Chickens and rabbits really bring out the prey drive in dogs. In your case the only thing you can do is to keep the chickens and the dog separate. The chances of you training the dog to leave the chickens alone are slim and none. Sorry.
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Yup, I believe the general breed plays big in behavior... shes grown up around the birds tho. Thankfully, now I have a friend helping me train her on this level. She is very rowdy, but smart as a whip and I have trained her myself since I've adopted her, she knows about everything I can think of to throw at her! Always am proud of our progress.A lot of people will fight me on this, but I'm a big believer in genetics. And your's a Heeler mix. On top of that, you have not trained her to be somewhat tolerant of them. Locking her up with the dead chicken does absolutely nothing, not sure where you picked that training advice
Well, it seems that way sometimes. They are separated of course ( don't think I would ever let my dog range with the birds, that's just asking for issues). The chickens fly out of their run, and (dog is in her kennel when I am busy) into the dog kennel, seems really dumb... That was my problem, was keeping them separated!Chickens and rabbits really bring out the prey drive in dogs. In your case the only thing you can do is to keep the chickens and the dog separate. The chances of you training the dog to leave the chickens alone are slim and none. Sorry.
You are right about genetics. I once saw a striking example of this firsthand. The Borzoi is a sight hound. The breed was developed by crossing cold tolerant breeds with African sight hounds because the African dogs could not tolerate the Russian cold. The object was to develop a sight hound that could. The Borzoi was the result. Among the dogs that went into making up the Borzoi was the rough coated Collie. One day I was visiting a farm where the owners had a Borzoi. I was intrigued because the dog was colored exactly like a sable Collie. My mother bred collies when I was little. The dog was running around purposely, and as I watched it became clear exactly what he was doing. He rounded up and was herding a flock of chickens exactly like my collies would do. Apparently, it wasn't only the coat color that came through, but behavior as well.A lot of people will fight me on this, but I'm a big believer in genetics. And your's a Heeler mix. On top of that, you have not trained her to be somewhat tolerant of them. Locking her up with the dead chicken does absolutely nothing, not sure where you picked that training advice