"if your dogs wouldnt "kill" anything that came into your yard while you are not home then are they truly protecting you or your livestock/property?"
That is why I have a .45.
Again, my horses are in a fence, inside another fence. My neighbors are retired and home all the time and check on the place, in addition to my nephew who goes to school in the evenings when I am home.
I have also had many dogs, of many different kinds. I have worked a variety of cattle dogs, trained an Akita in obedience and showed him to his CD in four shows. I have had dogs as pets, etc...
I've been on the earth for a few years now- no longer a spring chicken (or even a summer one I dont think
: ) and in all kinds of situtations have never needed a dog that would kill. Will they bite when NEED be? Yes, they will and have had them come to my aid a couple of times when they THOUGHT I needed help....
<inserting amusing story or two here> We used to get bats up under the eaves of one of the old ranch houses we lived in. I cannot stand bats (- you know, the usual visions of having them tangled up in your long hair, etc..) and to thin them out since we had so many, I used to get rid of the ones on the house (they were trying to move IN) hanging under the eave with snakeshot. I went out one evening just at dark, and when I shot at them this time, one fell straight down, a couple took off, one came toward me and fell dead right at my feet and one went RIGHT over my right shoulder! Of course, like an idiot in snake country being out there in shorts and barefeet, I screamed as it went over my shoulder and the other landed at my toes! The dogs, hearing the shot and me scream, both jumped up and were about to come out the front window-(no, it was not open) and I had to yell NO and tell them it was all ok. They were ok then.
Another time I locked my daughter out by accident- I thought she was in the house in bed, and had forgotten that she had gone to a friends. I locked the front door and went to bed. My dog- a border collie and queensland heeler, slept next to my bed all his life. He was a large dog-85 pounds and looked like a big black german shepard. Late at night I woke up to him laying beside the bed growling. I didnt move but glanced down to see his hair up, he was stiff as a board and still growling, and staring at the door in my room that led right out to the side yard, which was not fenced. There was a very large window to pass before getting to the door and I saw a person's silouette coming by the window to the door! I thought maybe it was the neighbors next door and the light past their place made the shadow look larger, but no, it was a person outside the door, and as I am laying there taking this all in, realized that I had NOT locked the door!! I moved my hand to the pistol by the bed but by that time the dog was on his feet, hair straight up, still beside the bed but in 'launch' position now.
HOPING it was maybe a neighborhood kid going by (though I couldnt imagine why they would be outside the house) my eyes really popped open when the door knob actually turned and began to open. I didnt have time to even move, because the dog was already in mid air as the person started to enter and he caught her scent just as my daughter said 'Mom!! Why did you lock me out??!!' The dog dropped and was quite happy to see her, but he was doing his job. I had to recover from a heart attack. (First rule of gun safety, you dont shoot at something you cant see or identify and I would never have had time- the dog was there first. )
Will my dogs protect me? You bet. (Well, I'm not too sure about the one, but the other I have no doubt) However, they do not just go around the property killing cats, rabbits. They know their job and place when they are NEEDED- they do not just attack anything that comes on the place. (That's my job, LOL)
My point is, a dog can be a good watch dog when needed- without killing stuff. Should a person not real familiar with my dogs go in the back yard when I'm not home? I wouldnt recommend it and couldnt guarantee anything, but I certainly would not expect to come home and find a leg on the back porch and a couple of arms under the tree by the hay shed. Should anyone try to let themselves into the house in the dark at night? Hahaha, I'd like to see it.
Dogs can sense when someone, or something is being 'sneaky' or is 'creeping around', or when things are not right, etc... and in my opinion, there is no need to have one that randomly kills something, like a deer, a foal, or a calf because it is running around in play, or bounds through the property. That is not a threatening gesture.
So a dog will not attack 'it's own' horses, calves, etc.. but will attack the neighbors that is not his to 'guard' if it gets out or through the fence and he knows it's not 'his'?? Livestock, deer, etc.. are not a 'threat' to a dog's property and empire that it is in charge of. Neither is the barn cat. Someone had forgotten to tell my neighbor's dogs that it was ok to kill wildlife but NOT the caretaker's kids. The third time was the last time- and it got worse each time. Had they not been close by that time.....
My personal experience with dogs that
like killing things, vs. doing it's job as NEEDED as a guardian is that there is a BIG disaster waiting to happen. Being a guard dog does not mean random helter skelter killing of anything and everything.
Just my opinion from a few decades of experience...