No. That breed of dog (collie and aussie) are suppose to have ears that flop over.
Australian Kelpie, Australian Shepherd, border collie, bearded collie, English shepherd, Great Swiss Mountain Dog, Old English Sheepdog, Newfoundland, Australian Cattle dog, many other breeds as well.
A Dutch Shepherd is not a Border Collie or a GSD (German Shepherd Dog). While they are herders and protectors, the Dutch Shepherd is not close to the ability of a Border Collie, and surpasses the ability of a GSD. Dutch Shepherds are very capable guardians, and virtually lack all of the health and temperament problems of a GSD. I have a Border Collie, GSD, and Dutch Shepherd and know that they are three very different dogs, and should not be confused with one another. In short, a Dutch Shepherd is less likely to snap when he shouldn't, is a far better protector than a GSD, and lacks nearly all of the health problems that a GSD does. I would say that a Dutch Shepherd ranks closer to a Doberman or Rottweiler as far as being a guard dog, an Aussie in terms of agility, and and Aussie again in terms of temperament.
The number one world smartest dog breed is the border collie. top 10 1. Border collie 2. poodle 3. German Shepherd 4. golden retriever 5. doberman pinscher 6. shetland sheepdog 7. labrador retriever 8. papillon 9. rottweiler 10. Australian cattle dog
The smartest canine breed is the Border collie. In second place is the poodle, and the third smartest dog is the German shepherd.
I would probably say Cavilier Charles Spaniel or English bulldogs are supposed to be great with kids. If you live on a farm especially a sheep farm a border collie would be a great herder.I know this because i have a Border Collie mixed with an Australian Shepherd and he likes to herd us sometimes.We live in the city and we have barely any yard room so he probably should be on a farm but i don't mind because i love dogs.
Yes. The border collie is more intelligent but overall the Australian shepherd would tear up the border collie
They are both amazing dogs but probably an Australian shepherd
Its not a Australian shepherd its a border collie. Does it have black fur?
A mutt with drive and working ability.
Some popular herding dogs include - Australian Shepherd - Australian Cattle Dog (Heeler) - Border Collie/ Collie - Corgi - Sheepdog
Tracy Libby has written: 'The Border Collie (Terra-Nova)' -- subject(s): Border collie 'The Australian Shepherd (Terra-Nova)'
Border Collie and Old English Sheep Dog (then theres the Australian Shepherd, Bearded Collie, Rough Collie, Smooth Collie, Shetland Sheepdog, Picardy Shepherd, German Shepherd, Puli, and a bunch more herding dogs :])
It's some sort of Shepherd. My top three guesses are English Shepherd Australian Shepherd Border Collie It could be any one...but Australian shepherd's tails are normally docked...
Australian Cattle Dog Australian Kelpie Australian Shepherd Bearded Collie Belgian Shepherd Dog Border Collie Bouvier Des Flandres Briard Cardigan Welsh Corgi Catahoula Leopard Dog Collie English Shepherd German Shepherd Koolie McNab Shepherd Old English Sheepdog Pembroke Welsh Corgi Puli Shetland Sheepdog Checkout this website: http://cattletoday.biz/
The dog looks just like ours, which is a border collie/Australian shepherd mix.
The dog is a Border Collie possibly crossed with Australian Shepherd.
Cattle dogs are working dogs who help out on the farm. Australian Cattle Dog, Australian Shepherd, German Shepherd, and Border Collie are some of the most common cattle dogs.