By Dorothy DeLisle
Dog makes strong and more or less continuous eye contact
with the stock. Note, it is not
necessarily eye-to-eye contact. For
example, dog may have a fixed stare on the heels. Typical of Border Collies, McNabs and Kelpies, less typical of
other breeds. As with all breed traits,
exceptions frequently occur. Strong-eye
is typically accompanied by “clap” – croaching real low. The total image of the dog presented to the
stock is that of a predator stalking them.
If the dog cautiously approaches, the stock will cautiously move away to
keep ahead of the presumed predator.
Because of this predator stalking imitation, livestock often don’t relax
under strong-eye. Strong-eye works exceptionally well with light
livestock. Whereas, heavy livestock may
refuse to move off strong-eye.
A dog with extreme expression of strong-eye is known as
being sticky-eyed or just plain “sticky.”
These dogs can exasperate their handlers because they will get “stuck”
in a hold pattern with the livestock and it can be quite difficult to get them
to stop doing a hold and to start moving the livestock. These dogs just want to stare down
livestock. They are more comfortable
when keeping livestock from moving, than they are when moving livestock.
A catch-all category that includes several types of eye,
unfortunately including non-eye. This
tends to give the dogs with other types of loose-eye a bad name as they are
often all pictured as being non-eyed. I
list some of them below. Folks more
familiar than I with other types of loose-eye are welcome to submit definitions
for additions to this page.
Dog makes good eye contact with the stock, but not on a
continual basis. Contact intensity
generally not as intense as in strong-eye.
Dog will use eye only in certain circumstances, such as when precision
work with light stock is required. Dog
may alternate between eye contact and no eye contact every few seconds to relax
the stock. Medium-eyed dogs may crouch
a little bit, but nowhere to the extent a strong-eyed dog does. I shall collectively refer to strong- and
medium-eye as direct-eye.
Dog continually surveys entire flock, watching not just
every head of livestock, but every EAR for the telltale signs that an
individual is thinking of breaking away from the group. Dog zooms over to that individual and warns
it not to do so. Typical of German
Shepherd Dogs and other tending breeds developed for situations where
individuals absolutely could not be allowed to break away from the
group/prescribed area.
Deliberately looking away from the stock to reduce the
pressure.
Examples of use:
Many dogs show no instinctual eye style at all. In my opinion, these should be referred to
as non-eyed dogs rather than as loose-eyed.
***
It should be noted that a dog may have more than
one type of loose-eye. He will
alternate eye type depending on the situation he is in. Most talented German
Shepherd Dogs have medium-eye, roving-eye, and anti-eye - all in the same
dog.
Please see descriptions of working consequences of
strong-, medium-, loose-, and non-eyed at http://aussieinfo.org/style.htm
See if you can tell which type of loose-eye each author is
referring to.
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