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Thanks for all the advice guys. I surely know more about springers now than I thought I knew before.
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Dean, not too long ago, we lost the last of Linda's Springers. Mother and son were both great upland and water dogs. Doser made his last open water retrieve on a live duck at 14 years old. Yes, we have pictures. Linda's Springers were not hard headed by any means, but absolutely lovable and cooperative house and car dogs. Crate train from birth, start frozen pigeon training young, and you will be OK.
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Dean - Here is a link to the Springer Field Trial Association.
http://www.essft.com/ More information than you probably want. Springer trials are the one field trial which still closely represents what the foot hunter wants in a dog (As opposed to the pointer trials on horseback). See if you can find a trial in your area, Watch it, ask questions and enjoy the dogs. Not sure if you would want a puppy or a trained dog, but if you want a trained dog, there are usually trial dropouts available which make wonderful gun dogs. |
John, Not to get off the Springer topic, but the two Pointers in my life were NSTRA trialers. The first one got my toe in the trialing fields and waters. He got a couple of placements before I was the dropout. He was my best hunting dog. Even NSTRA, which is an attempt at hunting conditions, becomes repetitive and styleized. The next one is a 2 year old whom I am having a great time hunting with now and is learning more with every hunt. He was a hard core trialer's reject, a little soft for trialing, but a great companion.
Fred |
Fred I haven't heard the walking on water story. ch
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OK Calvin, Three WF hunting buddies were very competitive about the quality of their retrievers. By opening day, one of them had spent a huge sum on a new "wonder dog" and couldn't wait to show it off. The three of them were in the blind when the first shootable flight turned in to the dekes. Three birds came down and the guy with the dog said to his buddies, "now watch this" and sent the dog for the retrieve. The dog jumped out of the blind and trotted across the water, picked up the three ducks and returned to the blind. Nobody said anything so the dog man said "didn't you guys notice anything about that retrieve?" One guy answered "yeah, damned dog can't swim".
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:rotf: Thats perfect so true.
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Quote:
Cheers, Jack http://www.shotgunworld.com/bbs/cpg1...MG_9999_8S.JPGhttp://www.shotgunworld.com/bbs/cpg1...G_9999_11s.JPGhttp://www.shotgunworld.com/bbs/cpg1...G_9999_24s.JPGhttp://www.shotgunworld.com/bbs/cpg1..._9999_6sgw.JPGhttp://www.shotgunworld.com/bbs/cpg1...9999_62sgw.JPGhttp://www.shotgunworld.com/bbs/cpg1...G_9999_24s.JPG (Well that was a bit of a melancholic journey through albums. It was tough to say goodbye to this guy.) |
Jack, Great pics of Taz. I have a friend here in Ashland County who has a nice, hard huntin', GSP with the tail he was born with. My young Pointer's tail has a slight inclination to the right when on point; at least he has the proper direction. I realize, for several breeds, that the "standards" call for a docked tail: and, there can be practical reasons for this. Not to let the tail wag the dog, it is but a small part of a fine creature.
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