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@@georgeclarke5551 I was just saying, that you only notice shedding on animals if they are inside or kept in a small area. lmao Not sure what the answer is to keep it to a minimal, maybe brushing him before coming in the house or placing a blanket on your bed for him to sleep on. But us animal lovers will put up with it but complain about it etc. Glad to hear you have lots of room for your dog.
ACD are very loyal Velcro dogs. The most important command to teach them is “leave it.” Whether it’s a workman or a visitor, the dogs learn when I say leave it, to stand down. A workman walked into my house once without knocking. My cattle dog took off like a shot. I yelled “leave it!” He skidded into the terrified man, wagged his tail, and pranced happily back to me. Usually when someone comes over, the dog will keep his distance for a few minutes, and then eventually warm up. I had a cattle dog who held off a pack of vicious loose dogs from attacking my toddler. A cattle dog will never run away from you. You hang the moon in their eyes. They miss you while you go to the bathroom. Mine would lie at my feet for hours while I was working, never complaining, but he was really lying in wait. The moment I’d stand up to take a break and take him outside, he’d jump up to attention, delighted and ready to go. You can leave the Hope Diamond in your unlocked truck with a cattle dog, and both will still be there when you get back. Although they are heelers, they are bred not to damage cattle. They have a strong instinct to softly grab and release someone’s foot. That’s how they got wild Australian cattle, notorious for difficulty, to move where they wanted. If you don’t train them not to, they will trip running children or grab their feet, not not actually hurt them. They’re trying to herd them, not attack. Our cattle dogs taught the resident coyotes exactly where our property line is. The coyotes would streak off our property, relaxing past the boundary as if they passed “safe.” They would guard our chickens when we let them out. My hens would nap next to my dog. Although they have a strong prey drive, and kill ground squirrels, once I taught them the hens were mine, he guarded them like the rest of my stuff. They have to be socialized and you have to regularly have people come over to your house, otherwise the dog will think his job is to keep everyone out. His instinct is to guard you and your stuff, and he has a tremendous work ethic. This is a dog who would die for you without hesitation. These really are wonderful dogs, if you are properly prepared for them.
I love the help out of mine. Leave it is a very useful command. Sometimes I get tested, and we have to start over for a minute but like he said it takes a stubborn person for a stubborn dog
Thank you for this great info. I'm fostering an ACD starting tomorrow, so I'm trying to get as much info as I can to make sure I'm doing things right for him!
Love your response!! So we'll said!! Leave it were my go to words also...my dog would skid to a stop or loop around and come right back....this is absolutely the best breed I have ever been around. I've had two and am looking for my next. Velcro is exactly what they are.
I rescued mine from a bad daddy. She is 8. I did my best to find her a new home. But because of everything you listed here, it was an impossible task. As a result, I have an Australian cattle Dog, in a very small house, in a small yard, in a small neighborhood. She is everything you listed here. I have lost a lot of weight trying to give her the daily activity she needs (not a bad thing to have happened). She's never tried to bite me, except when I need to trim her nails, but she does try to herd me all the time. It's comical. And very protective! She's had such hard life before me. After accepting that she is all mine, I promised her she'd never have to go to a new home. I'm recovering from a week-long stay in the hospital so my activity is low right now. She seems to understand. But I can tell she's ready rip-roar again.
A blue heeler fell into our lap, not that we wanted a dog at the time as my husband never liked dogs would never have one, and she is all this and everything but honestly was also the best medicine for us too. This little girl with all her difficulties and need for activity the most terrible type of dog for him to ever start with even liking one, well she melted his heart. He actually even lets her kiss him. :) She is so devoted and loyal too and puts up with well not going that way today. hugs
I had a heeler mix and she never bit me lol she killed other animals with ease though [no one's pets]. She was not dog aggressive either. I think this man might just have an aggressive dog lol... woops
@@Horrorbabe4. No, Jack is correct on all points. This is the only breed I’ve had since my first one in 1972. You need to be alpha or they can ruin your yard, friendship, furniture, almost everything. But with 6:40 proper training and exercise one of the best breeds out there.
Yes! Spot on - this breed takes a lot of attention. We got ours through a prison rescue program in 2007 and there wasn't as much info readily available like there is today - we had no idea what we were getting into! Fortunately we had 5 acres for him to run on and it worked out great. We learned early how smart he was when he figured out how to open the front door and let himself in when he was tired of the outdoors. One day playing frisbee - you probably can figure what happened - he intercepted. I'd had dogs before, but never anything like him - so I finally started seriously researching. I discovered a ranch that lets dogs herd sheep and took him there - it was really cool watching him do what he was bred to do. We were always finding activities for him to do to keep him busy - this breed can be as time-consuming as a kid. But if someone has the time, energy and willing to deal with an animal as stubborn as a teenager, they are the greatest, most rewarding, pet in the world. He passed a few months ago at 16 years old - which is a great run for his breed, but the loss is still devastating.
Sorry for your loss. I had my first Blue for 16 years also. 2 years later I still wasn't over it. The best dog I ever had and I've lived with dogs for 60 years. Finally had to get this one. Still miss her. She's on the mantle and I still talk to her. I know, crazy right? Having the new one really helps.
Sorry about your loss. And you are bang on. I got my puppy and I was told she was a jack Russell. 45 lbs later I had a white and polka dot dingo looking dog. A girl I know who lived on a farm said what a cute Red Heeler. That’s how I found out. She is everything this guys says in this video.
Sorry for your loss! Spot on with your comments! They are the greatest dog you could ask for! Sadly we are in the process of loosing our little red heeler to cancer. She has been part of our family for 14 years and we love her dearly! She has had a personal relationship with all four of us in the family. I have had sever dog in my lifetime but she is by far the best!
I just had to put my 13 yr old red healer down . He was a hard headed son of a gun and was loyal to me and was my friend. I loved that rascal RIP titan see ya on the other side boy
I have had 3 heelers, and am now down to two. I have always had females... so a little different experience. Smaller, and less aggressive. Very loyal Velcro dogs. My first was "Daisey" a Red Healer. She was bright, and very obedient. Was grateful to be adopted. Showed up in our yard as skin and bones. She was so good and obedient, she could be walked in down town medium size cities without a leash (until the police had other ideas). Two of mine have been very intelligent and obedient, one less so. I have never been bitten by any of them, although one, a jumper has nipped out of over enthusiasm, easily correctable. They are all very mouthy, but I view that as a normal way to use their "hand". They are bossy, and would like to control us and the house (if they could). They want to go everywhere with us. I would say they are great company, and intend the best for you (and them). My favorite bread.
One of my mutts is a heeler/pit/beagle mix. A little over 45 lbs of goofy muscle. Our friends have his sister and she's literally half his size. She's also waaaay more timid. Love both of them, but man can mine be a handful. Very cuddly with people he knows, but his guarding behavior was off the charts after he turned about a year old. Took a lot of effort and consistency to break his bad habits. Despite the effort, he's a great dog and totally worth it.
I have had three. None of them have had the problems you mentioned. They are fantastic dogs. And the oldest living one was named bluey at 28.5 years old
I'm on disability but able bodied. I'm very outdoorsy. I think this is the best breed for me. They're adaptive to hot or cold. They're Waterproof. Fearless. Their endurance and toughness is unmatched.
Brilliant. Brilliant. Brilliant! I'm from Australia and you have nailed what a cattle dog is. I have a blue heeler and she is everything you say. If you give them the time, let them know who is boss you will have the most amazing family member. Thats a proper cattle dog you have, most cattle dogs in the states are slender, ours are stocky like cowboy. Beautiful dog
Great video and you nailed the key points. I’m an Aussie cattle dog owner and it worries me that the breed is becoming ‘popular’ in the northern hemisphere for all the reasons you mention. They’re a working dog and they don’t take shit, not a display dog for sure. Good call bud, our pool guy spent half a day in our backyard waiting for me to come home and let him out - our two Blueys let him in but bailed him up when he tried to leave 😂
Haaaaaa our little girl does that. Sure you can come into the house to use the bathroom, but forget coming out of the bathroom to leave. Omg they are special. :)
Lol. Mine did this too at our old house where she grew up. We’re in a new house now & she won’t let u in at all anymore without me. Pretty safe from robbers lol
I have a Texas Heeler and I vacuum daily and sweep. We are outside a lot, I throw the ball routinely night and day, and we hike. The hair is just a thing I’ve gotten used to as another chore. She loves to get wet and roll in the dirt, so I’m sweeping up dirt on the regular too. She’s worth it!
You’re pretty spot on. What I would add is that they are a “one man dog”. I’m 65 and have had probably 7 heeler’s(red and blue) over the years on the ranch and not one would take a command from my wife. I have absolutely zero proof of this, but I swear that the red’s I’ve had have been way more aggressive than any of the blue’s I’ve had. These dog’s own you, you don’t own them! Queensland heelers are not for everyone, they are a lot of work.
My boy is almost 3 now. he was a pup during the first hard lockdown and hes not a fan of new people touching him. He bit the neighbors cleaning lady because she came onto our property. He also bit one of my male friends for making threatening body language toward me(it wasnt intentional). Hes protected me from being mugged twice now and i can actually go hiking,walking and running alone and feel safe. This dog isnt for everyone but if you want a protection dog that can keep up with an active lifestyle and that you want to train new tricks constantly this dog is an awesome match.
