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Subject: Re: [working-gundog] remote control?
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rospiganUser is Offline

MH
MH
Posts:372


09/21/2008 3:56 PM  
We were invited to duck shooting tonight and our host was one of the more successful working lab breeders in Sweden. I got into a hot spot and shot well but did not mark the falling birds as well as I shot them. My excuse is "lack of practice", as good as any other excuse. When the host, the lab breeder, came to pick my birds there was one we could not find. She gave me one of her older dogs, a very experienced dog in all types of hunting and with very high field trial merits, perhaps even a FTCH, and told me to go search for the last bird.
 
It was very amazing how easy this dog was to handle for me and how well it could do a "free search" by its own! Of course it knew me since years back as a frequent visitor to the family, but anyway...
 
Maud's last bird was also lost. Maud knew it was dead in the air and several dogs, including Briz,  was sent to find it but no success. Then just before we were ready to give up in the darkness one of the boy's went to the cars and took out his very young Labrador to give it a try. It was sent in the direction Maud thought the duck had fell into and voila' , the youngster found it immediately!
 
We decided, as a solution to why an inexperienced dog, like this this dog, found the bird so easily; it had been sitting in a car, had a fresh nose and a fresh brain, compared to those that had been working in the water and reeds for hours and were polluted with algae, mud and scent from both fresh and bloody ducks.
 
In a parenthesis I can mention that Briz has become a real versatile gundog now She refused to stay in the car so Maud took her with her to the duck stand and Briz retrieved several ducks that landed on land, Maud did not want to send her into the thick reed. By her own she also waded into the water to search for other ducks that other guns had shot! Not that she dared to go far enough to find any but she tried anyway. Then, late in the evening she showed that she is just a very small and poor little setter again. As I from another direction started to walk towards the car she slipped away from Maud's stand and followed me to the car, without asking for permission from Maud. She was cold and wet and tired and bitten by mosquitoes and hungry :-)))
 
Foxy would never have done that, nor Springer, they would have stayed to the end.... Whatever, small and poor dogs are also cute and beneficial! Maud and me are very proud that she did the best she could. No-one can do better! 
 
Torsti
Borta Med Vindens Kennel
"Ask not what your dog can do for you.
Ask what you can do for your dog."
www.rospigan.net
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