The Blue Heeler (or Australian Cattle Dog) should not be cropped if it is to be shown professionally, as the ears should be natural according to the official Breed Standard. However, providing you live in an area where ear cropping is legal, the Blue Heelers' ears may be cropped for whatever reason.
Usually a heeler's ears will prick at about four to five months.
Australian Cattle Dog, Queensland heeler, red Heeler, Blue heeler,
I believe it was a blue heeler
A Blue Heeler is a cattle dog with a dark speckled body.
Blue Heeler is another name for the Australian Cattle Dog.
I have. Blue heeler/ Beagle that is about 30 lbs.
Dobes have big floppy ears like beagles. Their ears are cropped at an angle so that scar tissue will hold them erect for a more alert and "sharp" look.
No their ears stand up on their own.
Of course it hurts! Do not crop dog's ears! Don't listen to them, you can have a dogs ears cropped. Obviously it does hurt them, but that is okay.
As a rule, goats' ears are not cropped. Sometimes goats with floppy ears have their ears caught in a fence or pull the tags out, and that tears them.There is one breed of goats that has ears (the external, floppy part) that are very short or nonexistent, and that is the LaMancha. You can find information about LaMancha goats here:http://www.lamanchas.com/LaManchas have ears that are naturally that way-- they are not cropped or clipped in any way.
I have one! He has the long, short body of a daschund while being a little bigger. He's about 26 pounds. I'm not sure whether the mother or the father was a heeler or a daschund. He has a heeler face with a daschund nose and pointy ears. The bark is really high and piercing like the heeler. Heelers are also referred to as Australian cattle dogs.
When you crop a dogs ears, they do not grow back.