It's like I tell my sister, "They FEAR NOTHING, not even Satan himself. Even the paranormal fears these little fellas." The other thing I tell her; "A heeler is a women's best friend." These aren't Legally Blond's Chihuahua; these are guardian angels eager to wrestle.
as an aussie , i think your comments are spot on and you have a real gift for presentation .one thing i've learnt ,is if he's in the back of your ute/truck ,don't put your hand in ,untill you've been properly introduced and familiar and they give you the ok .this neighbour down the road ,had a smithfield .[redish one ] and even though i was with charlie the owner ,as soon as i got in the yard he went into protect mode . about half a step behind .had to ask charlie a few times between his gate and the front door "charlie you sure the dog's ok ? yeah mate he's fine". he was but only because charlie was escorting me .
After completing a few online questionnaires about getting a dog, this came up top more than once but after watching your video I think it is likely not to be a good match. Thank you
You got to watch the other video before making that decision. I think they are unique, but he didn't mention the possibility of the male dog balls not dropping or just one drops. You can't leave them like that. And if one drops the other one must be removed, if both don't drop, well Ive always been against removing them for male dogs, I used to be a vet assistant after highschool for about a year. But it can cause cancer. Cats I understand especially if you let out side a lot, and if you are raising it as a house cat they will spray that funky plss smell when they are in musk.
I appreciate this video, my golden lab was horribly attacked by one of these dogs. The couple had him in an apartment and we all felt bad for the little guy, didn’t seem like the right place for him. Thankfully my dog recovered well but it shocked me to the core!
@@diydogguy HUGE point there. We've bred German Shepherds for 25+years, I have 2 Heelers, and have trained dogs professionally in everything from obedience to Police K9 (I'm a LE veteran) to SAR. There are very few bad dogs but there are plenty of bad owners/handlers. Great video. A lot of generalizations that aren't always set in stone but absolutely a great starting point for people considering an ACD. I've been bit by pretty much every working breed....Shepherds, Dobies, Rotties, Raptors (Mals).....you'll never forget the first time your heelers nails your ankle. 🤣🤣🤣 Beautiful boy you have there.👍
I have a 4 yr old rescue. His name is Ringo. He has a 7 yr old Shepard/lab, companion, constantly herding. They play constantly. We have 1/2 acre always on patrol.
I have had my Blue Healer for 9 years and I am very happy with him. He is very well trained. At the vet I say ZIp go sat down, he will set down and not move till I give him a command. Very protective and I love it.
Finally a clip with the right info about the cattle dog, i would say mental stimulation if you dont let the dog herd (just running will get you a fit dog but things like searching, tracking etc, will get them tired in a whole other way) and teaching them to find the off-button is up there as well on things you have to work on
I’m Australian and had 3 of these in my life. Your comments are spot on. Especially the bites part. They sneak up on intruders and bite them, more often than not you won’t realise there’s a heeler there until he latches on to your calf. But awesome dogs if you keep them working. Fiercely loyal and will work all day for a pat, half a cup of biscuits and a drink.
Liked the video. ** I have an Australian Cattle dog named Sadie that is colored like yours. I got her from the SPCA as a 7 month old puppy. Was told that a USAF serviceman got sent overseas and had a family taking care of her. She did not get along with their kids, so she was brought in to the SPCA near Dover AFB. ** She is a smart dog and is now 15 years old. She likes other dogs, but does annoy them a little when she tries to herd them. She has never bitten anyone or been in a dog fight. ** She minds me very well, one time she took off after a cat and I hollered and she stopped and came back. I walk her at the local park and she will walk by kids but if they reach for her she will growl and get behind me. Cattle dogs are nippers not attackers, but we still keep her away from grandsons. There are Geese and Ducks at the park and she does not pay attention to them. ** Sadie likes to see large animals like cows but I have never let her loose to see what she would do. One time we were on a trail and met a horse. The horse was used to dogs and came right up to Sadie and leaned over to be nose to nose. Sadie was in a stance to be ready to jolt. She was very excited to see meet the horse and kept looking at me, then the horse, and again to me, like "do you see this dad". Sadie was on a leash.
My partner and I have a border collie x kelpie and after a year, we decided to get him a friend (cattle dog x). We made the mistake of not looking at their history and needs… and take full responsibility for that. We got him from a rescue and he has scars all over his limbs and body so he has some sort of trauma happen. We’ve now had him for a year and it’s been a nightmare. We tried our best to train him the same way we trained our border collie but he quickly turned into a dominant bully. As you mentioned, he attacks his ankles all the time and asserts his dominance. Our border collie has turned into a completely different dog and just seems so depressed all the time. We take them both out twice a day for big runs/hitting the ball in a park with a tennis racket to burn their energy. We leave toys around the house and leave kongs and treats out but still he still is a terror and destroys our house/yard and come home to our border collie depressed from being bullied. He is also now lunging at kids on the lead and is getting aggressive towards other dogs. The other night he attacked our border collie too and ripped a bunch of hair out. We often come home to furniture and stuff around the house being destroyed. We have a tiny property with no room to run, so we always take them to a park but through out the day when we are working they stay inside because we don’t want them to dig holes in the backyard of our rental. Can you please suggest anything we can do? Is this trauma, dominance and behaviour something that can be trained? Or is it a good idea to find him a home on a farm? Again, I take full responsibility for the way he is and I wish I could go back and change the way I did things. Just trying to reach out for help! Thank you for reading.
Just found your page, and Recently accepted a blue heeler from a friend that had to rehome him. Happy i found your page and look forward to watching all the blue heeler videos.
Yeah, they are constantly on the sneak to see what they can get away with. "Leave it" is a command you need to teach them, and enforce. If you say it and they pretend not to hear you, you need to step up quick and tell them SERIOUS "I said LEAVE IT !". They will grin and wag their tail and tell you "Yeah, I know, I heard you" but they will try again later on. Once you teach them a person, cat, or other dog is part of the pack, they will protect them like a brother. So you should NEVER let a couple of kids play roughly in front of a Bluey, the first sign that one of the kids gets hurt, the Blue Dog will be protecting it, and will nip the bullying kid to stop them.
Love it. Got mine from a rescue a year ago. He was very aggressive to strangers and strange dogs when I got him. His training is impressive now, but everything you said in this video is on the nose. I would add that positive only or heavily compulsive training won’t cut it with these dogs. You’ll need to learn some serious skills as a balanced dog trainer to handle these off leash and in public. Particularly if you don’t want to see anyone get bit.
I consider it a paradox with my first Cattle Dog. He learns to do things very fast when you pour on the positive reinforcement (a ball in his case). However, he was prone to some pretty rude behavior until he came to understand that no means no. Like you said, not a Golden Retriever. Needs firm boundaries and structure. Expect them to be as reactive as sodium in water otherwise.
I take mine to work every day. Anyone who approaches my desk is growled at and it's the same people who play ball with him. They all want to be his friend and while he is social and will play with other people, myself and our space is protected at all times against everyone. The boss came up from behind him and pulled him down after jumping up on a shelf that had balls on it. Got Bit. Two coworkers were kind of screwing around - teasing him. Got Bit. My wife tried to push him off the bed. Got Bit. And This IS A Socialized ACD. If my wife pretends to get ready to strike me he growls at her and he loves my wife but I am #1. If you don't know what you are doing with these dogs you can get into trouble pretty quick. He is my second ACD. I've spent thousands of hours training, and exercising him. Only recommend this breed to experienced, dedicated dog owners.
Blu Heeler here. I try to keep her busy and give her jobs but she does tire out before I thought she would. She is stubborn too. She listens and learns very well for me but she gets busy sniffing around or a sudden burst of energy and she does what she wants for a couple minutes but she is such a sweetheart, she is the best dog I ever had. She is still only 5 months old! We keep each other busy and she sticks by my side and she checks the rest of my family to make sure they are ok in a way I’ve never seen out of a dog before. Never wanted a Heeler or cattle dog before but now I can’t imagine my life without her.
We have an ACD. He belonged to one of our daughters who passed away in July 2020. Odin, is loyal and smart. We cannot imagine sharing our lives with another breed. He is a Velcro dog, and he definitely is more my husbands dog than mine. We cannot leave him home alone, but we always arrange for another dog to babysit him if we cannot b w/him. He is 4.5 and as of yet have had no health problems.
They are tough! I met a guy last year and he said, and I quote, “I have one Blue Heeler and two Pitbulls., and the Heeler kicks the shit out of both of them!” 😆😆☹️
We have a heeler mix, she's an awesome dog. But has had several incidents of "herding" our kids when they were younger. Luckily shes such a smart dog, she learned a coping technique of when she's herding she grabs her ball and will still physically try coral the kids, she doesn't nip the kids, she takes out her breed programming, biting the tennis ball.
I guess I got lucky with mine.I had a red heeler first rest in peace Diesel and now I have a border collie and cattle dog mix. Love the breed and they are smart and learn really fast. I have not had any issues. They listen really well.
My favorite part was "if you're not stubborn, don't do it" 😂😂 so true. I've also found that they tend to take FULL advantage of complacency. No matter how many hours you spent training a behavior or boundary, if it's a joykill in their eyes, they'll default to "nah, I'm good. I'd rather _________" when they notice you're not quite as attentive to enforcing that particular rule. But not right away, they test the limits bit by bit all (adorably) sneaky. Till one day you realize what happened and back to enforcing the behavior... and then come the wounded, affronted looks. It's as if in their opinion YOU'RE being unreasonable. After all, that behavior was a thing once, sure. But clearly we came to an understanding that it wasn't a thing anymore. Now you're calling them on it? How rude. 😂 you said they're too smart for their own good... I've always said my heeler is too smart for MY own good.
