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A Sheepdog trial (also herding test or simply dog trial) is a competitive dog sport in which herding dog breeds move sheep around a field, fences, gates, or enclosures as directed by their handlers. Such events are particularly associated with hill farming areas, where sheep range widely on largely unfenced land. These trials are popular in the United Kingdom, Ireland, South Africa, Canada, the USA, Australia, New Zealand and other farming nations. Some venues allow only dogs of known herding breeds to compete; others allow any dog that has been trained to work stock.
[edit] HistoryThe first dog trials were held in Wānaka, New Zealand in 1867 with reports of trials at Waitangi and Te Aka in 1868, at Wānaka in 1869 and Haldon Station in the Mackenzie Country, in 1870. Australia also has a long history of dog trialing with a kelpie named Brutus reported in the local paper in Young NSW as winning a Sheepdog Trial in 1871. A well-trained dog can fetch a high price, as can its puppies, and can perform amazing feats of stockmanship. [edit] Event types An Australian Kelpie running over the backs of sheep during a yard dog trial, Walcha, NSW There are several events, but the key element is the control of three to six sheep by one or two highly trained dogs under the control of a single handler. Both time and obedience play a part, as competitors are penalised if a sheep strays from the prescribed course. Another popular event involves having the dog split six sheep into two groups of three and conducting each group in turn to small pens through a defined course by heading dogs. The group not being led is guarded by one of the two dogs, an eye-dog (from its ability to keep the sheep still by head movement alone). This is more difficult than it sounds because the two groups of sheep invariably try to stay together. Yard Dog Trials are also gaining in popularity, too. In these competitions dogs have to move sheep through several yards, including a drafting race and sometimes into and out of a truck, with minimum assistance. Cattle dog trials, similar to the standard sheep dog trials, are also popular in Australia and sheep dogs are usually used for this sport. Cattle dogs are not used in this sport. [edit] The Trial FieldThe exact layout of the trial field can vary significantly. Most experienced handlers agree that there are certain elements that are important to ensure that the challenge to the dog and handler is a fair and complete test. These elements include:
Other popular test elements that are often added include:
In addition there are various elements that may be added to increase the level of difficulty of a trial. One such example is the double lift where the dog is required to fetch one group of sheep, bring them to the handler, look back and find another group, somewhere else on the trial field some distance away. They must then leave the first group and do a second outrun to fetch the others and bring them to join the first group. In most competitions the dog will be required to do the fetching and driving tests on their own. During these test elements the handler must remain at a stake positioned during the layout of the trial course. During the shedding, singling and penning the handler usually leaves the stake and works with the dog to achieve the task. [edit] ScoringThe most popular scoring system works as follows:
For most elements the judge focuses on the behaviour of the sheep not the dog or handler. However if the dog rings the sheep (runs completely around them in a circle) they will usually be penalized. A dog that bites a sheep may be disqualified. This points type of system has been in use since at least 1979[1] and may have been formalized at about that same time. [edit] Popular mediaBob, Son of Battle was a popular children's book centered on the rivalry between two sheepdogs at sheepdog trials, and their owners, set in Cumbria. Sheepdogs are interesting enough to watch that they have been featured on television and in film. In New Zealand, A Dog's Show was a popular television show until the late 1980s, screening just before the weekend news. In the United Kingdom between 1975 and 1999, the BBC ran One Man and His Dog, which had a large urban audience. The movie Babe, about a pig who wants to herd sheep, was based on Dick King-Smith's book The Sheep Pig, about sheepdog trials in northern England. [edit] See also[edit] References[edit] External links
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