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Blue Heeler Question - UPDATE

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Last activity 2014-03-09 9:17 PM
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KylaKris
Reg. Jul 2008
Posted 2014-03-03 2:52 PM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question


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I have a heeler and she was not born with the herding gene. The most worthless cattle dog ever, but I love her to pieces. She is great with our family and my doxie. Never bothers the horses and love to go on rides with us. She just gets worked up into a frenzie around cattle and has since she was a pup. We tried everything, but came to the conclusion she just wasn't a herd dog. She is the best mouser I have ever seen though.

ETA: She is scared of guns as well and I don't think heelers would make good hunting dogs. She is protective of the family as well. If hubby is ever out of town she lays on the end of the bed awake all night and watches the door. My doxie, on the other hand, is burrowed under the covers sawing logs.

Edited by KylaKris 2014-03-03 2:54 PM
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blccwgl55
Reg. Dec 2012
Posted 2014-03-03 3:24 PM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question



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I also wanted to add about my Blue Heeler's disposition! I've heard people say they're mean and aggressive but for the most part mine is the BIGGEST baby ever! Probably because I used to rock him to sleep. Lol. He's our best buddy. He only gets aggressive if there's another male dog that comes on to our property or if there's someone or something that comes on to our property that's up to no good! He loves going on car and four wheeler rides, loves to swim, loves to sit on your lap, and the list goes on! He's 3 years old this March :) He's the best dog we've ever had and listens very well too! The only bad thing I can say, like I said before, is he likes to eat chickens but we're not around anyone that has chickens right now so that's not a problem. Lol



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SassyPirate
Reg. Oct 2009
Posted 2014-03-03 3:38 PM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question


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Ours are terrified of guns and the only things they hunt are cats and mice!! I don't think they would make very good hunters!!
Although ours have good noses! He can find a rock in the middle of a bale stack no problem!
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Ctrygirl14
Reg. Jun 2012
Posted 2014-03-03 3:43 PM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question



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Thank you everyone for all the infomation. I've been reading about blue heelers as well as a couple other breeds that were suggested to me via PM. I'm not looking to rush into a pup and want to make sure I make a good decision.
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River
Reg. Oct 2006
Posted 2014-03-03 3:47 PM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question



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My blue heeler in my avatar is my baby. She is a retrieving machine! Great frisbee dog as well as anything else you want to throw. Excellent mannered, obedient dog. I just love her and is always by my side. My little kids love to play "hide n go seek" with me because my heeler always gives my spot away. Lol. I will never be without a heeler but you have to train them early.

Although mine has the obedience and retrieving skills, mine would not do well at hunting. Scared of gunshots and can not follow a scent trail of an animal. Pretty much what everyone else said.
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hoofs_in_motion
Reg. Apr 2011
Posted 2014-03-03 4:27 PM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question



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I'd personally go with a pointer, or a brittany (sp?). Absolutely beautiful dogs, and smarter than a whip! My ex boyfriend had a shorthair pointer that he had since he was a pup that he used for hunting....I think the dog was smarter than my ex 
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Scout1320
Reg. Feb 2005
Posted 2014-03-03 4:54 PM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question



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I have a lab that we hunt with also.  For bird hunting, I just dont think there is a better breed than a lab.  I also had a blue heeler, and have a red heeler.  In my oponion they are great dogs.  By-your-side, got-your-back kinda dogs.  Not good for "retrieving" but good at tracking and killing rabbits, racoons, etc.  I don't think they would have a soft enough mouth for it, the bird would come back tore to pieces! 
I have read several other responses that their heelers were gun shy.  Mine was the opposite.  If she so much as saw the gun come out out, it is "game on!!" time, and she was all kinds of excited!  And she did have a nose.  She (Smokey, my blue heeler who passed on in November) she once tracked an injured deer (hunter shot and it ran) over a mile and a half to an adjacent ranch.  I sure do miss that girl.  There will never be another as bad ass as she was.
Great dogs.  Great compantion and ranch dogs.  Great work ethic.  I don't feel they will have a soft enough mouth.
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cowgirlchic
Reg. Feb 2005
Posted 2014-03-03 4:59 PM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question



