The dogs, during the day, pointed out their holes.
The dogs, during the day, pointed out their holes.
Planks were removed, nests were found, and
the rats, young and old, killed, instanter. Hundreds on hundreds
were slaughtered, in the first few weeks; and in a short time, the place
was mostly rid of them, until enough only are left to keep the dogs "in play," and to show that
in spite of all precaution, they will harbor wherever there is a thing
to eat, and a possible place of covert for them to burrow.
To have the terrier in full perfection, it is important that the
breed be pure. We are so prone to mix up everything we get, in
this country, that it is sometimes difficult to get anything exactly as
it should be; but a little care will provide us, in this particular. He
should be properly trained, too, when young. That is, to mind what is
said to him. His intelligence will be equal to all your wants in the
dog-line; but he should not be fooled with. His instincts
are sure. And, with a good education, the terrier will prove all
you need in a farm, and a watch-dog. We speak from long experience, and
observation.
The shepherd dog.
The shepherd dog is another useful - almost
indispensable - creature, on the sheep, or dairy farm. This cut is
an accurate representation of the finest of the breed. To the
flock-master, he saves a world of labor, in driving and gathering the
flocks together, or from one field, or place, to another. To the
sheep-drover, also, he is worth a man, at least; and in many cases, can
do with a flock what a man can not do. But for this labor, he requires
training, and a strict, thorough education, by those who know how to do
it. He is a peaceable, quiet creature; good for little else than
driving, and on a stock farm will save fifty times his cost and keeping,
every year. He is a reasonably good watch-dog, also; but he has neither
the instinct, nor sagacity of the terrier, in that duty. To keep him in his best estate, for his own peculiar work, he should not be troubled
with other labors, as it distracts his attention from his peculiar
duties. We had a remarkably good dog, of this kind, a few years
since. He was worth the services of a stout boy, in bringing up the
cattle, and sheep, until an idle boy or two, in the neighborhood,
decoyed him out in "cooning," a few nights during one
autumn - in which he proved a most capital hunter; and after that,
he became worthless, as a cattle dog. He was always rummaging around
among the trees, barking at birds, squirrels, or any live thing that he
could find; and no man could coax him back to the dull routine of his duty. A shepherd dog should
never go a-hunting.
Fonte: Rural Architecture. Farm Houses.