ear allows for mobility, and again, the ability to catch
more sound waves. The forward break causes rain to run off, protecting the
delicate inner ear without the necessity of pinning the ear (which handicaps the
hearing).
Because ears are extremely noticeable on a Sheltie,
even an untrained eye readily detects any deviation from the ideal. Therefore
specifications for proper ears are more exacting than in many breeds and are one
reason people sometimes place disproportionate emphasis on a Sheltie’s ears.
Ear set should be kept in proper perspective. All other
things being equal, in show competition a dog with correct, natural ears ought
not lose to a dog whose ears have been “manufactured” beyond natural
perfection. Although the ears are set high on top of the head, the inside edge
should not touch. The ears should be somewhat flexible and the dog will move
them up and down. They should not look as though they are cast from concrete.
Some Sheltie’s ears are kept in braces so long that the ears hardly move,
which looks very artificial.
Shelties whose ears never needs to be corrected are
convenient and desirable in a breeding dog. For decades the original working
dogs exhibited a fair percentage of individuals with naturally semi-erect ears.
We should expect as much today.
HEREDITY VS. ARTIFICIAL CORRECTION
Unfortunately, ears are influenced not only by
heredity, but also by emotional stress, teething, puberty, coat loss,
temperature, hormonal change, calcium assimilation, humidity, health and age.
And to top this off, they rarely inherit as predicted.
Some Sheltie’s ears are perfect regardless of the
environment and others are utterly hopeless. The majority need assistance at
crucial times. This is especially important during the period when a pup is
teething—between ten weeks and nine months of age.
A few breeders feel strongly that ears should never be
touched, and that showing and breeding dogs that have had their ears fixed
causes the occurrence of problem ears in the breed to increase. Breeding only
those individuals with perfectly natural ears will help to eliminate or reduce
the genetics for prick or heavy, low-set ears in the gene pool.
However this is not always practical. Dogs from several
generations of natural-eared Shelties may show up with problem ears. Earset is
affected by physiological, environmental, and stress factors as well as
heredity. So you have to ask, if you have achieved many goals in a breeding
program, should you eliminate a dog with incorrect ears but possessing more
important virtues like correct shoulder angulation or perfect balance? A
realistic position, it seems to me, is to value and breed for correct ears,
apply corrective measures to those with less than perfect ears, and eliminate
from a breeding program any dog that consistently produces very low or very
persistent prick ears.
article
by Betty Jo McKinney
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BREEDING THE
ALL-PURPOSE SHETLAND SHEEPDOG
The late Jean Clodwick named her kennel “Trinity” to reflect her goals of
breeding for conformation, obedience, and herding—a particularly tough
challenge.
Temperament was one of the qualities she valued most.
“I can compromise on type,” she said, “I need to have sound temperaments
and sound legs. I have to have balanced structure. I can forgive things like a
little less coat or a wider backskull, or maybe a rounder eye. I want my dogs to
be as correct as possible, because I want them to go in the breed ring, too, and
hold their own, but I would give up a little bit on type to get the rest. The
Sheltie is a working dog—it says it in the Standard.”
Because of her aspirations to breed top working
Shelties, Jean stayed away from show ring fads and focused on correct structure.
She felt that an agile, moderate Sheltie best fit the bill. “Massive bone on
sixteen-inch and under dogs produces too much bulk and not enough
flexibility,” she said.
Careful selection enabled Jean to claim that about 80
percent of her puppies showed with herding instinct. She looked for pups with a
want-to-please attitude. “We want them to really look for us and want to be
with us.”
Condensed from Shetland Sheepdogs at Work