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We have a heeler/lab mix puppy who is by far the sweetest thing ever. He has a great attitude and he is not overly hyper. He likes to go with you and do things, but listens when he needs to relax. He is a woman's dog, most definitely. We had a full blooded heeler years ago who was the exact same way. 
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RacingQH
Reg. Aug 2004
Posted 2014-03-03 10:36 PM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question


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A heeler COULD work as a hunting dog if you are REALLY lucky!! I had a heeler/Aussie Mix that helped me when I was raising game birds. He would find them when they would escape, and deliver them ALIVE too my hand. (If they were small.) Adult pheasants were too big for him to pick up (gee only weighed 35 lbs so was fairly small.) he would pin them to the ground until I got there and could pick them up. He NEVER so much as injured a bird, not even the babies. This was also a dog that was a varmit killing MACHINE. He would also gladly bite a cow, but he knew his jobs and did them well. That said, a Heeler wouldn't be my first choice if I were wanting a bird dog.
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RacingQH
Reg. Aug 2004
Posted 2014-03-03 10:45 PM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question


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A far as not having good noses, MANY "typical pet dogs" don't use their noses much as they get used to relying on their eyes WAY too much!! If you start with a puppy, and work with it and reinforce using it's nose, that wouldn't be an issue.
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Griz
Reg. Sep 2003
Posted 2014-03-04 5:32 AM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question


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Wow - I thought my heeler was the only one terrified of guns! If you shoot at my place, (which we do), she will RUN to the house and go in through the CAT door! LOL

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SunnyGotMeGood
Reg. Jan 2010
Posted 2014-03-04 7:12 AM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question



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No, I would not recommend a heeler as a bird dog. If you decide on this breed make sure that you have A LOT of time. They need someone to channel their energy. We own three and our oldest heeler is the perfect dog. After her we got two puppies. Honestly we didn't put enough time into them. One isn't too bad. The other one chases everything (cars, horses, chickens, birds, etc.). I've been trying to undo the damage by spending more time with her, but it is going to be a long hard road. Good Luck with whatever you choose.
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cheryl makofka
Reg. Jan 2011
Posted 2014-03-04 8:00 AM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question


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One negative with healers is they are a one person/family dog, some will bite, or nip at visitors
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Ctrygirl14
Reg. Jun 2012
Posted 2014-03-04 8:39 AM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question



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Thank you all for the continued input. I told my husband that a heeler would most likely not be the ideal bird dog. He seems surprisingly okay with it! Its encouraging to see that some people's heelers were somewhat okay with birds. My husband puts a lot of time into working with our lab and she is a great bird dog. I'm thinking if we got a heeler that of he put the same time and energy into them as our lab that maybe it would be doable. Now, I'm mainly wanting a companion dog for me since my husband and I work differentwork schedules and by the sounds of it a heelers is one of the best companion dogs.
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annsmistygal
Reg. Mar 2014
Posted 2014-03-08 11:41 AM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question


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i dont own a heeler myself but our neighbors owned a purebred blue heeler although he was not mine me and him were freinds and his name was jumper partly because he liked jumping on people to greet them but mostly it was always because he used to jump over the fence in his backyard i can remember me going down the road as im riding or riding out on the land he'd always invite himself and id always let him come along somtimes i thought him more of my dog then theirs and that i was lucky to have him, onetime i was outside in my corral brushing down my horse after a long day of trailriding i was tired and ready to relax after getting the horses situated as im brushing down my gelding i hear strange dogs barking then after a few seconds i seen the dogs coming straight after me i meen huge dogs teeth baring like they had rabies which made me think they did so im hoping if i stand my ground they would hopefully go away cause i did not want to leave my horse tied to a gate not able to defend himself then off a distance i see a blur running across the feild and then i see the other dogs tear after the blur i was terrified of what was about to happen as the dogs get closer i seen it was jumper, the dogs right away start fighting i tried everything i could to save his life throwing stones at the other dogs finally the dogs stopped and jumper was on the ground i chased the dogs away with my whip and immedeitaley picked him up and took him to my house my mother put him in the truck i stayed with him the entire ride holding on to him soaked in tears he had lost alot of blood and he died on the way their we had told the neighbors and they took his body from us and after all that had happend i never really gotten close or tryed to get close to another dog again but when my mom bought a austrailian shepard i named him turkey because i had gotten him before thanskgiving as a pup, he has been the light of my life eversince we do just about everything together he comes trailriding with me and comes to playdays with me and hops in the truck every time i go somewhere with my mom i honestly think he was sent to me from god and he's the best dog i ever owned.
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Ctrygirl14
Reg. Jun 2012
Posted 2014-03-09 9:50 AM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question - UPDATE



