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Andrea Eschen's avatar

I would LOVE to see these trials. Maybe we should plan to visit you next year at the time of the dogs and sheep go round.

One of my best ever experiences, surprisingly so, was hiking around the bend in the Pyrenees to see hundreds of sheep, a few shepards, and several Australian sheepdogs hard at work moving the sheep in and out of the trees and down to the main pasture. Those dogs darted here and there quickly! I asked the shepard what the big dog asleep under the trailer was doing while all the others were hard at work. He explained that this dog (a Great Pyrenees of all breeds :) ) worked at night to guard against the bears.

I'm currently in dog heaven visiting some friends who have a Mastiff, an English breed. The dog weighs 70 kilos (154 pounds). The dog, Carla, is so sweet and she knows she's found a temporary friend. She lies on my feet so of course I cannot go anywhere. I have to pet her and get my face licked as much as possible before returning to dog-lessness.

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Martin Kohout's avatar

As think you know, I too have always been a dog person, and I still believe that my sweet Chula the Goggle-Eyed Ricochet Hound saved my life after Heather died. When I finally decided to leave Massachusetts and move back to San Francisco, I chose my apartment based on the needs of a senior dog - one level, elevator, etc. - only to have her die (at age seventeen; she had a good run) just before I moved. I still miss her terribly, but I have to admit I'm enjoying the freedom of being able to travel without having to make arrangements for her (sorry, Chula). And my girlfriend has a dog, so I still get regular doses of doggy love.

Also, while I've never attended a sheepdog trial, in September 2010 I was part of a group of hikers descending from Lining Crag to Grasmere in the Lake District when we heard an astonishing and indecipherable array of shouts and whistles from the hillside above us. We looked up and saw two shepherds striding along, bellowing in what we took to be Gaelic - it certainly wasn't English - and almost immediately we were engulfed by hundreds of galloping sheep who were thundering down the trail behind us, escorted by several black and white sheepdogs. We scrambled onto some convenient rocks to get out of the way and admire the stream of sheep flowing around us. At one point one of the dogs jumped up onto the rock beside me; I told him he was a good dog, but he was intent on his charges and completely ignored me. It was an amazing, and mesmerizing, experience.

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