This past weekend we took Holly and Kori to a herding trial. The event was run by our collie club, and was open to all herding breeds. We also had a herding instinct test, for collies only. The instinct test is an AKC test, which determines if the collies still have an instinct for herding sheep, and if they know how to round them up and bunch them together. To earn the herding instinct "title", which is HIT, the collies have to have "two legs." Which means they have to pass the test twice, under two different judges. Holly and Kori have both passed the test in the past, and just needed their second leg to earn the HIT.
Holly did pretty good! Hard to believe she will be 9 years old this year!
My sister's collie, Penny, gave it a try too.
Then it was finally Kori's turn...
Kori has a very strong herding instinct! I wish there was somewhere local that we could train her to compete in herding!
This sweet puppy attended the event, and was a little doll!
Kori, enjoyed the sunshine and the beautiful scenic, farm!
It was a fun day, and both Holly and Kori passed their tests! My sister's collie, Penny, also passed. The collies love attending these events, and I love seeing that my family of collies still have their herding instinct!
Last week my mother fell, when she went out to feed the
birds.She slipped on the ice, and broke
both her arms!Chase, her collie, came
to stay with us.We call him Uncle
Chase, and he is a big boy.This is
Chase, isn’t he handsome?
So while my mother was in the rehab facility, Chase went to visit
her, since she missed her boy.While he was there, he noticed a woman in a wheelchair, and he walked
over to her, and very gently put his head in her lap! I was very impressed with how good
Chase was during the visit.And then
since Abby is so calm and quiet, she got to go visit her Grandma too.Abby was so gentle and calm, she immediately
climbed up on the bed and curled up next to Grandma.
Everyone loved both Chase and Abby, and I think either of
them would make excellent therapy dogs.We might go back with Abby, just to let her visit with some of the
residents, as it’s not only a rehab facility, it’s also a nursing home.
Yesterday, we took Scarlett to a collie specialty show, and
she won Winner’s Bitch and Best of Winners!Because of how many other smooth collies were entered, the win was for 4
points.They calculate the points based
on how many other dogs of that breed/variety are entered at the show.A major is a win of 3, 4 or 5 points.To become a champion, a dog needs a total of
15 points, and two of the wins have to be majors.Scarlett now needs just one 3 point major to
finish her championship!We are very
proud of our little Scarlett O’Collie!
On the way home we stopped by the beach, to take a couple pictures...
In the past, I’ve written about my family and our history of
collies.My Uncle was the first to fall
in love with the collie breed.He also
loved to travel, and he would pack up his children and collies in their RV, and
they traveled all over the United States.He would send letters to his mother, my grandmother, about their
adventures.They traveled as far east as
Cape Cod, and as far west as Alaska!I
inherited those letters, and I wonder what it would have been like, to see all
those amazing places, with my collies by my side.
My uncle gave my grandparents their first collie, Jade.He was a sweet, tri-color, rough collie and made
a lasting impression on my sister. As an adult, when she was ready for a puppy, she asked my uncle
to send her a collie of her own.That
collie, another male tri-color, was different than Jade though.My sister’s first collie was a smooth collie, and
she named him Reggie.
Jade with my Grandmother
I grew up loving all dogs, completely dog crazy.(and that hasn’t changed)But I was also a huge fan of the Lassie
movies, and Albert Payson Terhune’s books, which were written about his
Sunnybank Collies.I eagerly looked
forward to my Uncle and cousins visiting us, but also couldn’t wait to see
their beautiful collies.So it isn’t really a
surprise that I planned and dreamed of the day I would one day have a collie of
my own.
Lassie
When I read one of Terhune’s books or when I watched one of the old
Lassie movies, I am transported back in time, back to a time when I believed a
collie could fix all of life’s problems.I remember how much I loved watching those reruns of the old Lassie
movies on a rainy afternoon, or reading those musty, but deeply treasured, out of print books.So it was with both delight and some
misgivings that I learned of DreamWorks Animation’s intention to produce a new
Lassie movie.In the past whenever a new
movie came out featuring a specific dog breed it would mean disaster for that
breed. There would be a rash of individuals
and puppy mills producing the puppies of that particular breed. The puppies were mass-produced to cash in on
the current popularity of the breed, and the parents of these puppies were not
health tested, and little thought was given to temperament or genetic
issues.Before long, all those poorly
bred puppies, that were the current fad, ended up in rescues and animal shelters.
(Scarlett puppy loves Lassie movies!)
Because of this, I naturally worry what a new Lassie movie might mean for
the collie breed.However, it would be
wonderful to see Lassie capture the hearts and imaginations of a new
generation.When people were asked what
words they associated with Lassie, the most common answers were “loyal, brave,
hero and heartwarming.”When we take our
collies for a walk, someone always calls out to them, “Hi Lassie!”And all too often I hear people say to each
other as we pass, “Look, it’s a collie, isn’t she beautiful?You never see collies anymore!”In fact there are so few collies being
registered with the AKC these days, that collie owners are encouraged by the
Collie Club of America to have their collies act at ambassadors for the breed.So while it would be great if there was more
recognition of what this wonderful breed has to offer, collie breeders are greeting
the news of a new Lassie movie with some trepidation.
Ryder, showing off his Lassie collection!
What doyou
think?Is a new Lassie movie a good
thing or a bad thing?Do you have a dog
breed that was part of a past fad? (Dalmatian, Chihuahua, German Shepherd,
Great Dane, etc). I have to admit, despite my misgivings, I can’t wait to see the new Lassie series!