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I've been doing research since I posted this thread and I have decided to get a heeler. My husband is not going to use her for hunting and the pup will be my companion at the barn and basically everywhere I go. I've looked into every breeder and rescue in a five state radious and I have found the perfect breeder in Missouri. I will be getting a pup in September.
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River
Reg. Oct 2006
Posted 2014-03-09 11:44 AM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question - UPDATE



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How exciting! They are so smart and just start training it early as a puppy. I promise, mine knows me so well by now and seems like she is one step ahead at times. Always tries to please me. She loves my bed of my truck and I can take her in public and control her without a leash on, she's that attentive to my voice. She meets people with a frisbee in her mouth but I did a lot of socializing her when she was a puppy...but if a strange dog ever gets close to my family, she will attack. I get so many compliments on her and requests for puppies, but she's spayed. My best dog.
I was trail riding a spooky gelding one time in a new area we had never been. Had a Rottweiler come out and aggressively charge my horse. Horse bolted around and kept spinning as I had a tight rein on him...couldn't see anything. Finally got him to a stop to see my heeler had that dog twice her size penned up to the fence. Just love her. And mine learned quickly to not kill chickens.
I've had another heeler but I rescued her from an 8x8' cage and these dogs need lots of room and activity. She was a year old when I got her, so extremely hyper and hard headed at this point due to her upbringing. Probably the worst dog I've ever had. Lol. Hence why I said train early:)
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Ctrygirl14
Reg. Jun 2012
Posted 2014-03-09 11:54 AM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question - UPDATE



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River - 2014-03-09 11:44 AM

How exciting! They are so smart and just start training it early as a puppy. I promise, mine knows me so well by now and seems like she is one step ahead at times. Always tries to please me. She loves my bed of my truck and I can take her in public and control her without a leash on, she's that attentive to my voice. She meets people with a frisbee in her mouth but I did a lot of socializing her when she was a puppy...but if a strange dog ever gets close to my family, she will attack. I get so many compliments on her and requests for puppies, but she's spayed. My best dog.
I was trail riding a spooky gelding one time in a new area we had never been. Had a Rottweiler come out and aggressively charge my horse. Horse bolted around and kept spinning as I had a tight rein on him...couldn't see anything. Finally got him to a stop to see my heeler had that dog twice her size penned up to the fence. Just love her. And mine learned quickly to not kill chickens.
I've had another heeler but I rescued her from an 8x8' cage and these dogs need lots of room and activity. She was a year old when I got her, so extremely hyper and hard headed at this point due to her upbringing. Probably the worst dog I've ever had. Lol. Hence why I said train early:)

I'm very excited and I've talked with the breeder for a few hours this morning and she very helpful and has answered all my questions. She is helping me pick the pup and has asked me lots of questions in what I want and what I am using the dog for. The breeder lives on a large ranch where the dogs are used and are also socialized with other animals and they are all family dogs. I know I will find the perfect pup. :)
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sorrel horse ranch
Reg. Apr 2006
Posted 2014-03-09 5:44 PM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question - UPDATE


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I am so sick at the moment I know I shouldn't post so please excuse spellings and stuff.  I am hoping someone can remember the post I am talking about.  I had one wonderful heeler and that was all.  But someone posted a few years back and I still laugh about it.  Something about a Saturday afternoon she came in the house to take a shower to get cleaned up so she could go to town.  Didn't realize her heeler was lying on her bed shile she was in the bathroom and some man broke in her house and started in the bedroom where her heeler came airborn off the bed and got the man in the arm.  Scared him so bad he went out the front door instead of the one he came through where he was met with three of her outside dogs.  She called the Sheriff's department and they caught him, thank goodness,  But I still laugh about how her heeler took such good care of her. 
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Nevertooold
Reg. Oct 2003
Posted 2014-03-09 8:48 PM
Subject: RE: Blue Heeler Question - UPDATE



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Ours is a squirrel hunting machine. She trees them and once they are shot she picks them up and brings them back to my husband. She tends to leave a few teeth marks so I wouldn't want her to retrieve a bird..
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