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Since I discovered Coco was afraid of going down stairs, I decided we should practice. (Because I was tired of carrying her to visit the chickens.) So I had the bright idea that I would carry her halfway down the stairs, put her down, then run to the bottom and call her to come to me.
Coco loves to visit the chickens with me. How could she resist?

It was clearly a brilliant plan.

And worked like a charm.

Down, down, she came.

Oh, wait, that’s up.

And there was no cajoling her down. She’s a wuss! My livestock guardian dog is a wuss! A cute, adorable, ball o’ fluff wuss! She went back upstairs and ordered a sparkly purse from QVC and painted her nails purple! We’re doomed!

Don’t tell the coyotes!!!
"It was a cold wintry day when I brought my children to live in rural West Virginia. The farmhouse was one hundred years old, there was already snow on the ground, and the heat was sparse-—as was the insulation. The floors weren’t even, either. My then-twelve-year-old son walked in the door and said, “You’ve brought us to this slanted little house to die." Keep reading our story....
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Some friends of ours have GP’s and swear that they dont handle them much because they are a gaurd dog?? I asked her how they trained them to be ‘protective’ – her answer was that they ‘just are’ – no training involved. A fellow on my way to work has sheep, Llama’s and he has 2 GP’s in with them. I stopped to talk to him one day and asked him about training them. He said – you guessed – I dont…. He bought his first ‘pair’ that he ended up breeding – and left them with the sheep ALL THE TIME. He said he doesnt handle them to much, but that they are naturally gaurdians. I have watched them patrol the fence line and when I came close to the fence – one dog would move the sheep away from the fence while the other one watched me CLOSELY!! LOL pretty cool huh? The question I had for him was – How can you NOT handle them when they are SO FRIGIN CUTE AND LOVABLE!!!! LOL Good luck with the puppy wannbe prom queen! LOL
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The next time you feed her, put her one step up from the bottom and keep adding a step. Make sure she is good and hungry and maybe add something extra tasty to her bowl.
She’ll get the hang of it!
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We were at a 4th of July party last year that had a lot of kids. The Australian Herd Dog they had was continually attempting to herd the kids. It was so funny to watch.
The owner said the dog was great at keeping their kids out of harm’s way. Guess it’s the same principle with real kids.
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As others have suggested, try luring her down with food — a favourite treat, perhaps. Put it on the last step, or even put several pieces on various steps. I would think it has to be smelly and really dog-yummy. LOL.
I dunno…I haven’t had any dogs in my life since I was 16.
-Kim A.
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So, human socialization isn’t recommended. Interesting. I guess it is necessary for them to bond with the flock. So how much longer before Coco meets her new family?
M
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Anyway, have you tried taking her down to the bottom step or two? Put her that low, then coerce her to jump off that one step with food or something that she really likes, then move her up, one step at a time and she’ll eventually be an old pro. That’s how we taught our chihuahuas to work the steps and if they can do it, I KNOW Coco can do it!! Oh and she’s too cute.
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She may never ‘do’ stairs – while you are looking
We handle ours; basic training for manners at vet visits, public events, general control, etc.. The rest of the time he is free to guard in our 2 acre fenced pasture (bylaw restrictions). He loves the children-all grown now, and he interacts with each of them differently. He takes to his job instinctively, despite how we tried to train him at first.
He will react to people he doesn’t like. Our neighbor for example can be a threat. The dog knows exactly when this is and kicks in to guard mode: he has many different barks, which he has trained us to listen to. He started his barking at around 6 months, and it took about 1 year to a year and a half for us to notice consistency (we may be slow-I don’t know)- He is still teaching us. Anyway….Coco will provide you with lots of wonderful stories.
Cheers!
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We got a collie puppy when the kids were 6, 3 and newborn. The dog would always herd the children, keeping them safe the backyard. She would not leave the side of the youngest child outside. She even took on the Monster (garbage truck) that her boy (then
was interested in watching. She got between the Monster and the boy, and leaned against the boy, not letting him get close to the Monster. Under normal circumstances, she hid from the Monster – unless there was a child to protect. Now I’m sad, I miss her. She passed last summer, at the remarkable age of 12.
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http://lifeislikechampagne.blogspot.com/
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As for the steps, I agree with the others – try putting her down closer to the bottom and enticing her with food or treats.
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Have a Happy 4th of July!
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Wow, the chickens are getting so big and they are such pretty colors!!!
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By the way, did anyone ever tell you that picking up a crying baby would spoil it? They were wrong, weren’t they?
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But don’t despair. Even if she does turn out to be a wuss at taking stairs, it doesn’t mean that she won’t be a fierce guard dog.
I’ve come to realize that people who are considered “fearless” really aren’t so in all aspects of their lives. My young 4-year-old niece, whom I always considered somewhat timid, had no problems with the kiddie roller coaster while her so-called “fearless” older cousin, who had to be fished out of the lake three times before he realized that it could be dangerous to just walk into the lake off the dock, wouldn’t set foot in it at first. It was only after she survived two trips that he decided that the roller coaster might be worth a try.
I never considered that traveling all alone as a teen might be fearsome; just don’t get me anywhere where I might injure myself or get sick, like on a roller coaster. :flying:
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Blessings from Ohio…