The Scotch collie is practically unknown to the majority
of Americans, although some Eastern farmers associate the name with the family dog that makes a safe
playmate for the children and brings in the cows at milking time, while the fancier, in turn,
recalls the pride of the show bench, and one of his most devoted pets. What is, then, the real Scotch Collie and
what his mission? Briefly worded, he is the ideal shepherd. Among Scottish flocks he is the pride of
Scottish owners, and is valued, both in the Old World and the New, as one of the best aids money can procure.
Here even, in far California, there is one ranch, lying
high on the breezy mountains and low in the grassy dells, that for years has relied
upon the help given by imported collies and their offspring, and it is of the
work these bright dogs do that this article is written.
For the history of the collie one must look elsewhere
than in a brief magazine sketch. In appearance and color they vary; the heads are
sharp, almost pointed; the eyes, bright and intelligent, fairly speaking to
those they favor most; ears, carried sharply upright in many cases, and as a rule the
better workers are those of light, lithe build; as the sheep- man puts it, "one that
is springy on his feet."
On this Mendocino ranch, for twenty-five years and more,
the trained collies have handled sheep, season after season, herding, driving, holding, gathering, with
a trained intelligence that seems marvelous to the novice; and the very stones, if they could speak, would
bear eloquent witness to their practical utility and value as viewed from a business standpoint. Many wise
dogs have journeyed far by land and sea to race over the rugged hills after the nimble sheep, which in
these mountain wilds give fleet defiance to the would-be gatherer. From a quarter of a century ago, when
the present owner came to California in pursuit of health lost in the mists of rainy Glasgow, and the
beauty of the hills appealed to his city-starved heart, since then, when shepherd Dougal followed him across far
seas, and collie Flora pattered down the gangplank at his heels, there has never been a time that these
wise dogs, the Scotch collies, have not been the help and pride of the place. The short-haired
collies are usually chosen in preference to their longerhaired brethren, owing to the warm summers of the Mendocino
interior; and though the change from Scottish mist to California sun is a little trying to
any, all bring their natural sagacity and trained work to bear as faithfully on the mountains of the new worlds as
upon the heathered hills of Scotland.
Many puppies here have grown to active usefulness with
wise care, though not every sheep-man can train a young dog successfully, but few possessing the
requisite knowledge and tact. No one but a real Scotch shepherd can train these dogs to the perfection
they attain among Scottish flocks under constant supervision. Descended from long generations of workers
the puppies take actively to business, and practice amusing tactics of herding on the farm poultry
while still too young to be initiated into the graver cares of life; and at first sign of a band of sheep will
usually make some move that denotes the shepherd strain. They are trained to work from motions of the
master's hand, quick whistles that sound shrilly above the bleating flock, and brief, sharp words of command;
and to be successfully handled must be kept solely by one person, and be fed, worked, praised, or
punished, by one alone. Literally is it true of the collie, "Ye cannot serve two masters"; his allegiance
must be given to but one, or the valuable animal becomes worthless for the work that nature and training
have given him to do. A well-trained collie does the work of several men on rough and brush- grown hills,
and does it with infinitely more ease and less hard running of the flock, after the sheep are once
accustomed to him, saving the hire of man and horse, and furnishing his owner with faithful help for years if
wisely handled.
Come with me in spirit to the Mendocino hills, and
follow the master and his collies through the pleasantest gathering of the year, at rodeo, or marking
time, in early April, while the hills are still kneedeep with waving grass, bright with the beautiful flowers of
the Mendocino region, while the air is one caress of springtime, and burning summer still is but a
memory or prophecy. The breeze is sweet with bloom, and the sunlight falls, a flood of golden glory,
over the lavish green of April meadow, as we take the upward trail, a woodland path that rises steeply
under the shadow of the Peak, giving but glimpses of the valley home below, and winding through still shadows
in the absolute silence of Nature's own domains. Higher we go, and onward, past an old stone
cabin, a picturesque bit of ruin in the lap of spring, sheltered by whispering madrones, and nestled in great
banks of yellow violets, erythroniums, and maiden-hair fern that peeps shyly between the crevices
of its gray walls. As we come out from the woods with the Peak still above us, send a swift glance
northward, where Sanhedrim and the northern mountains still are capped in glittering snow, rising sharply from
green valleys to the sunny sky, their sparkling peaks the only hint of winter in all this summerland.
Southward lies the rival of Kashmir, -- Sanel Valley in April, flower-lit, green-held, the jewel of the hills.
Below us, in the hollow, is a little bunch of lambs;
there is where the collies' work begins; and in response to a word and gesture, the two race gayly down the ridge
through buttercups and poppies, and running beyond the startled ewes gently turn and drive them in
the direction pointed by the master.
"Fred! Here, sir!"