Well my cattledog is nothing like what you say. He is gentle, won't even harm a fly! Was mouthy as a pup but not bad! He loves the luxury of a warm, soft bed,; and left alone he won't tear up the place....used to but only twice. True he is loyal and extremely protective of me. But he won't bite. He be a gooboy!
Got one at age 50 so I could hike for in the woods and she would keep me safe. Socialized intensely so she is not people aggressive but probably would be against strange dogs. She has no off switch!! That would be another one I'd add. She cannot relax and is 12 now. Both of her knees blew out probably due to frisbee. 10,000 there. Overall a magnificent dog good traveler. The smartest dog I've ever met. She would have made an excellent cattle dog. Super high end energy. There are mellower ones out there.
Our baby girl loves her frisbee to so much. She makes sure that after play is over she on her own brings it in the house and puts it in a safe place. She organizes her things always. I think that is part of their mindset of working. :)
They're not for everyone. We've had Heelers for almost 30 yrs. Fox-eared assholes for sure! But we love them and won't be without one. Luckily, we live on a farm and they get to wear themselves out. A tired Heeler is a good Heeler! My oldest lived to be 17. I recently lost my 11 and 13 yr olds. Starting over with a new pup was very hard as I forgot how demanding it can be, plus we usually have at least one old dog to help break in the new pup and show them the ropes. Sadly, both of my old dogs died within months of each other and I didn't have the chance to get the newest pup before. So this newest dog has been a very different experienc, I think because we didn't have the benefit of an older dog. That said, we did have one Heeler that was a couch potato from day one. Those are extremely rare. If you want a couch potato, look into adopting a Greyhound; they sleep most of the day. I hope to add one to my pack someday. What an interesting pack I will have!
Jack, you are dead on with how a cattle dog is and what is required to keep them and yourself in optimal means. I am recovering from a TBI and my Blue Heeler is and has been the very best part of my life. She is so smart that to this day, 9 years later I am amazed by Her intelligence, her innate ways, and her physical abilities that continue to blow my mind. Bottom line, She completes me. PLEASE MAKE SURE THAT YOU HAVE AND WANT TO SPEND PLENTY OF TIME WITH THEM. You won’t be sorry you did!
Well, I have 8 cattle dogs. 2 blues, 4 reds and 2 red stumpy tail cattle dogs. They really don't need to be going all day long on the exercise 😂 A good long walk, playing fetch or the jolly ball is good. The nipping of humans is an easy fix as well for the most part when they're brand new ya put it in check. Their brains are always working, very very smart. My hubby's cuz thought he was ok to walk in the house unaccompanied by my hubs or myself. Well, Mr Kai Rayne decided his finger was a great thing to bite. Lol. A little blood along with a huge learning lesson for the cousin The most important thing in owning a cattle dog is you have to be more confident and strong willed than your acd/astcd. If you're a push over they will run the show, and it will be total chaos.
Our Hank looks like Cowboy. Everything you said right on! He nipped me so hard, my ankle up to knee was black and blue. Worked with him on this. Still need to address his high energy. We have a Chesapeake Bay Retriever now. Both high energy, working dogs and so amazing.
I’ve got the perfect dog for my lifestyle and that is a Blue Heeler. I had to go to school to learn to be the Alpha. If you don’t want a personal body guard, this may not be the breed for you. I have a business where customers come to shop. I have hours by appointment so I know they’re coming. And I have an steel gate to separate him from direct contact but he can still see me. When he settles down he then may be allowed to come out to say hello. I adore my doggie!! 💕🐾
You got it, and I'd add an emphasis on mental stimulation being equally as important as physical. The ACD also has the intelligence of a 3-4yo child, including the boundary pushing, questioning, arguing and defiance. They will also be thinking one to two steps ahead of you and anticipating your response. You've got to be on your toes to stay ahead of your ACD and you must be the leader they trust and respect. Positive reinforcement training methods are the most effective with ACDs. They are also a one person velcro dog, for their lifetime. I just lost my 16yo Clara, who was a rescue because she chased the family's chickens.
Went into this thinking I would disagree, but you are absolutely correct. If you are not a pushover, and willing to work the dog as much as possible, they're wonderful.
Spot on mate, I was a bit worried that you're American and that you wouldn't properly get the whole "cattle dog" thing. But you're absolutely spot on, you nailed it in every way. That's exactly what my cattle dog is like, and it took a lot of work to get her to behave even remotely normally. But so worth it, she's the best mate ever. Such a good breed of doggy. Well done big fella
I adopted a 2 year old Texas heeler who'd been living as a stray on the streets of a small Arizona ranching city. I don't know how he ended up "on the streets," but I've had local heelers visit my property that apparently were bored ranch dogs looking for attention. One day I was removing brush near the house, and a few free range cattle walked in through the open gate without me realizing it. My heeler stood between me and them. What did he do? Ran behind me and watched me woop and wave my arms to get them out. Still, he's willing to nip my other dogs, and it took a while to stop him from biting me when I'm leaving the house without him.
Best dogs ever. My mom adopted an abandoned cattle dog. He had big problems but with training and love he is the sweetest boy ever. He is so vocal is adorable. Your right you must train them and be careful.
The heeler was bred from half dingo half Australian cattle breed. They are exactly as shown. An interesting breed. Very strong,. very loyal, also very independent, emotional, loyal like no other. They will climb cliffs or stand on tables for higher ground. Not dominance but visual clarity. A great breed. If you want one, love one. ❤️
Okay I kinda have a cattle dog by proxi. She is a neighborhood dog that was at my house when I bought it. Where I live people dump dogs but some also believe in outside non fenced dogs (yes it’s a problem). Anyway she is the sweetest most loving dog she rolls over at everyone’s feet and begs for pats. She has no human aggression what so ever. … BUT her prey drive is intense and she clearly has an alpha personality. We feed her as do several other homes in the neighborhood but she seems to spend most of her time at my house. She listens to me but that’s because I don’t take her crap. When she is at my house I pay attention to her behavior and I stop her before she picks a fight with another dog. Other people just run her off because they don’t understand her or they don’t realize she will mind but you have to make her. I would never personally own a cattle dog but having had a standard schnauzer (which I will also never own again) I know how to handle her.
I just recently got my first blue heeler. Ive had dobermans, pit bulls , miniature pinchers. But he is my first blue heeler. 4 months old at 25 lbs. And hes always ready to play and he follows me like my shadow. I had to have my 15 yr old pitbull put to sleep recently. And i got him to help me get thru it. And as a companion for my other 4 yr old pitbull thats a female. Now they are best buds
I love em - they are loyal and if you introduce them to people early they'll be ok around them - most of the time - as long as they have a friend and lots of room to run outside they will be happy - Keep in mind they have a jaw pressure as or more than pit bulls - they have to be happy - if they're not happy .......
Thank you for the video. I just rescued a Merl/Red cattle dog. She is 4 I’ve had her one week now, so intelligent. She had an accident in the house, coming from an abused background I didn’t scold her to hard. I pointed to it, said in a stern voice no no! After it was all cleaned up I would pat the area and say no. Took her outside in the yard, then patted on the ground and said here girl here. Well!!!! Next day she gives me a look, I say outside opened the door!!! Success!! Smart is an under statement 😮. I’m very active and retired, she starts a dog training agility course next week very excited to see what she can do. I’m so happy we found each other. My best 2 all that get one. ❤🐾♥️🐾♥️🐾♥️🐾♥️🐾✌️
I personally have 2 healers, a red male and a blue female. Yes you must be a strong pack leader. My red healer took a sidewinder snake bite to protect me. I feel these are the best dogs! They get walked every morning. So your points are valid, but again simply being a strong pack leader will solve problems. Thanks. Also he is a beautiful dog!
We just love our ACD!! She will be 2 in October. She is so smart, she loves to learn new tricks. She is a good gaurd dog. We socialized as well as we could during covid. We live in the country and have friends and family that live near, she came with us everywhere as a pup. We have 5 kids, one of our kids she doesn't like very much, he annoyed her too much as a pup. The rule is that they have to avoid each other lol. She is mouthy but gentle, she loves to Rough house with both my oldest son and me, she makes a lot of noise when we play and shows her teeth a lot, but it is all in good fun 😄. I feel like it's part of her exercise routine
I just called animal control to come and pickup a female cattle dog that someone dumped. She will be at the Phoenix west side animal shelter. She is very sweet! About 2 years old. Very healthy too!
Excellent treatment of the subject, brother!! So many of videos in this genre are reducible to owners’ personal antidotes and wants. All five of your reality checks are examples of this great breed’s incorrigible phylogeny! Thus, it truly applies to the breed in whole and parts, collectively and individually! I hope and pray many prospective owners watch this! It will save a lot of hurt and heartache for the dogs, the breed and their people! Well done, you!
