Island Life Magazine Ltd June/July 2015 | Page 54

COUNTRY LIFE In the Country Sam's tip for the countryside! Beware laminitis by Sam Biles Sam Biles is Managing Director of country Estate Agents: www.bilesandco.co.uk T he spring and early summer are a prime time for laminitis in horses and ponies – the early, rich spring grass in excess is too much for them and causes potentially terminal lameness when the membranes (laminae) lining the inside of the hooves become acidified and inflamed. Great care needs to be taken by horse and pony owners to ensure that their charges do not overeat at this time of year. Dogs in the countryside Sam Biles looks at the benefits and problems D ogs have been domesticated in Britain since at least the Iron Age and hunting dogs were reported in Roman times. Over the centuries dogs - hounds - have been used for hunting - to catch foxes, hares and rabbits for sport and for the pot as well as to flush game, including deer and game-birds for humans to shoot. There are dogs such as spaniels which flush birds from cover, others such as pointers which go ‘on point’ to indicate where birds are hiding and others such as Labradors which retrieve birds which have been shot. There are police dogs to catch criminals, guard dogs to guard property and sniffer dogs which search out drugs. Rescue dogs find people in the mountains or in collapsed buildings after earthquakes. Only a hundred years ago dogs were used to pull carts and huskies still pull sleds in colder climates. The Island has its 54 www.visitilife.com share of working dogs - primarily in the shooting field or on farms as sheep dogs. Anyone who has seen sheepdogs working, whether on the television on ‘One Man & His Dog’ ; on a farm or at a show or sheep trial cannot help but marvel how the abilities of shepherd, and dog are married to bring out the best of the abilities of both. The instincts of the dog to herd sheep needs to be brought out and nurtured, through hours of training, yet curbed enough to ensure that herding does not turn into chasing or ‘worrying’. In the countryside domestic dogs off the lead will often run towards sheep and the sheep will run away - this brings the dog’s hunting instincts to the fore and can have disastrous results especially if the dogs taste or smell blood. Few pet owners will believe any ill of their beloved pooch but the most placid dog can kill when its ‘blood is up’. Farmers protecting their livestock may consider shooting dogs which are worrying or killing their stock and this can be a reasonable course of action, but it is a complex area of law involving several statutes; dog owners should ensure their pets are under control at all times particularly near livestock. Dog mess is revolting. It can cause illness and there is little more unpleasant than to find it embedded in the tread of a shoe. In certain areas there are dog bins and it is an offence to foul the footpath/ highway. Some maintain that it is natural for dogs to ‘do their business’ in the open countryside and that it is acceptable to flick this into a hedge to rot naturally. What is more difficult to understand is those people who go to the effort of picking up the offending substance in a bag, knotting it and then bizarrely hanging it in a bush where it will neither rot nor be removed but will hang like a strange and odious decoration.