Off he dashes up the hill, makes a wide circle past a
dozen ewes, and as they bolt up hill heads them, turns, and deftly drives them down. Over the ridge a
number are feeding in the hollow. Their lambs lie asleep in the warm sun or frolic together on the
hillside, bright bits of moving white against the green. A motion of the hand directs the alert dogs, and they join
the two bands and send them steadily along the trail. Two ewes and a lamb go running to the side.
"Here, Pete!"
The dog dashes quickly across a little rill, the bright
drops sparkling on his black coat as he passes the sheep and turns them. Bolt!--off they go at a tangent.
Circling in front again, the dog overtakes, turns them, follows, and turns again, and patiently works them
along till his troublesome charge are safely among their fellows. If sent to hurry the little flock,
he dashes at the hindmost, barking his orders.
Here the master whistles Fred to the right. Nothing is
visible to him, but off scurries the obedient dog, barking frantically, circles, and stops. A wave of the
hand sends him in a wider circle up the hill. Nothing yet. Another, wider sweep of the master's hand sends him
flying in a great circle through the trees, barking as though his doggish life depended on it.
A bunch of sheep now run from the brush, and Fred,
barking always, follows and drives them down, to meet the main band with a nicety as to crossing lines.
The whole flock is startled now, and dashes away down
hill, but a shrill whistle sends Fred to the front. He runs back and forth behind the leaders and checks their
clumsy lope to a slow run. Off he dashes, perhaps fifty feet or so ahead, and dropping to the
ground with nose between his paws, he waits till the flock is close upon him; then he springs up and trots
ahead again, and once more quietly waits their coming.
"Fred! Lie down, sir!"
The master walks away, and Fred, understanding perfectly
that he must keep the flock, swiftly circles round them and brings them to a halt. Here, alone, he
holds them, keeping them closely together while Peter and the master "gather" the other side of the
hill, and return two hours later to find the sheep quietly grazing and Fred lying as quietly watching them.
Two ewes wander a little too far. Scarcely rising to his
feet, the dog slips quietly through the grass beside them, and they turn and slowly rejoin the band, cropping
as they go. Fred trots quietly around his charges, sees that all are safe, then drops down again,
watching them ceaselessly with shining eyes, and not a ewe or lamb is missing when the returning master
adds his flock.
Steadily we climb, through the golden afternoon.
Occasionally shy deer peer through the brush, the warm air is sweet with the breath of bloom, and a distant
eagle screams as he sweeps in stately circles over the Peak. The flocks number in the hundreds as we finally
reach the summit, where we are met by the shepherd and "Tweed," with another band. In go the dogs,
and send the sheep briskly down the trail, while Peter, circling far behind of his own accord,
often brings in a stray ewe that has slyly dropped out.
Yonder is a place where the whole band broke away years
ago, and never have forgotten it,--but neither have the dogs. Watch them, untold, slip quietly ahead
and stand alert, watchful and ready. Bolt-- go two old ewes down a sudden turn, swiftly followed by a
hundred more. With a fierce challenge the collies vigorously meet the flying band, and force them back to
the trail more roughly than we have seen them do yet,--in punishment, perhaps, for their presumption and
past sins. As we go, watch that old ewe. She has bolted away several times, and given Peter much trouble
to bring her in; but his Scotch is up, as she dashes away again. He springs in before her, and with a
dexterous hoist of his body sends her tumbling end over end, which is his own cure for these
troublesome "bolters," and was never known to fail. Tweed observes this, and being a most imitative collie,
forthwith essays the same thing. Away goes his sheep. Away goes Tweed, and heads it. As if shot from a cannon,
the ewe bangs against him, and over goes Tweed, howling--rolling over and over, down the steep
hillside, all four feet kicking at once, in angry protest as they come uppermost; and his chap-fallen
expression, as he struggles to his feet and away, shows that Tweed is both a sadder and a wiser dog.
Though all are trained alike in a general way, two collies differ as widely in characteristic methods of
work as two men,--each possessing a distinct individuality of his own.
Ah! there is a break the collie did not check, and
running at headlong speed down the mountain the men risk life and limb to save the day's work. After much
hard running the flock is finally under control, but a bunch of lambs has become separated in the confusion,
and after circling helplessly, stampedes in wild disorder. Peter tries his wise best to work the foolish
little things back, vainly attempting to head them off, but they jump over him, half-a-dozen in succession, ears
and tails flapping wildly as they clear his broad back. Others run under him, pass between his legs, and
take other juvenile liberties so off he trots with them, in their own direction, with a glance at his
master that plainly says, "These children must be humored."
