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Brody trying to herd the Herd Queen
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Kittycat (left) & Curry (right)
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Brody sitting & smiling, like the happy guy he is!
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Pedigreed ESC ES

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The latest venture . . . farmcollies!
 
Below are some really great write-ups about the history of this rare type of dog that nearly became extinct, with the disappearance of the small, working family farmstead:
 
 
 
Nice, short & sweet summary from http://gsbisco.mysite.syr.edu/ofc.htm
 
 

"What is an Old Farm Collie?

The old farm collie was not a breed in the modern sense of having an organized breed club and registry. It was a North American landrace descended primarily from the old working collie landrace of Great Britian. Photo evidence from the 1800s and early 1900s indicates that the North American old farm collie was quite variable in type, probably showing the whole phenotypic range from Roman cattle dog type to herding spitz type. Some individuals may have shown the influence of other types as well, such as setter, retriever or greyhound. Individual family lines may have been quite uniform in type, and perhaps in many geographical areas certain types became fixed due to popularity of certain family lines, or simply due to the population being somewhat isolated by distance or other geographical barriers.

The decline of the old farm collie landrace apparently began with the rise of formal kennel club registries and the subsequent creation of the modern idea of pure breeds. By the early 1900s, some people were worried about the future of the old farm collie. Other breeds such as the trial-bred Border Collie and show-bred Rough Collie were popular and seemed to be replacing the old farm collie. In addition, farmers may have used individuals from these and other registered breeds to grade-up existing old farm collie stock, as was commonly practiced in livestock breeding.

At least two pure breeds were developed from the old North American farm collie landrace during the early decades of the 20th century: the English Shepherd and the Australian Shepherd. After World War II agriculture in North America began changing rapidly. The old farm collie as the common stock dog across North America seems to have disappeared between the 1940s and 1960s."

 
 
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Notoriously slow-maturers, we're working through the years-long evaluation/training phase but, thus far, all are showing much promise!  Plans are to register them with one or more of the working stockdog registries that supports the resurrection & restoration of the heritage farm dog.  :)

Curry
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From Indiana Amish working ES lines

Kittycat
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