6 Weird Blue Heeler Behaviors Explained
6 Weird Blue Heeler Behaviors Explained. Why do blue heelers herd children? why do blue heelers destroy the furniture?
In this video, we look at the oddest blue heeler behaviors and explain them.
Blue Heeler dogs herding
Australian cattle dogs
Chapters
0:00 Intro
0:25 Herding Children
1:20 Yawning When Not Tired
1:55 Spinning Before Pooping
2:30 Staring At You
3:18 Sitting On Your Feet
3:55 Destroying Furniture
Blue Heelers
Australian cattle dogs
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22 Comments
You know absolutely fark all about any thing.
I'm Australian and my father bred "heelers".
Dogs are pack animals, they will "herd" a child away from danger!
ffs, you know nothing about anything.
uMgih t nIiñ aw raíes croena deys tfaos rc aan ciBolneus.e N oHs eeenlceanrt aun.t i🥳l I actually lived with one
I thought I was ready for a Blue Heeler until I actually lived with one. The energy, the drive to herd everything that moves, and the nonstop need for a job caught me off guard. At first, I treated him like a “regular” dog and that just made the problem worse. What finally helped me was Paws That Listen by Buck Tavric. It explained how to channel that working drive into structured training instead of fighting against it. My puppy is happier than ever now, and it is honestly crazy how quickly his behavior improved once I learned how to work with his instincts instead of against them.
I thought I was ready for a Blue Heeler until I actually lived with one. The energy, the drive to herd everything that moves, and the nonstop need for a job caught me off guard. At first, I treated him like a “regular” dog and that just made the problem worse. What finally helped me was Paws That Listen by Buck Tavric. It explained how to channel that working drive into structured training instead of fighting against it. My puppy is happier than ever now, and it is honestly crazy how quickly his behavior improved once I learned how to work with his instincts instead of against them.
I thought I was ready for a Blue Heeler until I actually lived with one. The energy, the drive to herd everything that moves, and the nonstop need for a job caught me off guard. At first, I treated him like a “regular” dog and that just made the problem worse. What finally helped me was Paws That Listen by Buck Tavric. It explained how to channel that working drive into structured training instead of fighting against it. My puppy is happier than ever now, and it is honestly crazy how quickly his behavior improved once I learned how to work with his instincts instead of against them.
I thought I was ready for a Blue Heeler until I actually lived with one. The energy, the drive to herd everything that moves, and the nonstop need for a job caught me off guard. At first, I treated him like a “regular” dog and that just made the problem worse. What finally helped me was Paws That Listen by Buck Tavric. It explained how to channel that working drive into structured training instead of fighting against it. My puppy is happier than ever now, and it is honestly crazy how quickly his behavior improved once I learned how to work with his instincts instead of against them.
I thought I was ready for a Blue Heeler until I actually lived with one. The energy, the drive to herd everything that moves, and the nonstop need for a job caught me off guard. At first, I treated him like a “regular” dog and that just made the problem worse. What finally helped me was Paws That Listen by Buck Tavric. It explained how to channel that working drive into structured training instead of fighting against it. My puppy is happier than ever now, and it is honestly crazy how quickly his behavior improved once I learned how to work with his instincts instead of against them.
AWESOME DOGS, SUPER SMART AND LOYAL AND LOTS OF FUN ❤
Most of this is city blue behaviour. Mine was from championship stock. Was bred to another Australian champion. She had 5 pups. I kept one. Arthur. (She wasn't in pup until I had 10 suitable humans to buy them). Owner of the sire had pick of litter for exchange. Didn't want one. I got pick. Took runt. She grew to be full sized. Her son was great. Bessie and Arthur worked stock. Slept on bed. Guarded my kids, car, property and livestock. 17 years and 14 years when passed. Can't trust them if not bought up in a great place. They get horrible. Bite. No off swich. Try and belt them to obedience? You'll need stiches…..
To be a canine of Northern Europe Wolf and Southern Dingo Dog, bred with a collie dog, is something amazing.
Two blacks, a black and white, made a blue
Our heeler mix likes to hug our leg.❤
It's worth remembering these dogs are bred from Dingoes and were intended to be working dogs.
If they're destroying stuff it's because they're bored, which is your fault, not theirs.
If you don't address their boredom you're causing mental health issues which, if combined with young children, won't end well.
I think the yawning and other behaviours that aren't common in dogs have come from their half-dingo ancestry.
Just so everybody is 100% informed Blue and Red Heelers are not family pets. They need to be working or they snap in the mind and often either go crazy and injure themselves or become super reactive and hyper-aggressive.
This information should be the first thing anyone says when they are considering taking on the challenges of owning a cattle dog.
Definitely not for everyone. Be prepared to put in the work. Their bond is very strong, and requires high amounts of engagement. Spend some time around some heelers before taking one home.
So I’ve grown up with blue heeler mixes (they were siblings) and I’m just curious if there is any difference in behavior between the red heeler and blue heeler?
My Blue Heelers staring at me while I watch this video. One 14yrs the other 12 weeks. And I can vouch for the accuracy of this video.
The blue ones aren't afraid of anything, not even the Devil himself.
Hi from Australia my blue heeler intact boy. His favourite thing was rolling in shit, horse, cow or manure pile. He knew he'd get bath later which he hated above all else but the pull of the poo was too much. But smartest boy ever.
Hi from Australia my blue heeler intact boy. His favourite thing was rolling in shit, horse, cow or manure pile. He knew he'd get bath later which he hated above all else but the pull of the poo was too much. But smartest boy ever.
Lots of breeds do the same things, but yes Healers are excellent dogs…..
As a red heeler owner I feel discriminated 😂 this video should talk about Australian Cattledog, not a certain sub-breed