Thank you SO much for this honest portrayal of a Heeler. I have a Queensland heeler that I rescued and did not know what the breed was. So I had to run my girl for 3 hours per day and thankfully I have history in animal training so the tricks and mental necessity of these animals I was equipped for albeit not knowing I had rescueded a Queensland. She was 7 weeks old when I got my girl and VERY SICK. She is my daughter, my best friend, my everything but YES everything you just said is 100% correct
Good video but I have some additional information that might be helpful to someone trying to decide whether to get cowdog or not. I love my cowdog breeds. Border Collies, Australian Shepherds, Heelers, Corgis, etc. are AWESOME breeds IF you have experience with working cowdogs. I agree that most of these dogs are not well suited for life in towns or cities. They need constant mental stimuli. Really, they need a full-time job. Herding is best but there can be other activities that can keep them occupied. If you don't keep these dogs occupied, they will find their own entertainment. Most of the time, that is not good... ALSO, Heelers and Aussie Shepherds are generally a one person dog. They can do well in a family situation but there should always be one person that is in charge of feeding and general care and stimuli. Heelers are very loyal. To a fault sometimes. Mine will try to push my wife out of the way to get my attention many times. You need to deal with Heelers on an Alpha/Beta basis for each and every person in their daily lives. This can be exhausting due to the fact that these dogs will continually push the boundaries and try to get to the next highest level in their "pack". I've had a few that benefitted from Alpha roll-over therapy. In general, I would highly discourage anyone from getting a cowdog breed for their 1st dog experience.
We got ours at 4 months, rescue. She is 8 months now. My first dog, wow. Sweet, hyper, smart, just a great dog. She needs a job constantly and makes it known she is part of the family. She is ACD and pit terrier mix 25%.
My dog (Pru ) was a stray puppy that somebody dumped in the bed of my truck while I was at work , she’s a year old now and she’s majority cattle dog mixed with German shepherd. She is a hand full and I love her to death , so I I’ve seen all of these points first hand. Great vid !
Fantastic post. I am in Australia where they originate from. My Cattle Dog has every trait you mentioned. Personally I would not have one unless on acerage as you said they can go all day. I am on acres and take her to a bigger acerage property where I feed out on a big horse breeding property. She comes on the buggy run from paddock to paddock, chases duckes around the dam and gets exercise there. And in the morning and evening feeds out with me on my property my horses and follows me moving around property when I do jobs. I have had to train her not to herd horses, nip my heels and the other dogs heels when excited. She is very jealous of the other dogs and will try to block and heel them if they want to come into my space. They need a lot of repetitive training as you said, can be stubborn and very protective of strange dogs and other people. This breed require a lot of dedication, time and exercise. Not a dog you can throw in the backyard while you go to work or out on weekends and it will cope. Otherwise they become nippy, destructive, aggressive and can take on repetitive manic behaviours to stimulate their unexhuded energy and lack of mental stimulation. You need to think hard about this dogs needs, the time of you they require and if you lead an active lifestyle. The shelters are full of dogs people wanted though did not research what the dog was bred for, was required to fulfil the breed or of them owning it.
Very good description. Be prepared if your considering these dogs.Our heeler travels everywhere with our family of 5. She is smart enough to find a tennis ball before she heards our kids and crunches the tennis ball instead of their feet.
a challenging breed. as a teenager i had a kelpie heeler cross. i made the mistake of startling her from sleep. tore my face apart. lifelong scars even after plastic surgery. once calmed down, my dog whimpered upon realising what it just did. for an entire month after, she would shyly approach, lick my leg and run away she absolutely destroyed the newly laid carpet (twice) due to running up and down the corridors, also herding each of us and barking intermittently at our bedroom doors to be let in/out fortunately we also had a large yard for her to run around. she took great pleasure chasing the birds. she would bark alot outdoors. over the years; both of our neighbours cats died. in an open discussion, our neighbours blamed the dog for constantly scaring their cats and not letting the cat out of the tree. they weren’t wrong she had a habit of herding anyone and everyone. it was her instincts. as well as loving exercise she would tear apart stuffed toys. with training she would not destroy our shoes and furniture my saddest day was having to put her down after 18 years. she was a massive pain but also loyal, high energy , fun and affectionate. great video, alot of truths
When I walk I take my cattle dog we walk for at least 1 hour then we go to the park for 1 hour and I ride me bike and she just chases me but some time when she sees a cat she will chase it and it scares me that she may get hit my a car and one time I had her on her leash and a kid fell cause someone pushed the kid and she went insane she was snarling barking with teeth and I had to pick her up to leave them alone
As a current bulldog (Olde English Bulldogge) owner, and former heeler owner, this guy is 100% dead on!! 😂👍 I’ve heard of heelers called “Lite Mallinois” and that’s an apt description.
I have had different dogs in my life, but nothing and I mean nothing can compare to my Heeler. The smartest, most loyal, go everywhere you go, best friend there is. This breed has a personality like no other and I am so happy to be lucky enough to find them. If I ever own another dog , it will without a doubt be an ACD…hooked for life.
Got my heeler as a puppy he is cautious smart reserved now at age 8 he is the most loyal disciplined dog this is not a breed for everyone but for me he is
I have a red heeler/pit bull mix. I walk him 5 miles a day because I'm to old to do anything else. He's 3 yrs. old. and although he doesn't display the nipping or the mouthing you have described, he checks all the other boxes. When inside I occupy him with puzzles and games. I thought I had retired and was ready to take it easy but this guy tells me no, and I'm glad of it.
This is the most honest evaluation of a cattle dog on the Internet. Great job. Recently I had a client that rescued one of these and she turned out to be so highly aggressive and manipulative they had to return her. She wasn’t going to make a very good family dog due to the aggression. She was a beautiful dog but she was the wrong dog for them.
I had a blue heeler for 18 years and now I have a Australian cattle dog and she is just like your cowboy! She a adoption us one day 6 months ago and came in pretty wild at a 1 year old the veterinarian said. And she is all of what your saying . So we named her Katie Chaos very fixing
I just got an ACD from my local humane society, we're treating him for lyme's disease now. I can't wait to see how drastically he changes after he gets better!
I just adopted a 3 year old red heeler... he was 74 lbs when I adotped him. Hes around 62 now a month later. The energy is insane even despite his weight. He's a lovely baby and so calm and tame... i feel he wasnt treated right and Im getting him the needs he has
I’ve owned a blue, til 18 and now a red ( 2yr) surburbann Australia ) I’ve never had these problems. My first one ( blue) we had before our kids. She was crazy but so good with the kids, never atacked them. She really was a gentle classy lady. And as they grew up she loved Them and cuddled them and gave so much love. My red is a teddy bear that will hug you all day long, does not destroy, does not bully. Only some random dogs. But stopped nipping early when we taught her. Most affectionate, smart, best friend I have ever had.
Thank you! I was considering adopting a Heeler mix. After watching your video, I think she could be a problem for the dog we currently have as well as us if we don't fulfill her exercise requirements. I don't know what the 'mix' in her is, but I can't take a chance that the Heeler traits would be dominant.
I like going off trail in the forest. Very loyal and protective, smart, mouthy. He will bark at you and hackles up. Should ski jour with a double lead. They are strong and fast for their size
My CD would herd my cats and was slightly nippy. She often was at the vet for sports injuries. She destroyed a brand new couch as a puppy. Smartest dog I ever owned...that why I kept her and loved her.
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You hit the high points, but I would add that cattle dogs shed A LOT. I have to clean up hair daily, even when it's not shedding season for him
Good point for sure! I made a whole video just on shedding haha. While they shed somewhat year-round, I guess it depends on your dog hair tolerance.
That's because they weren't supposed to be indoor dogs.
@@Mav_F my dog has acres to roam on but he does come inside and sleeps on my bed. That’s responsible for the most shedding
@@georgeclarke5551 I was just saying, that you only notice shedding on animals if they are inside or kept in a small area. lmao Not sure what the answer is to keep it to a minimal, maybe brushing him before coming in the house or placing a blanket on your bed for him to sleep on. But us animal lovers will put up with it but complain about it etc.
Glad to hear you have lots of room for your dog.
You’re just lazy
ACD are very loyal Velcro dogs. The most important command to teach them is “leave it.” Whether it’s a workman or a visitor, the dogs learn when I say leave it, to stand down. A workman walked into my house once without knocking. My cattle dog took off like a shot. I yelled “leave it!” He skidded into the terrified man, wagged his tail, and pranced happily back to me. Usually when someone comes over, the dog will keep his distance for a few minutes, and then eventually warm up. I had a cattle dog who held off a pack of vicious loose dogs from attacking my toddler. A cattle dog will never run away from you. You hang the moon in their eyes. They miss you while you go to the bathroom. Mine would lie at my feet for hours while I was working, never complaining, but he was really lying in wait. The moment I’d stand up to take a break and take him outside, he’d jump up to attention, delighted and ready to go. You can leave the Hope Diamond in your unlocked truck with a cattle dog, and both will still be there when you get back. Although they are heelers, they are bred not to damage cattle. They have a strong instinct to softly grab and release someone’s foot. That’s how they got wild Australian cattle, notorious for difficulty, to move where they wanted. If you don’t train them not to, they will trip running children or grab their feet, not not actually hurt them. They’re trying to herd them, not attack. Our cattle dogs taught the resident coyotes exactly where our property line is. The coyotes would streak off our property, relaxing past the boundary as if they passed “safe.” They would guard our chickens when we let them out. My hens would nap next to my dog. Although they have a strong prey drive, and kill ground squirrels, once I taught them the hens were mine, he guarded them like the rest of my stuff. They have to be socialized and you have to regularly have people come over to your house, otherwise the dog will think his job is to keep everyone out. His instinct is to guard you and your stuff, and he has a tremendous work ethic. This is a dog who would die for you without hesitation. These really are wonderful dogs, if you are properly prepared for them.
I love the help out of mine. Leave it is a very useful command. Sometimes I get tested, and we have to start over for a minute but like he said it takes a stubborn person for a stubborn dog
after he leaves it, I introduce the stranger and he's then looking for a pat
These are the reasons I plan on getting this as my first dog. I have to wait until I get some property and a job that doesn't involve such long hours.
