Land n Sand Oct / Nov 2013 | Page 51

Ten sheep break into a trot, the scraggly strands of their white winter coats flitting by. They pick up speed, their necks rigid and clumsy. The Border Collie drives the sheep towards a gap between two white farm fences. They drift too much to the left. “Come by!” booms the handler. The dog moves clockwise and the sheep trots neatly through the gap. They come closer. “Lie down!” and the dog drops into a low crouch. The sheep settle again, anxious to see what the next move of this dangerous creature will be. So begins the dance between ‘predator’ and ‘prey’, dog and sheep, the moves choreographed by the handler. The sheep react to the dog, as their instincts shift to ‘alert’, they keep moving away once the dog gets too close, and in between, never take their eyes off it. The dog’s herding of the sheep is a modified predatory instinct; it chases, but has been thoroughly schooled not to actually attack. The inherent behaviour patterns of these opposites are utilised to the farmer’s advantage. I watch with increasing fascination while the rules are explained; within 30 minutes, the dog must first fetch ten sheep a few hundred meters off to one side of the camp, then another group of ten on the other side, moving each group separately, then together, through a rather narrow opening between farm gates. The handler is anchored; he stands at a post and may direct the dog’s moves only. Once the dog has brought the flock safely to the handler, he may leave the post for the first time, to work with the dog to separate five marked sheep out of the group of 20. Neither dog nor handler may touch the sheep. Lastly, the five marked sheep must be moved towards and enclosed in a small pen. The dog must not move too fast or erratically, which would stress the sheep, yet the sheep must remain wary enough of the dog to keep moving in the desired direction; a soft dog without a keen eye might be ignored by over-confident sheep.