Temperament
Working types
Working collies are extremely energetic and agile dogs with great stamina, well able to run all day without tiring, even over very rough or steep ground. They are intelligent, and are instinctively highly motivated to work. These characteristics generally make working strains unsuitable as pets, as few owners are able to give them the mental and physical challenges they need and, if not well fulfilled, they may become unhappy and badly behaved. However, in addition to herding work they are well suited to active sports such as sheepdog trials, flyball, disc dog and dog agility. Working strains have strong herding instincts, and some individuals can be single-minded to the point of obsessiveness. They are often intensely loyal.
Show and pet types
Certain types of collie (for example Rough Collies, Smooth Collies, Shetland Sheepdogs and some strains of Border Collie and other breeds) have been bred aspet and show dogs for many generations. These types have proved to be highly trainable, gentle, loyal, and well suited as pets. Their gentleness and devotion also make them quite compatible with children. The temperament of these breeds has featured in literature, film and popular television programmes. The novels of Albert Payson Terhune celebrated the temperament and companionship of collies and were very popular in the United States during the 1920's and 30's. More famously, the temperament and intelligence of the Rough Collie was exaggerated to mythic proportions in the character Lassie which has been the subject of many films, books and television shows from 1938 to the present.
Collie types and breeds
Herding dogs of collie type have long been widespread in Britain, and these can be regarded as a landrace from which a number of other landraces, types, and formal breeds have been derived, both in Britain and elsewhere. Many of these are working herding dogs, but some have been developed into show andpet dogs, sometimes losing their working instincts.
Herding types tend to be more variable than the show and pet breeds, as they are bred primarily for their working ability, and appearance is of lower importance.
Dogs of collie type or ancestry include:
- Australian Cattle Dog. Dog used in Australia for herding cattle. Dogs of this type are also known as Queensland Heeler, Blue Heeler and Red Heeler.
- Australian Collie. Not actually a breed, but a popular cross between two other collie types, Australian Shepherd and Border Collie.
- Australian Kelpie. Developed in Australia from collies originally brought from Scotland and northern England.
- Australian Shepherd. Developed in the US, probably from dogs of British origin (of Farm Collie type), but now found in other parts of the world (including Australia).
- Australian Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog. Dog with stumpy tail used in Australia for herding cattle.
- Bearded Collie. Now largely a pet and show breed, but still of collie type, and some are used as working dogs.
- Border Collie. The most well-known breed for herding sheep throughout the world. Originally developed in Scotland and Northern England. Not always suitable for herding cattle.
- English Shepherd. Developed in the US from stock of Farm Collie type originally from Britain. Not to be confused with the very different Old English Sheepdog.
- Farm Collie. Landrace herding dog found on many livestock farms in Britain, in the US (derived from British dogs), and perhaps elsewhere. In Britain, often simply called "farm dog".
- German Coolie, Koolie, or Collie. Developed in Australia, probably from British collies.
- Huntaway. Developed in New Zealand from a mixture of breeds, probably including some collie – but it is not of collie type.
- Lurcher. Not a breed, but a cross of collie (or terrier) with Greyhound or other sight hound. Traditionally bred for poaching, with the speed of a sight hound but more intelligent and less conspicuous.
- McNab (Shepherd). Developed in the US partly from dogs of collie type.
- Old English Sheepdog. Derived from "Shags", hairy herding dogs. Not to be confused with the English Shepherd.
- Rough Collie and Smooth Collie (sometimes considered varieties of one breed, and originally called Scotch Collie). Now show and pet dogs, these were created by crossing working collies with other dogs (especially Borzois) and are of rather different type to other collies.
- Shetland Sheepdog. A small show and pet breed developed in England partly from herding dogs originating in Shetland. These were originally working herding dogs, not collies but of Spitz type (similar to the Icelandic Sheepdog). However they were later heavily mixed with collies and toy breeds, and are now similar in appearance to a miniature Rough Collie.
- Welsh Sheepdog. Landrace herding dog from Wales.
The heeler types of dog are probably related to collies, being usually shorter-legged dogs used primarily for herding cattle.
Collie names
Working collies are often given traditional short and evocative names, including, for example:
Ben, Cap, Craig, Fly, Flash, Jed, Jet, Gyp, Meg, Moss, Nan, Nell, Rex, Roy, Sam, Shep, Spot, Sweep, Tess, Tip.
In a few cases the names of individual real or fictional dogs have become attached to a whole type, as for example with Kelpie and Lassie (Rough Collie).
Famous Collies
- Lassie
- Colleen from Road Rovers
- Jessie, the dog from the satirical novella Animal Farm by George Orwell, is portrayed as a Border Collie in the 1999 film version
- Laddie from The Simpsons
- Flo & the other puppies in All Dogs Go to Heaven
- Blanco, pet of Lyndon Johnson
- Reveille, official mascot of Texas A&M University
- Lad of Sunnybank, from the series of novels by Albert Payson Terhune
- Wilson of the 1984 Manga series (and 1986 Anime) by Yoshihiro Takahashi, Ginga Nagareboshi Gin, and ex-circus dog.
- Fly and Rex, Border Collies from the movie Babe, and the original book The Sheep-Pig by Dick King-Smith.
- Thunder and Lightning, Granny Aching's near-telepathic sheepdogs in Terry Pratchett's Discworld novel The Wee Free Men and its sequels.
- Laddie, an extremely dense but photogenic film-collie in Terry Pratchett's Discworld novelMoving Pictures; a satire on too-perfect film-dogs such as Lassie.
- Murray the dog of Paul Buchman & Jamie Buchman in the TV series Mad About You
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