Thank you for this great info. I'm fostering an ACD starting tomorrow, so I'm trying to get as much info as I can to make sure I'm doing things right for him!
Love your response!! So we'll said!! Leave it were my go to words also...my dog would skid to a stop or loop around and come right back....this is absolutely the best breed I have ever been around. I've had two and am looking for my next. Velcro is exactly what they are.
I rescued mine from a bad daddy. She is 8. I did my best to find her a new home. But because of everything you listed here, it was an impossible task. As a result, I have an Australian cattle Dog, in a very small house, in a small yard, in a small neighborhood. She is everything you listed here. I have lost a lot of weight trying to give her the daily activity she needs (not a bad thing to have happened). She's never tried to bite me, except when I need to trim her nails, but she does try to herd me all the time. It's comical. And very protective! She's had such hard life before me. After accepting that she is all mine, I promised her she'd never have to go to a new home. I'm recovering from a week-long stay in the hospital so my activity is low right now. She seems to understand. But I can tell she's ready rip-roar again.
A blue heeler fell into our lap, not that we wanted a dog at the time as my husband never liked dogs would never have one, and she is all this and everything but honestly was also the best medicine for us too. This little girl with all her difficulties and need for activity the most terrible type of dog for him to ever start with even liking one, well she melted his heart. He actually even lets her kiss him. :) She is so devoted and loyal too and puts up with well not going that way today. hugs
Two years later and I hope you've been blessed with a full recovery and your heeler is still with you. I enjoyed your post.
I had a heeler mix and she never bit me lol she killed other animals with ease though [no one's pets]. She was not dog aggressive either. I think this man might just have an aggressive dog lol... woops
@@Horrorbabe4. No, Jack is correct on all points. This is the only breed I’ve had since my first one in 1972. You need to be alpha or they can ruin your yard, friendship, furniture, almost everything. But with 6:40 proper training and exercise one of the best breeds out there.
@@quenemoend did your dogs show aggression towards you?
Iv had 5 cattle dogs oh boy what a ride
Yes! Spot on - this breed takes a lot of attention. We got ours through a prison rescue program in 2007 and there wasn't as much info readily available like there is today - we had no idea what we were getting into! Fortunately we had 5 acres for him to run on and it worked out great. We learned early how smart he was when he figured out how to open the front door and let himself in when he was tired of the outdoors. One day playing frisbee - you probably can figure what happened - he intercepted. I'd had dogs before, but never anything like him - so I finally started seriously researching. I discovered a ranch that lets dogs herd sheep and took him there - it was really cool watching him do what he was bred to do. We were always finding activities for him to do to keep him busy - this breed can be as time-consuming as a kid. But if someone has the time, energy and willing to deal with an animal as stubborn as a teenager, they are the greatest, most rewarding, pet in the world.
He passed a few months ago at 16 years old - which is a great run for his breed, but the loss is still devastating.
Sorry for your loss. I had my first Blue for 16 years also. 2 years later I still wasn't over it. The best dog I ever had and I've lived with dogs for 60 years. Finally had to get this one. Still miss her. She's on the mantle and I still talk to her. I know, crazy right? Having the new one really helps.
Here he is th-cam.com/video/6-myR6AgbNQ/w-d-xo.html
Sorry about your loss. And you are bang on. I got my puppy and I was told she was a jack Russell. 45 lbs later I had a white and polka dot dingo looking dog. A girl I know who lived on a farm said what a cute Red Heeler. That’s how I found out.
She is everything this guys says in this video.
A lot of love all round...fortunate Dog and owner's, thanks for your comment.
Sorry for your loss! Spot on with your comments! They are the greatest dog you could ask for! Sadly we are in the process of loosing our little red heeler to cancer. She has been part of our family for 14 years and we love her dearly! She has had a personal relationship with all four of us in the family. I have had sever dog in my lifetime but she is by far the best!
my neighbour asked me the other day how many times does your cattle dog shed year...I told him, just twice. January to June and July to December
😂😂😂
If y'all don't have cattle! Get a dang poodle!
How dare this fool say not to get a healer ? He's another idiot !!!!!
I just had to put my 13 yr old red healer down . He was a hard headed son of a gun and was loyal to me and was my friend. I loved that rascal RIP titan see ya on the other side boy
He’ll always be with you.
❤
Im from Australia and I'm absolutely in love with this breed they are so dam smart and loyal
Do you have one currently ?
@@dorianmartinez3238 yep I sure do
@@jasonpotts4279 you should make a channel lol it would be cool to see more on here
@@dorianmartinez3238 she is on here under blue heeler with zoomies Lucy is her name
Yes they are . They have dingo in them . And dingoes are very smart.
I have had 3 heelers, and am now down to two. I have always had females... so a little different experience. Smaller, and less aggressive. Very loyal Velcro dogs. My first was "Daisey" a Red Healer. She was bright, and very obedient. Was grateful to be adopted. Showed up in our yard as skin and bones. She was so good and obedient, she could be walked in down town medium size cities without a leash (until the police had other ideas). Two of mine have been very intelligent and obedient, one less so. I have never been bitten by any of them, although one, a jumper has nipped out of over enthusiasm, easily correctable. They are all very mouthy, but I view that as a normal way to use their "hand". They are bossy, and would like to control us and the house (if they could). They want to go everywhere with us. I would say they are great company, and intend the best for you (and them). My favorite bread.
One of my mutts is a heeler/pit/beagle mix. A little over 45 lbs of goofy muscle. Our friends have his sister and she's literally half his size. She's also waaaay more timid. Love both of them, but man can mine be a handful. Very cuddly with people he knows, but his guarding behavior was off the charts after he turned about a year old. Took a lot of effort and consistency to break his bad habits. Despite the effort, he's a great dog and totally worth it.
I have had three. None of them have had the problems you mentioned. They are fantastic dogs. And the oldest living one was named bluey at 28.5 years old
I had a Blue Heeler years ago. The best, most trainable dog I've ever loved. They NEED a job! Without a job to do they can be very difficult.
Mine has a tracker on his collar. He moves 19 miles a day
Imagine how many miles he would cover moving cows in a drive?
@@hotartesian4163 miles and miles of heaven. I need to find someone with cows.
The staring at you comment is so right on. My dog does that all the time. You will not win a stare down vs a heeler.
lmaoooo this!!! i'll randomly catch mine staring at me and i'm like "how long you been looking at me??" 😂😂😂
Oldest dog is a heeler named bluey lived 29 and 5 months ❤️
I'm on disability but able bodied. I'm very outdoorsy.
I think this is the best breed for me. They're adaptive to hot or cold. They're Waterproof. Fearless. Their endurance and toughness is unmatched.
If you have the time to put into training they are certainly all those things!
Able bodied but disabled?
Can go camping but cannot work at any job sounds strange
@@mgomer9597 I know
Brilliant. Brilliant. Brilliant! I'm from Australia and you have nailed what a cattle dog is. I have a blue heeler and she is everything you say.
If you give them the time, let them know who is boss you will have the most amazing family member.
Thats a proper cattle dog you have, most cattle dogs in the states are slender, ours are stocky like cowboy. Beautiful dog
100% correct he a big solid Red proper form with the big head.
We call mine an Australian malinois. He is 22.5 inches tall and 45 lbs.
Great video and you nailed the key points. I’m an Aussie cattle dog owner and it worries me that the breed is becoming ‘popular’ in the northern hemisphere for all the reasons you mention. They’re a working dog and they don’t take shit, not a display dog for sure. Good call bud, our pool guy spent half a day in our backyard waiting for me to come home and let him out - our two Blueys let him in but bailed him up when he tried to leave 😂
Haaaaaa our little girl does that. Sure you can come into the house to use the bathroom, but forget coming out of the bathroom to leave. Omg they are special. :)
Lol. Mine did this too at our old house where she grew up. We’re in a new house now & she won’t let u in at all anymore without me.
Pretty safe from robbers lol
Pool guy became livestock I guess 😆
I have a Texas Heeler and I vacuum daily and sweep. We are outside a lot, I throw the ball routinely night and day, and we hike. The hair is just a thing I’ve gotten used to as another chore. She loves to get wet and roll in the dirt, so I’m sweeping up dirt on the regular too. She’s worth it!
You’re pretty spot on. What I would add is that they are a “one man dog”. I’m 65 and have had probably 7 heeler’s(red and blue) over the years on the ranch and not one would take a command from my wife. I have absolutely zero proof of this, but I swear that the red’s I’ve had have been way more aggressive than any of the blue’s I’ve had. These dog’s own you, you don’t own them! Queensland heelers are not for everyone, they are a lot of work.
"These dog’s own you, you don’t own them!" I would say that is true for all dogs.
@@dc-wp8oc You’re right!
Agree 100% red vs blue
My boy is almost 3 now. he was a pup during the first hard lockdown and hes not a fan of new people touching him. He bit the neighbors cleaning lady because she came onto our property. He also bit one of my male friends for making threatening body language toward me(it wasnt intentional). Hes protected me from being mugged twice now and i can actually go hiking,walking and running alone and feel safe. This dog isnt for everyone but if you want a protection dog that can keep up with an active lifestyle and that you want to train new tricks constantly this dog is an awesome match.
They are also called a shadow dog always near you.
It's like I tell my sister, "They FEAR NOTHING, not even Satan himself. Even the paranormal fears these little fellas."
The other thing I tell her;
"A heeler is a women's best friend."
