Herding sheep? Easy. You grab one and the rest just follow, well, like sheep, right? Oh, no. It’s complicated, but don’t worry – there are cute puppy pictures as well!
Neil Ross is a champion sheepdog trainer.
A no-nonsense Scot who is one of the last full-time shepherds in his region in Inverness-shire, he also spends years training his sheepdogs. And it shows.
It takes at least two years to train a sheepdog. The first year is spent training to voice commands – lie down, away to me, a few bits of swearing and general chat seemed to be the standard. The second year is training to a specific whistle
Each dog has its own whistles and there are eight commands, so if you have eighteen dogs, as Neil does, that’s a lot of whistles. However, stop is stop and universal for all.
Neil’s skill isn’t limited to handling the dogs. He can fling a mean sheep around too.
And never mind those Aussie shearers with their electric cutters – Neil scalped this one in pretty short order, while maintaining a constant monologue on the evils of mechanical razors!
We were more interested in the smaller fleeces.
Feeding baby lambs is nice and all that, but where are the puppies?
Neil’s yard was good training for us, as the next day we were off to a real sheepdog trial.
Unusually for our Scottish trip, the weather was not being kind to us, but the show trial must go on.
Soon the grey mists lifted and we could see the dogs in action.
There are five main components to the competition:
The lift – where the dog races down the field, coming up behind the sheep and moves them off their standing position…..
The drive – bringing the sheep back up the field to the shepherd and around the standing post…..
Gates – taking the flock through two gates….
The pen – getting the sheep into a pen. Some encouragement from the shepherd with the gate rope or his stick is permitted, but not encouraged…..
Splitting the herd – in some competitions, specific sheep with coloured collars have to be split from the main group, but at this trial it was simply a question of going in two-by-two….
Some were mighty impressive and some were having a bad day.
And some simply got on the wrong side of some pretty grumpy sheep.
But the level of skill amongst them all was undeniable. Dog and trainer in perfect harmony. If you ever get the chance to go to a sheep dog trial – grab it, we promise you’ll enjoy it!
Okay, okay – here are the puppies again!