Five mornings a week, Dr. David Slotwiner, the chief of cardiology at NewYork-Presbyterian Queens hospital, can be found tending to human hearts.
But on Sunday mornings, he is on a grass-covered field at a rural farm in Hackettstown, N.J., standing among half a dozen sheep, whistle in hand, teaching his Border collies Cosmo and Luna to herd.
āIt helps me think about what it takes to be an effective leader, though doctors donāt respond to whistles very well,ā said Dr. Slotwiner, 58, who specializes in cardiac electrophysiology.
He started coming to the farm during the coronavirus pandemic, after Cosmo began showing aggression and bit his wife, Anne Slotwiner, 60. A trainer recommended a small sheep farm in New Jersey, Wayside Farm, that trains Border collies ā and, once he herded with Cosmo for the first time, he was hooked.
Dr. Slotwiner shares a three-bedroom house in Pelham, the oldest town in Westchester County, with his wife, Cosmo, Luna and a 15-year-old American Eskimo rescue, George. (He has two adult sons, Harry, 28, and Peter, 25.)
SLEEPING IN, KIND OF During the week, I get up around 5 a.m., but on Sundays, Iāll sleep until 6:30 a.m. Iām not a morning person, but Iāve been forced to be a morning person. Iāll start the day by reading The New York Times on my iPhone in bed.
RISE AND RIDE I go to a 7:30 a.m. SoulCycle class in Bronxville. Itās always timed to the rhythm of the music, which makes it different from other spin classes. Before the pandemic, I was often taking six classes a week, which was not healthy.
MORNING MEET-UP Around 9 a.m., I meet my wife for breakfast at CaffeĢ Ammi in Pelham. Sheāll have the dogs in her car, because my car isnāt quite big enough to take them out to the farm in. Iāll get a large whole milk latte with one sugar and a warmed-up cranberry scone and ā if Iām feeling decadent ā an almond croissant.
OUT TO THE FARM I drive about an hour and 15 minutes to Wayside Farm. Iāll listen to a podcast on the way ā I love āHard Forkā and the NewYork-Presbyterian podcast āHealth Matters.ā And I really enjoy John Mandrolaās āThis Week in Cardiology.ā Heās a bit of a curmudgeon and always is slow to adopt new technology, and so I like to hear his critical perspectives. I tend to be a little bit of an earlier adopter, but I like to hear the science of both sides.
WHISTLE WHILE YOU WORK We arrive at the farm around 11 a.m., and I grab my whistle and put on my headset ā the distances are very great across the field, so this is how I can hear the people training me ā and head out on the field with Cosmo and Luna.
Gene Sheninger and Teri Rhodes, who own the farm, train people to the highest level of competition internationally, but theyāll also take novices. There are other herding breeds, but Border collies tend to be the most common and tend to be the best for sheep.
BABY STEPS The first thing you teach them is to go clockwise, which is called ācome by,ā or counterclockwise, āaway.ā And then you teach them to drive the sheep to you in a straight line, in a controlled way, so they donāt push the sheep so quickly that they scatter. And then you teach them to push the sheep beyond you, which is one of the hardest things to get them to do, because Border collies want order ā they donāt want the sheep to escape.
The ultimate challenge is to teach the dog how to separate the sheep into two groups, because the sheep instinctually want to stay together as a herd.
TOOLS OF THE TRADE Once youāre a certain distance away, you have to give commands using a whistle. In competitions, sometimes you do this over 800 or 900 yards, where you canāt even see the sheep. But the dogs learn to trust you so much that they know that if you give them the command to go clockwise, even if they donāt see the sheep, they will go clockwise to the edge of the field and keep running and running and running until they find those sheep, and then they will bring them to you.
NEWBIE NOSTALGIA Itās great to be a novice at my age, because Iām teaching medical students and residents every day. Iām teaching attending cardiologists how to do invasive procedures. Itās refreshing to be a beginner at something, to remember how it is to learn as Iām teaching people.
GETTING IN THE ZONE Iāll pack up around 12:30 p.m. or 1 p.m., then hop into the car and finish my medical podcast on the way back to Pelham. It helps me get in the mind-set for work.
DUMPLING DETOUR If Iām on call at the hospital, which I am every fourth weekend, Iāll head to downtown Flushing to grab a bite to eat before my shift. I love the soup dumplings at Juqi.
DR. BOW-TIE WILL SEE YOU NOW I arrive around 2 p.m. and change into scrubs. Iāll usually have four or five patients to check up on, and then Iāll take care of some paperwork or review a manuscript or two.
Iām typically rocking a bow tie. Fifteen years ago, a patient gave me one, and I decided Iād give it a try. It took me a while to figure out how to tie them ā it was a lot of YouTube videos ā but then I would wear it occasionally, and my patients really liked it. So then I went all in on bow ties. I have more than 50.
DINNER DATE Around 5 or 6 p.m., Iāll head back to Pelham to pick up my wife, and weāll meet our son Harry and our daughter-in-law for dinner in Williamsburg. One of our go-to places is Ringolevio. If Iām splurging, Iāll have a skirt steak and a glass of red wine. Or I might meet my parents, who live in Battery Park, at a Greek restaurant down the block from them, Anassa Taverna. I love the grilled branzino, with white wine.
FUN WITH FRISBEES You canāt just come home to Border collies and say, āOK, itās time to go to bed.ā Theyāve been herding for an hour and a half to two hours, and theyāre working hard. So Iāll come home and play Frisbee with Cosmo and Luna for around half an hour. Cosmo is very toy motivated. Luna mostly wants affection and interaction.
KINDLE TIME Iāll climb into bed around 11:30 p.m. and read for half an hour on my Kindle. Right now Iām reading a Tana French novel, āFaithful Place,ā which Iām enjoying. Itās a book to clear my brain. Iāve also finished another book that I really love, Barbara Kingsolverās āDemon Copperhead.ā I love the feature where you can switch between reading on the Kindle and listening to it, because that way, when I commute, whether itās to work or to the farm, I can continue it.
OUT LIKE A LIGHT I usually fall asleep close to midnight. Iām a night owl. But I donāt go to SoulCycle on Monday morning, since Iāve had the whole weekend to exercise, so I donāt have to get up until 6.