These aren't Legally Blond's Chihuahua; these are guardian angels eager to wrestle.
as an aussie , i think your comments are spot on and you have a real gift for presentation .one thing i've learnt ,is if he's in the back of your ute/truck ,don't put your hand in ,untill you've been properly introduced and familiar and they give you the ok .this neighbour down the road ,had a smithfield .[redish one ] and even though i was with charlie the owner ,as soon as i got in the yard he went into protect mode . about half a step behind .had to ask charlie a few times between his gate and the front door "charlie you sure the dog's ok ? yeah mate he's fine". he was but only because charlie was escorting me .
After completing a few online questionnaires about getting a dog, this came up top more than once but after watching your video I think it is likely not to be a good match. Thank you
You got to watch the other video before making that decision. I think they are unique, but he didn't mention the possibility of the male dog balls not dropping or just one drops. You can't leave them like that. And if one drops the other one must be removed, if both don't drop, well Ive always been against removing them for male dogs, I used to be a vet assistant after highschool for about a year. But it can cause cancer. Cats I understand especially if you let out side a lot, and if you are raising it as a house cat they will spray that funky plss smell when they are in musk.
I appreciate this video, my golden lab was horribly attacked by one of these dogs. The couple had him in an apartment and we all felt bad for the little guy, didn’t seem like the right place for him. Thankfully my dog recovered well but it shocked me to the core!
Ya not that dogs fault. Just bad owners
@@diydogguy HUGE point there. We've bred German Shepherds for 25+years, I have 2 Heelers, and have trained dogs professionally in everything from obedience to Police K9 (I'm a LE veteran) to SAR. There are very few bad dogs but there are plenty of bad owners/handlers. Great video. A lot of generalizations that aren't always set in stone but absolutely a great starting point for people considering an ACD. I've been bit by pretty much every working breed....Shepherds, Dobies, Rotties, Raptors (Mals).....you'll never forget the first time your heelers nails your ankle. 🤣🤣🤣
Beautiful boy you have there.👍
To be fair these aren't exactly Legally Blond's Chihuahuas.
Sad to hear about out by your, and your gentle giant's misfortune. 😟
I have a 4 yr old rescue. His name is Ringo. He has a 7 yr old Shepard/lab, companion, constantly herding. They play constantly. We have 1/2 acre always on patrol.
I have had my Blue Healer for 9 years and I am very happy with him. He is very well trained. At the vet I say ZIp go sat down, he will set down and not move till I give him a command. Very protective and I love it.
Finally a clip with the right info about the cattle dog, i would say mental stimulation if you dont let the dog herd (just running will get you a fit dog but things like searching, tracking etc, will get them tired in a whole other way) and teaching them to find the off-button is up there as well on things you have to work on
I’m Australian and had 3 of these in my life. Your comments are spot on. Especially the bites part.
They sneak up on intruders and bite them, more often than not you won’t realise there’s a heeler there until he latches on to your calf. But awesome dogs if you keep them working.
Fiercely loyal and will work all day for a pat, half a cup of biscuits and a drink.
Liked the video.
** I have an Australian Cattle dog named Sadie that is colored like yours. I got her from the SPCA as a 7 month old puppy. Was told that a USAF serviceman got sent overseas and had a family taking care of her. She did not get along with their kids, so she was brought in to the SPCA near Dover AFB.
** She is a smart dog and is now 15 years old. She likes other dogs, but does annoy them a little when she tries to herd them. She has never bitten anyone or been in a dog fight.
** She minds me very well, one time she took off after a cat and I hollered and she stopped and came back. I walk her at the local park and she will walk by kids but if they reach for her she will growl and get behind me. Cattle dogs are nippers not attackers, but we still keep her away from grandsons. There are Geese and Ducks at the park and she does not pay attention to them.
** Sadie likes to see large animals like cows but I have never let her loose to see what she would do. One time we were on a trail and met a horse. The horse was used to dogs and came right up to Sadie and leaned over to be nose to nose. Sadie was in a stance to be ready to jolt. She was very excited to see meet the horse and kept looking at me, then the horse, and again to me, like "do you see this dad". Sadie was on a leash.
I have one in NYC. And my first dog, Only cats before. Yes, a lot of attention and time needed but I don’t regret it. Awesome.
I've got a four year old heeler and he is on me about getting outside as soon as I get home. He is fairly social but gets more wary as he gets older.
My partner and I have a border collie x kelpie and after a year, we decided to get him a friend (cattle dog x). We made the mistake of not looking at their history and needs… and take full responsibility for that. We got him from a rescue and he has scars all over his limbs and body so he has some sort of trauma happen. We’ve now had him for a year and it’s been a nightmare. We tried our best to train him the same way we trained our border collie but he quickly turned into a dominant bully. As you mentioned, he attacks his ankles all the time and asserts his dominance. Our border collie has turned into a completely different dog and just seems so depressed all the time. We take them both out twice a day for big runs/hitting the ball in a park with a tennis racket to burn their energy. We leave toys around the house and leave kongs and treats out but still he still is a terror and destroys our house/yard and come home to our border collie depressed from being bullied. He is also now lunging at kids on the lead and is getting aggressive towards other dogs. The other night he attacked our border collie too and ripped a bunch of hair out. We often come home to furniture and stuff around the house being destroyed. We have a tiny property with no room to run, so we always take them to a park but through out the day when we are working they stay inside because we don’t want them to dig holes in the backyard of our rental. Can you please suggest anything we can do? Is this trauma, dominance and behaviour something that can be trained? Or is it a good idea to find him a home on a farm? Again, I take full responsibility for the way he is and I wish I could go back and change the way I did things. Just trying to reach out for help! Thank you for reading.
rehome the dog, absolutely.
Have you tried doing dog agility classes with him? These dogs need a job beyond chasing a ball or going on a walk. They need mental stimulation too.
Just found your page, and Recently accepted a blue heeler from a friend that had to rehome him. Happy i found your page and look forward to watching all the blue heeler videos.
Yeah, they are constantly on the sneak to see what they can get away with. "Leave it" is a command you need to teach them, and enforce. If you say it and they pretend not to hear you, you need to step up quick and tell them SERIOUS "I said LEAVE IT !".
They will grin and wag their tail and tell you "Yeah, I know, I heard you" but they will try again later on.
Once you teach them a person, cat, or other dog is part of the pack, they will protect them like a brother. So you should NEVER let a couple of kids play roughly in front of a Bluey, the first sign that one of the kids gets hurt, the Blue Dog will be protecting it, and will nip the bullying kid to stop them.
Love it. Got mine from a rescue a year ago. He was very aggressive to strangers and strange dogs when I got him. His training is impressive now, but everything you said in this video is on the nose. I would add that positive only or heavily compulsive training won’t cut it with these dogs. You’ll need to learn some serious skills as a balanced dog trainer to handle these off leash and in public. Particularly if you don’t want to see anyone get bit.
Agreed. You can't train this dog like you would a golden retriever. They need a firm hand and thrive on the structure.
I consider it a paradox with my first Cattle Dog. He learns to do things very fast when you pour on the positive reinforcement (a ball in his case). However, he was prone to some pretty rude behavior until he came to understand that no means no. Like you said, not a Golden Retriever. Needs firm boundaries and structure. Expect them to be as reactive as sodium in water otherwise.
I take mine to work every day. Anyone who approaches my desk is growled at and it's the same people who play ball with him. They all want to be his friend and while he is social and will play with other people, myself and our space is protected at all times against everyone. The boss came up from behind him and pulled him down after jumping up on a shelf that had balls on it. Got Bit. Two coworkers were kind of screwing around - teasing him. Got Bit. My wife tried to push him off the bed. Got Bit. And This IS A Socialized ACD. If my wife pretends to get ready to strike me he growls at her and he loves my wife but I am #1. If you don't know what you are doing with these dogs you can get into trouble pretty quick. He is my second ACD. I've spent thousands of hours training, and exercising him. Only recommend this breed to experienced, dedicated dog owners.
Well, I've spent a long time thinking, should or should I not get a Heeler. I've heard it all, but I'm up for the challenge.
Blu Heeler here. I try to keep her busy and give her jobs but she does tire out before I thought she would. She is stubborn too. She listens and learns very well for me but she gets busy sniffing around or a sudden burst of energy and she does what she wants for a couple minutes but she is such a sweetheart, she is the best dog I ever had. She is still only 5 months old! We keep each other busy and she sticks by my side and she checks the rest of my family to make sure they are ok in a way I’ve never seen out of a dog before. Never wanted a Heeler or cattle dog before but now I can’t imagine my life without her.
We have an ACD. He belonged to one of our daughters who passed away in July 2020. Odin, is loyal and smart. We cannot imagine sharing our lives with another breed. He is a Velcro dog, and he definitely is more my husbands dog than mine. We cannot leave him home alone, but we always arrange for another dog to babysit him if we cannot b w/him. He is 4.5 and as of yet have had no health problems.
They are tough! I met a guy last year and he said, and I quote, “I have one Blue Heeler and two Pitbulls., and the Heeler kicks the shit out of both of them!” 😆😆☹️
We have a heeler mix, she's an awesome dog. But has had several incidents of "herding" our kids when they were younger. Luckily shes such a smart dog, she learned a coping technique of when she's herding she grabs her ball and will still physically try coral the kids, she doesn't nip the kids, she takes out her breed programming, biting the tennis ball.
