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Although Al & Gwynn will chase squirrels -- to the point of ignoring a routine "come!" recall -- they have left deer and other animals alone and been well-behaved around horses <sigh of relief>. The above photo shows Al obeying "Leave it!" as a blue grouse, with chicks, crosses the trail 10' behind us; this grouse is much less wary than the ruffed grouse, which ordinarily flushes whenever you get anywhere close.
They'll go after squirrels in the yard, but never get close. They do show an intense interest, but they've never killed anything except squeaky toys, the broom, and the vacuum.
oh yea carly has a strong prey drive , im constantly stopping her from killing the bees and bugs hahaha!! i dont know what shed do to a cat if one stopped and i let her go. Hopefully they wouldnt fight ? my goodness she loves to herd the birds in the park and would chase every car if i didnt have her leashed and ive corrected her for the last 8 months not to do so!
At night when it gets dark and the opossums come out she goes crazy trying to bark one down , i hope this girl never gets a hold of one...and all we have to say is the word "squirrel" and shes out the door running! hahaha
I have seen Jack herd a toad several times. He will follow along behind it, and when it stops he will lie down and wait for it to move. I would be surprised to see him "dispatch" any living thing, as he's very in tune with others and generally changes his behavior to match the situation.
Maddie seems to have quite a high prey drive, but she's not quite bright enough to catch anything. Many a time I have seen her circle the bottom of the tree, searching the ground for the magically disappearing squirrel while it chatters away above her.
However, when she finally realized chipmunks go to ground and don't fly away, she plunked herself down in front of said chipmunk hole and would not move, even when I waved treats in front of her nose. I had to crawl up to where she was and haul her away (and she has an excellent recall). The first time one went to ground on her, she kept looking at Jack as if to say "Do YOU know where it went??? You're the clever one!" But now she knows. I may have to train her to come to a whistle because the last few times we took her off-leash hiking, she was going off quite far away from us looking for chipmunks.
I think if she were given more off-leash opportunities where critters were about, she might figure it out.
I have a friend who said the Corgi at the barn where she keeps her horses is an excellent ratter.
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