As it is a large bunch, after Fred has helped the master
safely corral the flock at the foot of the mountain, he too is sent off,--one motion telling him to go help
Pete. While the master separates the sheep, let us sit on this sunny hillside and watch the collies as they
circle round the running lambs. They never bark at them as they would at old sheep, but merely follow and
slowly check them by degrees. The little things are both obstinate and foolish, and at first pay no
attention to the quiet collies that trot patiently around and round, quietly gather them together, and at last
stop their wild run. Slowly, and with marvelous patience they are turned, jumping over each other, then
over the dogs, and it seems a hopeless task even to attempt to take them the half-mile to the
corral, but in a couple of hours time Fred and Peter come slowly up to the gate with them, not a lamb hurt or
missing, and their first acquaintance made with these gentle protectors and friends. In such a case, many of
the lambs would have been hopelessly lost, had it not been for the dogs,--men could have done nothing with
them.
The lambs safely in, the master sends Peter to keep two
bunches of sheep separate until he can attend to them; and though the bands are but a dozen feet
apart, and try their best to join, Peter keeps each bunch strictly by itself; and his master says, in
response to our surprise, that not even on the range can two bands join if Peter is told to keep them apart.
The corral work over, we walk away, listening to the
master's many anecdotes of his pets. Peter is a favorite, bright even beyond the ordinary collie, his
first appearance in the field showing a canine reason. The wooded pasture bewildered the new comer; plainly he
was at a loss. Then he suddenly spied a huge rock; straight for
it he want, and springing into sight upon its top, he stood a
moment, one paw uplifted, ears up and nose a-quiver, a pretty picture,
gave two quick glances, and was down and with the sheep again, and
quietly drove them straight across the field to the hidden gate.
Often, till he learned the hills, did he leave the sheep, and on some
high point literally "take his bearings," to return to his charge
and take them down the better way, justifying his master's assertion
that surely the line between reason and instinct is closely drawn in the
Scotch collie. He was a ready match for a certain obstinate old
ram, that always fought the dogs and delayed their work; till at last when sent for the flock Peter
went first for his old enemy, and there, nose to nose, both heads bobbing excitedly, he would angrily bark and
growl, till the conquered ram at last would make a sudden bolt, and the victorious Peter calmly gather in
the flock. A most conscientious dog, his work was done faithfully and well till years disabled him; but
Fred, more alert to praise, did best were strangers present, when he abounded in bright ways and brilliant
work, done with a comically conscious air of superior excellence. He had the collie trick of carrying
a stock or stone in his mouth, dropping it on barking, only to seize another; and often carried light
poles longer than himself, flirting his black body and lifting his dainty feet with all the airs of a danseuse;
and proportionately, the longer the stick, the prouder the dog.
One summer, when shepherding was a weary task on glowing
hills, the collies suffered much with sore and swollen feet, caused by creeping seeds that burrowed
far between the toes, and caused most painful swellings. Pitifully their eyes met their beloved
master's as he probed to remove the cause. The young man pondered a little, then to the country saddler he
went and ordered made from his description little leather shoes. A stout leather sole was cut the shape of
the foot, two curving pieces sewed to it, joined in front and lapping at the back, with strings to tie
securely around the leg; then he came triumphantly home to try the new invention on his pets.
Peter the Wise walked off daintily upon them; held up
each foot by turns to look, sniff, and ponder what this new-country idea might be. He took to them kindly,
like the wise dog he was, wore them gratefully, and after a long day's run through flying seed, off
would come the shoes, leaving his feet sound and well. But Fred, the rascal! Meekly he would let his shoes be
donned, regarding his master quizzically the while, and wear them complacently enough in view, but let him
be sent for sheep a little out of sight, a little delay would be noticed, -- then out from behind some bushy
clump or sheltering rock Fred would gayly emerge, with many gambols to divert the eye. But the master knew
him! And behind the bush or rock he always found the four little cast-off shoes, tucked carefully
out of sight, while their owner scampered gayly in the distance.
New-comers from auld Scotia are faithful Clyde, willing
Help, and pretty Gyp, who first opened her blinking eyes upon the stormy seas around the Horn, and
entered the Golden Gate a feeble specimen of her race, at once the pity and the jest of the good ship
Howth, but one feeble sister left to her out of a large and once promising young family. Clyde closely
resembles Fred, whose days are past; and till the present puppy, tiny Tweed, grows to working age, Clyde
is the mainstay of the gathering. Help fulfills his name on other portions of the large range; but either
are true types of the working collie, willing and faithful helpers till years disable them. Either one is
sent for sheep entirely out of sight in a large field, and patiently hunts till he finds them, then brings them in
alone; and Gyp's mother, Bessie, brings in the entire flock from her owner's small range just as readily as
from the field. Indeed, it is easier for a collie to drive five hundred sheep than five.
Volumes might be written descriptive of these collies,
but suffice it that this is a truthful sketch of the practical work they have done and are doing today on the
mountain ranges of Mendocino.