#6 High prey kill drive for small medium animals, #7 solves unfamiliar issues by biting first
#7a. *solves unfamiliar issues by biting IMMEDIATELY without other consideration
LOL solves issues by biting - yep! Investigates all things with mouth, for sure.
I guess I got lucky with mine.I had a red heeler first rest in peace Diesel and now I have a border collie and cattle dog mix. Love the breed and they are smart and learn really fast. I have not had any issues. They listen really well.
My favorite part was "if you're not stubborn, don't do it" 😂😂 so true. I've also found that they tend to take FULL advantage of complacency. No matter how many hours you spent training a behavior or boundary, if it's a joykill in their eyes, they'll default to "nah, I'm good. I'd rather _________" when they notice you're not quite as attentive to enforcing that particular rule. But not right away, they test the limits bit by bit all (adorably) sneaky. Till one day you realize what happened and back to enforcing the behavior... and then come the wounded, affronted looks. It's as if in their opinion YOU'RE being unreasonable. After all, that behavior was a thing once, sure. But clearly we came to an understanding that it wasn't a thing anymore. Now you're calling them on it? How rude. 😂 you said they're too smart for their own good... I've always said my heeler is too smart for MY own good.
I'm dyin' here!😂 Your comment is dead on!❤
Well my cattledog is nothing like what you say. He is gentle, won't even harm a fly! Was mouthy as a pup but not bad! He loves the luxury of a warm, soft bed,; and left alone he won't tear up the place....used to but only twice.
True he is loyal and extremely protective of me. But he won't bite. He be a gooboy!
I’m from Australia and yes he is right
Got one at age 50 so I could hike for in the woods and she would keep me safe. Socialized intensely so she is not people aggressive but probably would be against strange dogs. She has no off switch!! That would be another one I'd add. She cannot relax and is 12 now. Both of her knees blew out probably due to frisbee. 10,000 there. Overall a magnificent dog good traveler. The smartest dog I've ever met. She would have made an excellent cattle dog. Super high end energy. There are mellower ones out there.
Our baby girl loves her frisbee to so much. She makes sure that after play is over she on her own brings it in the house and puts it in a safe place. She organizes her things always. I think that is part of their mindset of working. :)
Thank you for this video. We recently adopted a rescue Queensland heeler/Shepherd mix and now I know what we need to work on.
They're not for everyone. We've had Heelers for almost 30 yrs. Fox-eared assholes for sure! But we love them and won't be without one. Luckily, we live on a farm and they get to wear themselves out. A tired Heeler is a good Heeler! My oldest lived to be 17. I recently lost my 11 and 13 yr olds. Starting over with a new pup was very hard as I forgot how demanding it can be, plus we usually have at least one old dog to help break in the new pup and show them the ropes. Sadly, both of my old dogs died within months of each other and I didn't have the chance to get the newest pup before. So this newest dog has been a very different experienc, I think because we didn't have the benefit of an older dog. That said, we did have one Heeler that was a couch potato from day one. Those are extremely rare. If you want a couch potato, look into adopting a Greyhound; they sleep most of the day. I hope to add one to my pack someday. What an interesting pack I will have!
Jack, you are dead on with how a cattle dog is and what is required to keep them and yourself in optimal means. I am recovering from a TBI and my Blue Heeler is and has been the very best part of my life. She is so smart that to this day, 9 years later I am amazed by Her intelligence, her innate ways, and her physical abilities that continue to blow my mind. Bottom line, She completes me. PLEASE MAKE SURE THAT YOU HAVE AND WANT TO SPEND PLENTY OF TIME WITH THEM. You won’t be sorry you did!
Well, I have 8 cattle dogs. 2 blues, 4 reds and 2 red stumpy tail cattle dogs. They really don't need to be going all day long on the exercise 😂 A good long walk, playing fetch or the jolly ball is good. The nipping of humans is an easy fix as well for the most part when they're brand new ya put it in check. Their brains are always working, very very smart. My hubby's cuz thought he was ok to walk in the house unaccompanied by my hubs or myself. Well, Mr Kai Rayne decided his finger was a great thing to bite. Lol. A little blood along with a huge learning lesson for the cousin
The most important thing in owning a cattle dog is you have to be more confident and strong willed than your acd/astcd. If you're a push over they will run the show, and it will be total chaos.
agreed, as long as you are more stubborn and strong willed you will be able to train them lol
Our Hank looks like Cowboy. Everything you said right on! He nipped me so hard, my ankle up to knee was black and blue. Worked with him on this. Still need to address his high energy. We have a Chesapeake Bay Retriever now. Both high energy, working dogs and so amazing.
Chessies are cool dogs too. I would consider one. Both high energy breeds for sure
I’ve got the perfect dog for my lifestyle and that is a Blue Heeler. I had to go to school to learn to be the Alpha. If you don’t want a personal body guard, this may not be the breed for you.
I have a business where customers come to shop. I have hours by appointment so I know they’re coming. And I have an steel gate to separate him from direct contact but he can still see me. When he settles down he then may be allowed to come out to say hello.
I adore my doggie!! 💕🐾
You got it, and I'd add an emphasis on mental stimulation being equally as important as physical. The ACD also has the intelligence of a 3-4yo child, including the boundary pushing, questioning, arguing and defiance. They will also be thinking one to two steps ahead of you and anticipating your response. You've got to be on your toes to stay ahead of your ACD and you must be the leader they trust and respect. Positive reinforcement training methods are the most effective with ACDs. They are also a one person velcro dog, for their lifetime.
I just lost my 16yo Clara, who was a rescue because she chased the family's chickens.
You sound wiser beyond your years. Very educational. I thank you.
appreciate the support!
I have had 3 jerkers . Wouldn’t have anything
Else. Video is very true.
Went into this thinking I would disagree, but you are absolutely correct. If you are not a pushover, and willing to work the dog as much as possible, they're wonderful.
Spot on mate, I was a bit worried that you're American and that you wouldn't properly get the whole "cattle dog" thing. But you're absolutely spot on, you nailed it in every way. That's exactly what my cattle dog is like, and it took a lot of work to get her to behave even remotely normally. But so worth it, she's the best mate ever. Such a good breed of doggy. Well done big fella
appreciate it 🤙
I never had a better friends than my dogs. These guys are on another level when it comes to showing emotions.
I adopted a 2 year old Texas heeler who'd been living as a stray on the streets of a small Arizona ranching city. I don't know how he ended up "on the streets," but I've had local heelers visit my property that apparently were bored ranch dogs looking for attention. One day I was removing brush near the house, and a few free range cattle walked in through the open gate without me realizing it. My heeler stood between me and them. What did he do? Ran behind me and watched me woop and wave my arms to get them out. Still, he's willing to nip my other dogs, and it took a while to stop him from biting me when I'm leaving the house without him.
Best dogs ever. My mom adopted an abandoned cattle dog. He had big problems but with training and love he is the sweetest boy ever. He is so vocal is adorable. Your right you must train them and be careful.
The heeler was bred from half dingo half Australian cattle breed. They are exactly as shown. An interesting breed. Very strong,. very loyal, also very independent, emotional, loyal like no other. They will climb cliffs or stand on tables for higher ground. Not dominance but visual clarity. A great breed. If you want one, love one. ❤️
Okay I kinda have a cattle dog by proxi. She is a neighborhood dog that was at my house when I bought it. Where I live people dump dogs but some also believe in outside non fenced dogs (yes it’s a problem). Anyway she is the sweetest most loving dog she rolls over at everyone’s feet and begs for pats. She has no human aggression what so ever. … BUT her prey drive is intense and she clearly has an alpha personality. We feed her as do several other homes in the neighborhood but she seems to spend most of her time at my house. She listens to me but that’s because I don’t take her crap. When she is at my house I pay attention to her behavior and I stop her before she picks a fight with another dog. Other people just run her off because they don’t understand her or they don’t realize she will mind but you have to make her. I would never personally own a cattle dog but having had a standard schnauzer (which I will also never own again) I know how to handle her.
I just recently got my first blue heeler. Ive had dobermans, pit bulls , miniature pinchers. But he is my first blue heeler. 4 months old at 25 lbs. And hes always ready to play and he follows me like my shadow. I had to have my 15 yr old pitbull put to sleep recently. And i got him to help me get thru it. And as a companion for my other 4 yr old pitbull thats a female. Now they are best buds
I love em - they are loyal and if you introduce them to people early they'll be ok around them - most of the time - as long as they have a friend and lots of room to run outside they will be happy - Keep in mind they have a jaw pressure as or more than pit bulls - they have to be happy - if they're not happy .......
Thank you for the video. I just rescued a Merl/Red cattle dog. She is 4 I’ve had her one week now, so intelligent. She had an accident in the house, coming from an abused background I didn’t scold her to hard. I pointed to it, said in a stern voice no no! After it was all cleaned up I would pat the area and say no. Took her outside in the yard, then patted on the ground and said here girl here. Well!!!! Next day she gives me a look, I say outside opened the door!!! Success!! Smart is an under statement 😮. I’m very active and retired, she starts a dog training agility course next week very excited to see what she can do. I’m so happy we found each other. My best 2 all that get one. ❤🐾♥️🐾♥️🐾♥️🐾♥️🐾✌️
I personally have 2 healers, a red male and a blue female. Yes you must be a strong pack leader. My red healer took a sidewinder snake bite to protect me. I feel these are the best dogs! They get walked every morning. So your points are valid, but again simply being a strong pack leader will solve problems. Thanks. Also he is a beautiful dog!
