American and French Brittanys as companion gun dogs. Hunting, training, trialing and more.
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Folks “doin’ it right” always have the best bird dogs

“Doin’ it right.”  That’s what I say about someone who has a well bred bird dog and makes every effort to bring that pup up right.  That’s a broad statement so I’ll put it this way: After good genetics, It all begins with proper socialization followed by proper formal training and lots of bird contact, especially in the first 3 years of the pups life. 

Often times, we get busy and the pup gets set on the back burner.  By the time we get around to making time, critical socialization and bird introduction opportunities are gone.  Yes, gone.  There are narrow windows of opportunity for developing pups to their max potential and much adult ability & behavior for your pup is ‘turned-on’ in the early months of development. 

A more severe form of not socializing your pup daily (more than filling the food pan) results in the pup becoming ’kennel sour’.  A ‘kennel sour’ dog is one that always acts like its been beaten.  Folks will swear you have beaten your dog.  Good trainers will spot it immediately.  This young pup / dog won’t interact with any human and is often very shy of all humans.  It rejects human companionship and won’t even eat its food if you are near (It won’t even take a treat from your hand).  It will get along with other dogs but that’s about it.  When your pup gets to that point, usually around 6 months of age (notice how quickly it happens!), it is too late.  It’s a long, long row to hoe to repair that pup, much less train and hunt it, which now has to come after you repair the socialization problem.

To be good at something, a dog has to have practice.  A few minutes of socialization here and there, yard work and a few birds every now and again does not make a good bird dog.  Little work and high expectations on opening day is a good prescription for lots of disappointment.

For your dog to be very good, like a surgeon in their residency, it means lots of practice and exposure to the multitude of variables that may occur in different scenarios which renders experience and seasoning.

Dogs really blossom when it is done right.  Socialization, exposure to good training and lots of bird contact makes the bird dog and you can take that to the bank.  I’ll sign my name to it!

Thelma-Liz\'s first wild bird shot for her

This year, as in every year that I travel to Montana for two months of dog work, I saw dogs blossom right in front of my eyes.  Some had never been to Montana while others had returned from a previous year where they did learn fundamentals and were ready for more advanced work.  First time dogs became good and returning dogs became truly awesome.  Veteran dogs that have been to my Montana camp more than twice are simply incredible.

I’m not trying to sell my camp though I am quite proud of what it produces.  I am telling you about it so you can draw parallels with what you are doing with your dog.  If you can work your dog 10 minutes just 3 times a week for a couple months on wild birds or strong pen raised birds prior to bird hunting season every year, you will be amazed.  I promise you that!

“Doin’ it right.”  That’s the owners who treat their dogs like family from puppy day number one, they take them afield and get them on birds wild and/or pen raised at a very early age, they properly trained their dogs in a logical step by step fashion and are avid bird hunters.  That’s the secret to having the best bird dog your dog is genetically capable of, plain and simple.

Give your dog a treat for me and tell ‘em “Dave says ’good dog’ !” 

Cordially,

Dave Jones, USN, Navy, Ret, owner, Chief’s Brittanys

2 comments

1 Bpeacher79 { 10.29.08 at 7:05 PM }

Dave,
Man, you have said a mouthful with this entry. This is the most powerful ,truthful advice I’ve ever read, period. You have hit it out of the park. Every prospective bird dog owner needs to read and reread this entry before even thinking of buying a bird dog if they want it to live up to it’s potential. My hope is everyone that reads this really understands how powerful and truthful your words are. You get it.

Bob

2 Trent { 11.05.08 at 8:10 PM }

Repetition, Repetition, Repetition. You can’t just send your dog out to a trainer for a few months, not regularly hunt/train it and expect it to just perform flawlessly a couple times a year. Bird dogs need refresher courses, exposure to birds and regular training. That’s why Dave is “doin’ it right”.

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