Herding Instinct in Mixed Breeds and Rescue Dogs
How to identify and evaluate herding instinct in mixed breed and rescue dogs, from recognizing everyday herding behaviors to navigating HIC testing without a known pedigree.
Expert guidance on herding instinct testing from a Kennel Club judge. Practical advice for preparing your dog, understanding test results, and developing natural herding ability.
Welcome to Herding Instinct Test, your comprehensive resource for understanding and preparing for HIC (Herding Instinct Certified) testing. Whether you have a Border Collie who has never seen sheep or a German Shepherd with an unexplained fascination for moving objects, this site will help you understand what to expect and how to prepare.
Before the Test Proper preparation makes all the difference. Learn what handlers wish they had known before their first test, from basic commands that actually matter to physical conditioning that prevents exhaustion.
During the Test Understanding what evaluators look for helps you read the situation in real time. We break down the scoring criteria and explain which behaviors indicate genuine instinct versus learned responses.
After the Test A passing HIC opens doors to formal herding training. A failing result provides valuable information about your dog’s suitability and potential training approaches.
Every year, thousands of herding breed owners wonder whether their dog carries the working instinct their ancestors were bred for. Some want to pursue competitive herding. Others simply want to understand their dog better. Instinct testing answers the fundamental question that affects training decisions, exercise needs, and mental enrichment strategies.
The HIC is not about creating working farm dogs. It is about evaluating whether the genetic programming that made herding breeds extraordinary exists in your individual dog.
How to identify and evaluate herding instinct in mixed breed and rescue dogs, from recognizing everyday herding behaviors to navigating HIC testing without a known pedigree.
How herding instinct is inherited, what genetics research tells breeders about selecting for working ability, and why instinct testing has become a serious breeding tool.
Practical methods for locating quality herding instinct test facilities, evaluating them before you book, and what to watch for when searching in unfamiliar regions.
Breed-specific guidance for testing Shetland Sheepdogs, including how the Sheltie's sensitive nature affects evaluation, what genuine instinct looks like in the breed, and why many fail when instinct is actually present.
Herding Instinct Test is authored by James Whitworth, Kennel Club A-Panel Judge and KCAI Accredited Instructor. With 25 years of hands-on experience working with herding breeds and countless instinct tests supervised, James brings real-world expertise to every article.
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