We just love our ACD!! She will be 2 in October. She is so smart, she loves to learn new tricks. She is a good gaurd dog. We socialized as well as we could during covid. We live in the country and have friends and family that live near, she came with us everywhere as a pup. We have 5 kids, one of our kids she doesn't like very much, he annoyed her too much as a pup. The rule is that they have to avoid each other lol.
She is mouthy but gentle, she loves to Rough house with both my oldest son and me, she makes a lot of noise when we play and shows her teeth a lot, but it is all in good fun 😄. I feel like it's part of her exercise routine
I've owned 3, one of my favorite breeds. Not for everyone but they are fun as hell if they're brought up right.
I just called animal control to come and pickup a female cattle dog that someone dumped. She will be at the Phoenix west side animal shelter. She is very sweet! About 2 years old. Very healthy too!
Excellent treatment of the subject, brother!! So many of videos in this genre are reducible to owners’ personal antidotes and wants. All five of your reality checks are examples of this great breed’s incorrigible phylogeny! Thus, it truly applies to the breed in whole and parts, collectively and individually! I hope and pray many prospective owners watch this! It will save a lot of hurt and heartache for the dogs, the breed and their people! Well done, you!
Thank you SO much for this honest portrayal of a Heeler. I have a Queensland heeler that I rescued and did not know what the breed was. So I had to run my girl for 3 hours per day and thankfully I have history in animal training so the tricks and mental necessity of these animals I was equipped for albeit not knowing I had rescueded a Queensland. She was 7 weeks old when I got my girl and VERY SICK. She is my daughter, my best friend, my everything but YES everything you just said is 100% correct
Good video but I have some additional information that might be helpful to someone trying to decide whether to get cowdog or not.
I love my cowdog breeds. Border Collies, Australian Shepherds, Heelers, Corgis, etc. are AWESOME breeds IF you have experience with working cowdogs. I agree that most of these dogs are not well suited for life in towns or cities.
They need constant mental stimuli. Really, they need a full-time job. Herding is best but there can be other activities that can keep them occupied. If you don't keep these dogs occupied, they will find their own entertainment. Most of the time, that is not good...
ALSO, Heelers and Aussie Shepherds are generally a one person dog. They can do well in a family situation but there should always be one person that is in charge of feeding and general care and stimuli.
Heelers are very loyal. To a fault sometimes. Mine will try to push my wife out of the way to get my attention many times. You need to deal with Heelers on an Alpha/Beta basis for each and every person in their daily lives. This can be exhausting due to the fact that these dogs will continually push the boundaries and try to get to the next highest level in their "pack". I've had a few that benefitted from Alpha roll-over therapy.
In general, I would highly discourage anyone from getting a cowdog breed for their 1st dog experience.
We got ours at 4 months, rescue. She is 8 months now. My first dog, wow. Sweet, hyper, smart, just a great dog. She needs a job constantly and makes it known she is part of the family. She is ACD and pit terrier mix 25%.
Kota is my 3rd blue heeler. They love to nip ankles and play hard. Best and most loyal pups out there! Timmy C Arizona
My dog (Pru ) was a stray puppy that somebody dumped in the bed of my truck while I was at work , she’s a year old now and she’s majority cattle dog mixed with German shepherd. She is a hand full and I love her to death , so I I’ve seen all of these points first hand. Great vid !
You are spot on the cattle dog!! Kadi..my cattle dog was my saving grace .I had just lost my terrier..I lost my
Fantastic post. I am in Australia where they originate from. My Cattle Dog has every trait you mentioned. Personally I would not have one unless on acerage as you said they can go all day. I am on acres and take her to a bigger acerage property where I feed out on a big horse breeding property. She comes on the buggy run from paddock to paddock, chases duckes around the dam and gets exercise there. And in the morning and evening feeds out with me on my property my horses and follows me moving around property when I do jobs. I have had to train her not to herd horses, nip my heels and the other dogs heels when excited. She is very jealous of the other dogs and will try to block and heel them if they want to come into my space. They need a lot of repetitive training as you said, can be stubborn and very protective of strange dogs and other people. This breed require a lot of dedication, time and exercise. Not a dog you can throw in the backyard while you go to work or out on weekends and it will cope. Otherwise they become nippy, destructive, aggressive and can take on repetitive manic behaviours to stimulate their unexhuded energy and lack of mental stimulation. You need to think hard about this dogs needs, the time of you they require and if you lead an active lifestyle. The shelters are full of dogs people wanted though did not research what the dog was bred for, was required to fulfil the breed or of them owning it.
Most loyal dog breed I’ve ever owned
Very good description. Be prepared if your considering these dogs.Our heeler travels everywhere with our family of 5. She is smart enough to find a tennis ball before she heards our kids and crunches the tennis ball instead of their feet.
a challenging breed. as a teenager i had a kelpie heeler cross. i made the mistake of startling her from sleep. tore my face apart. lifelong scars even after plastic surgery. once calmed down, my dog whimpered upon realising what it just did. for an entire month after, she would shyly approach, lick my leg and run away
she absolutely destroyed the newly laid carpet (twice) due to running up and down the corridors, also herding each of us and barking intermittently at our bedroom doors to be let in/out
fortunately we also had a large yard for her to run around. she took great pleasure chasing the birds. she would bark alot outdoors. over the years; both of our neighbours cats died. in an open discussion, our neighbours blamed the dog for constantly scaring their cats and not letting the cat out of the tree. they weren’t wrong
she had a habit of herding anyone and everyone. it was her instincts.
as well as loving exercise she would tear apart stuffed toys. with training she would not destroy our shoes and furniture
my saddest day was having to put her down after 18 years. she was a massive pain but also loyal, high energy , fun and affectionate.
great video, alot of truths
When I walk I take my cattle dog we walk for at least 1 hour then we go to the park for 1 hour and I ride me bike and she just chases me but some time when she sees a cat she will chase it and it scares me that she may get hit my a car and one time I had her on her leash and a kid fell cause someone pushed the kid and she went insane she was snarling barking with teeth and I had to pick her up to leave them alone
As a current bulldog (Olde English Bulldogge) owner, and former heeler owner, this guy is 100% dead on!! 😂👍
I’ve heard of heelers called “Lite Mallinois” and that’s an apt description.
Redneck Malinois. Lol.
I have had different dogs in my life, but nothing and I mean nothing can compare to my Heeler. The smartest, most loyal, go everywhere you go, best friend there is. This breed has a personality like no other and I am so happy to be lucky enough to find them. If I ever own another dog , it will without a doubt be an ACD…hooked for life.
Got my heeler as a puppy he is cautious smart reserved now at age 8 he is the most loyal disciplined dog this is not a breed for everyone but for me he is
I have 2 and from sun up to sun down It is a wrestling match full tilt
Good points, they are awesome dogs had a red like yours 🇦🇺
I have a red heeler/pit bull mix. I walk him 5 miles a day because I'm to old to do anything else. He's 3 yrs. old. and although he doesn't display the nipping or the mouthing you have described, he checks all the other boxes. When inside I occupy him with puzzles and games. I thought I had retired and was ready to take it easy but this guy tells me no, and I'm glad of it.
This is the most honest evaluation of a cattle dog on the Internet. Great job. Recently I had a client that rescued one of these and she turned out to be so highly aggressive and manipulative they had to return her. She wasn’t going to make a very good family dog due to the aggression. She was a beautiful dog but she was the wrong dog for them.
I had a blue heeler for 18 years and now I have a Australian cattle dog and she is just like your cowboy! She a adoption us one day 6 months ago and came in pretty wild at a 1 year old the veterinarian said. And she is all of what your saying . So we named her Katie Chaos very fixing
very fitting 😂 love it
I have 5 and wouldn't own anything but, Love them!!!
I’ve had 3 ACDs. Best exercise regimen was 1 hour twice a day. This is such a great and honest critique of the ACD.
I just got an ACD from my local humane society, we're treating him for lyme's disease now. I can't wait to see how drastically he changes after he gets better!
Not for everyone! But for us! The best dog!
I just adopted a 3 year old red heeler... he was 74 lbs when I adotped him. Hes around 62 now a month later. The energy is insane even despite his weight. He's a lovely baby and so calm and tame... i feel he wasnt treated right and Im getting him the needs he has
I’ve owned a blue, til 18 and now a red ( 2yr) surburbann Australia ) I’ve never had these problems. My first one ( blue) we had before our kids. She was crazy but so good with the kids, never atacked them. She really was a gentle classy lady. And as they grew up she loved Them and cuddled them and gave so much love. My red is a teddy bear that will hug you all day long, does not destroy, does not bully. Only some random dogs. But stopped nipping early when we taught her. Most affectionate, smart, best friend I have ever had.
I have never had any other dog but ACD blue and red heelers best breed in my opinion
Thank you! I was considering adopting a Heeler mix. After watching your video, I think she could be a problem for the dog we currently have as well as us if we don't fulfill her exercise requirements. I don't know what the 'mix' in her is, but I can't take a chance that the Heeler traits would be dominant.
When I lived in Australia I had a kelpie shepherd mix right now 2024 have a 4 month old red male he's a handful and nips and and 4:23
I like going off trail in the forest. Very loyal and protective, smart, mouthy. He will bark at you and hackles up. Should ski jour with a double lead. They are strong and fast for their size
My CD would herd my cats and was slightly nippy. She often was at the vet for sports injuries. She destroyed a brand new couch as a puppy. Smartest dog I ever owned...that why I kept her and loved her.
My cow dog /collie was a rescue best dog ever I think she was a farm girl but now she's a CNA!