My sheltie totally ignored me and ran across the street!!! She has never done this before

My feelings are no matter how well trained your dog is, no matter how consistently your dog has obeyed commands... they are still dogs with natural canine instincts. All it takes is one second for a dog to decide, you know what "today I want to see what's across the street". Yard gates are always locked and leashes on outside of the home.

I'm very glad nothing happened. That is very scary.
 
Thank you for posting this Gloria, it certainly is my greatest fear.
I don't know if you remember but when I first joined SN I found that Piper's brother's owner had also joined. His brother's name was Barley and she would post picture him all the time.
After a time I saw nothing posted about him so on a visit to the breeder I asked her about Barley (I'd spent so much time with the pups of this litter I was concerned). She then told me how Barley had escaped from the yard and been hit by a car and died. I felt awful for that family who loved him so so much. Even now thinking about it brings tears to my eyes.
You really can't trust them, they are dogs after all and instincts will take over.

Lisa, I have a very similar story. My first sheltie Kelsey was from a wonderful breeder. She explained how a year old sheltie she recently sold had gone to a loving home. They adored her. Someone left the garage door opened and the back door too. She got out... In a panic, the new owner alerted the breeder Debbie. They searched and searched for her... after hours of searching.... they found her dead in the road. HEARTBREAKING... Tears come to my eyes as well. Debbie explained to me that she would have never given the pup to someone who lived next to a 6 lane highway...
 
There is a deadly disease stalking your dog.....

a hideous, stealthy thing just waiting its chance to steal your beloved friend. It is not a new disease, or one for which there are inoculations. The disease is called "Trust."

You knew before you ever took your dog home that it could not be trusted. The rescue group/breeder who provided you with this precious animal warned you, drummed it into your head. Dogs steal off counters, destroy anything expensive, chase cats, take forever to house train, and must never be allowed off lead!!

When the big day finally arrived, heeding the sage advice, you escorted your dog to his new home, properly collared and tagged, the lead held tightly in your hand.

At home the house was "dog-proofed." Everything of value was stored in the spare bedroom, garbage stowed on top of the refrigerator, cats separated, and a gate placed across the living room to keep at least one part of the house puddle free. All windows and doors had been properly secured, and signs placed in all strategic points reminding all to "Close the door!"


Soon it becomes second nature to make sure the door closes nine tenths of a second after it was opened and that it is really latched. "Don't let the dog out" is your second most verbalized expression. (The first is "No!")

You worry and fuss constantly, terrified that your darling will get out and disaster will surely follow. Your friends comment about who you love most, your family or the dog. You know that to relax your vigil for a moment might lose him to you forever.

And so the weeks and months pass, with your dog becoming more civilized every day, and the seeds of trust are planted. It seems that each new day brings less destruction, less breakage. Almost before you know it, your gangly, slurpy dog has turned into an elegant, dignified friend.

Now that he is a more reliable, sedate companion, you take him more places. No longer does he chew the steering wheel when left in the car. And darned if that cake wasn't still on the counter this morning. And, oh yes, wasn't that the cat he was sleeping with so cozily on your pillow last night?

At this point you are beginning to become infected, the disease is spreading its roots deep into your mind.

And then one of your friends suggest obedience classes, and, after a time you even let him run loose from the car into the house when you get home. Why not, he always runs straight to the door, dancing a frenzy of joy and waits to be let in. And, remember he comes every time he is called. You know he is the exception that disproves the rule. (And sometimes late at night, you even let him slip out the front door to go potty and then right back in.)

Years pass -- it is hard to remember why you ever worried so much. He would never think of running out the door left open while you bring in the packages from the car. It would be beneath his dignity to jump out the window of the car while you run into the convenience store. And when you take him for those wonderful long walks at dawn, it only takes one whistle to send him racing back to you in a burst of speed when the walk comes too close to the highway. (He still gets in the garbage, but nobody is perfect!)

This is the time the disease has waited for so patiently. Sometimes it only has to wait a year or two, but often it takes much longer. He spies the neighbour dog across the street, and suddenly forgets everything he ever knew about not slipping out doors, jumping out windows or coming when called due to traffic. Perhaps it was only a paper fluttering in the breeze, or even just the sheer joy of running...

Stopped in an instant. Stilled forever. Your heart is broken at the sight of his still beautiful body.

The disease is trust. The final outcome -- hit by a car.

Every morning my dog bounced around off lead exploring. Every morning for seven years he came back when he was called. He was perfectly obedient, perfectly trustworthy. He died fourteen hours after being hit by a car.

Please do not risk your friend and your heart. Save the trust for things that do not matter.
Please read this every year on your dog's birthday, lest we forget.

~Author Unknow
Very powerful...I'm stealing this and posting it on my facebook page!
 
Take this incident as a blessing--you found out she will disobey/ignore you and she didn't get hit in the process. If she'll do it once, odds are she will do it again. Personally I wouldn't risk it.

+1

My dog is generally good, however I don't think its something that can ever be trained out of them, no matter who trains them or how much. Just had a similar incident last week, where my dog took off after the large garbage truck that empties the dumpsters behind a convelescent home across the street.

Time for a good underground dog fence, and probably some densitizing training on leash every garbage day once it warms up.

Its sad that in their mind they are doing exactly what they're supposed to do.
 
Please reconsider and do not install an electronic fence. They are not safe for a sensitive sheltie!
Not in general IMO. If a dog takes off at full steam they cannot stop in time then are locked out. If it is your only choice I am not sure otherwise a physical structure is the only thing I trust. And yes shocking Angus would crush him (Spitfire would do a back flip over the line and give you the paw as he was getting shocked).
 
Yup...I would trust a physical structure over an electric fence in my opinion. I can understand where one could have a lot of property and a wooden fence would be prohibitive but I'd still research other options first. Too many things can go wrong with an electric fence.
 
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