Agriculture remains one of Texas鈥 most robust and profitable industries. In 2022, Texas farms sold more than $32 billion in agricultural products 鈥 and nearly half of that came from cattle farms.
Many Texans hold jobs in the agriculture sector. But there is one job on a few cattle farms 鈥 and many sheep farms 鈥 that is increasingly being done by dogs: herding.
Kay Stephens, a veterinarian and dog trainer who owns a small sheep farm outside of College Station, has several border collies who help her with the 40 head of sheep she has on her property this season.
One dog, Jade, is a 5-year-old border collie, the breed of dog preferred by most sheep farmers.
Jade is able to respond to spoken commands and whistles to come up behind the flock in the pasture and put just enough pressure on the sheep to move them toward Stephens in the field.
鈥淵ou can see she stays nice and pretty far off of them so she doesn鈥檛 upset them,鈥 Stephens said. 鈥淎nd the sheep never really get off of a walk. So again, the key thing here is we鈥檙e not stressing or upsetting the sheep.鈥

Sheep do not make up a very large percentage of Texas livestock operations, but those who raise them are increasingly turning to border collies to help them manage their day-to-day farm tasks.
While the use of dogs is trending up, it鈥檚 nothing brand-new, of course: Humans have put dogs to work on farms around the world for thousands of years. But now, as farm labor shortages have persisted in Texas, many sheep farmers are turning to dogs for help.
鈥淚鈥檝e helped probably 10 ranchers in the past two months actually getting into this, working livestock with dogs for the very reason that they can鈥檛 get help, they can鈥檛 get labor,鈥 said Maci McGraw, the president of the Texas Sheep Dog Association. 鈥淭hey need somebody to go out in the farm truck with them and actually bring the cattle up to the bunks. You know, we鈥檝e all gone to alarms or bells on our trucks, or anything like that, to get them to come up 鈥 the cattle to the feed bunks where we鈥檙e putting out food. So I think it鈥檚 really important, a role that they play.鈥
禄 COMING SOON:
It鈥檚 a role several people said dogs do better than humans anyway. Charly Kronberger, a Texas Sheep Dog Association board member, said that when it comes to herding, dogs can do the work of several people.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e moving a flock of 100 or several, if you get behind and you have to cover from one side to the other, and the dog can do that himself,鈥 Kronberger said. 鈥淲hereas if it was people on foot, you鈥檇 have to have three or four people pushing, you know, scattered across the back end of the flock moving on. But a dog can do it all.鈥
Kronberger got into sheep farming in a roundabout way: She had border collies and wanted to put them to work. She started with sheep dog trials, which are competitions for herding dogs and their handlers, before she got her own sheep. Many of the sheep ranchers with herding dogs participate in trials, sometimes at rodeos or as standalone events.

Johnny Greenwood, another Texas Sheep Dog Association board member, said the dogs really enjoy this type of work.
鈥淭hey are working dogs, and they love to work, and they love to please. And when they鈥檙e doing the things that they love to do and that they鈥檙e bred to do, that鈥檚 what they were created for,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing like it when you鈥檙e watching them. It鈥檚 almost like watching your kid take their first steps as they progress through life.鈥
At her farm outside College Station, Stephens says she uses dogs to bring sheep in from pasture. The dogs can also split specific sheeps off the group if those animals need vet care, like corralling lambs away from their mothers for vaccinations.

Josh Koch has similar experiences 鈥 but with cows instead of sheep and Blue Lacys instead of border collies 鈥 working on a small cattle farm in Central Texas.
鈥淲e use the dogs mostly when the cattle are in the pens to push them from pen to pen,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd then come calving season, we individually tag each calf as it鈥檚 born, and we use the dogs to hold the mama cows in place while we tag and weigh and doctor on any calf.
鈥淎nd then if we have a calf that鈥檚 born off in the woods somewhere, and the mama won鈥檛 bring her up to us, we use the dogs to back trail and find the calves so we can doctor them and do whatever we need to do with them and bring them up to the barns.鈥
McGraw says there鈥檚 another benefit to using dogs to help fill a labor shortage: They have very little impact on the environment.
鈥淭hey actually help create a better situation for us, and talk about very little carbon footprint,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got a vet bill and a dog food bill, and that鈥檚 really all the input cost you have into a dog 鈥 and some praise.鈥
Greenwood says the companionship he feels with his dogs is also a huge draw for him.
鈥淓very week I learn something from my own dogs 鈥 and I鈥檝e been doing this for a while now 鈥 but it鈥檚 their intelligence,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey are smart, smart dogs, and sometimes it just amazes me. I look at some of them and think if they could talk, they would tell me everything that I鈥檓 doing wrong, because their natural ability is way beyond what we can think sometimes.鈥

Back outside of College Station, Stephens says maintaining her sheep farm has gotten harder over the years. The 40 head she has this season is a big decrease from her usual operation. She had to sell off a lot of animals last year at the height of the drought. And with weather being less predictable due to climate change, Stephens says she鈥檚 not sure how much longer her operation will be feasible.
But as long as she鈥檚 out there farming, her dogs will be there to help.
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