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----- Original Message ----- From: Margaret Cotton To: working-gundog@web.whc.net Sent: Wednesday, February 11, 2009 8:30 AM Subject: [working-gundog] CJ humour 2002 Sent via working-gundog: working-gundog@discuss.dundee.netI don't know if I mentioned this before, I don't read what I write.A charming fellow showed up at the hunting camp this year with his Englishpointers. He brought a stack of bird dog trialing magazines for ouredification (the ones where the winners are pictured holding their dog'stail up in the air). The pointers were nice dogs although we didn'tunderstand why he arose before dawn each morning to run his dogs for a halfhour before we went hunting.He was impressed with our dogs, they found a lot of birds, but they had apretty "close" search that wasn't up to his standards. When he took hisnice 4 year old bitch out of the travel crate she was impressive, packageddynamite... There were four collar changes required to hunt the dog in NewBrunswick bird covers. First the dog was kheld tight while the regularleather collae was removed. Then the dog was fitted with a beeper collarthat had more programmed sound sequences than my laptop. Above the beepercollar was mounted a 1 mile range TriTronics super collar with short whipantenna. Above that was mounted another wide nylon collar bearing a bell.The dog was now equipped to communicate with the owner. The hunter thenstrapped on his multi-function e-collar transmitter in a very elaborateshoulder holster... he was not equipped to communicate with the dog. Thebitch only weighed 40 pounds (50 pounds with collars installed) and wasunable to turn her head very well but that didn't matter to her, she wasonly going one way.We picked a very large bird cover for this dog and and she was launchedwithout ceremony (and launched was the appropriate word). I turned up thepower on my hearing aids and listened carefully as the bell sounds deindledto silence. The dog's owner was really good, he announced that she had abird and started off in the direction of the beeper. We worked through thebrush for about 500 meters and came on the dog locked into a beautiful threepoint stance. Very impressive... the owner asked what we thought of the dog.. .that flushed the grouse... we missed.The dog was launched again and she bored straight uphill and was out ofsound range in less than a minute. She didn't come back after three or fourminutes so we assumed she had another bird. We couldn't locate the beeperuntil we had labored to the top of the hill (lots of sharp wild raspberriesencountered on the way). She was down the other side of the hill at theedge of the swamp. And she had a woodcock pinned. We took no cjhances andspread out and positioned ourselves before the bird flushed. Success... weall hit the bird... two 12 gauge and one 28 gauge does a number on a smallbird. No problem with the retrieving, there was no need. We collected awoodcock wing for lead and pesticide analysis and then relaunched her.She found another grouse, about 700 meters from the first bird, and one ofthe crew managed to drop the bird with one shot. Then back to the truck.The dog was just getting warmed up and the next cover, a four or five acregrouse "hole" wasn't a problem, she blew through it in about eightseconds... we hadn't loaded the shotguns yet. There were apparently nobirds in the next cover... about 800 acres of alders.It was lunch time and the dog was just getting into gear... we wereexhausted.The next morning we ran his 10 month old male... a western (big going) dogfrom Oklahoma the owner said. This male was larger and the three collarsdidn't bother him a bit. I didn't get to shoot over the dog, couldn't getto him in time. But one of my hunting companions (a marathon runner byavocation) managed to get three woodcock and a grouse over the dog. Thedog's owner missed these birds... he's a high school gym teacher and in goodcondition but he was hampered by the transmitter holster and the sweatfogging his glasses. The pointers were lovely animals and did a beautifuljob but it's an athlete's game. A two hundred meter Drahthaar is about allthat I can handle. I forgot my camera and was sorry that I didn't get anypictures of the small three collar pointer in full battle dress... maybenext year.