Training Dogs, 5/3/14

I loaded Dolly, Luke, Lucky and 6 pigeons into the truck, for the trip to the county park that is near my home. I staked the dogs out then hid 2 pigeons in the tall grass. While I was putting the pigeons out Dolly whined and barked wanting to be let loose to hunt. She knows better than that. At home on the chain gang, I always use the noisy one last. Luke and Lucky were calmly waiting so I put the e-collars on Luke first.


Luke

Luke

I heeled Luke down the road to the south, whoaing him several times. The wind was 15 to 20 miles an hour out of the north and Luke was going back and forth across the field, in front of me, at top speed. He slammed into a point about 40 yards from the birds. I took some pictures then walked in front, kicking the tall grass, flushed the bird and fired the blank pistol. He didn’t move. I continued to kick the cover, then flushed the second bird and fired the blank pistol. Again, he never moved. I went to him, stroked his tail up and petted him then walked back in front, kicking the cover. I walked back to him, tapped him on the head, and released him.

Lucky

Lucky

I heeled Lucky down the road but at his age I don’t make him jump through too many hoops. He just wants to point birds. I turned him loose and he went to work. He went to the birds like he had planted them and went on point. I took pictures, walked in front, kicking the cover, then flushed the pigeon and fired the blank pistol. He never moved. I continued to kick the cover then flushed the bird and fired the blank pistol. Lucky took one step then stopped. I went to him, picked him up and put him back where he had originally pointed. I stroked his tail up and petted him then went back in front kicking the cover. I went back, petted him then tapped his head to release him.

Dolly

Dolly

Dolly was still whining, wanting to go so I put the e-collars on her and heeled her down the road. I whoaed her then tapped her on the head to release her to hunt. She went back and forth across the field and homed in on the birds. She was about 40 yards from the birds when she went on point. As usual, I took pictures, then walked in front kicking the cover. I walked around kicking the cover longer than usual because of her whining on the stake out. Finally I flushed the bird and shot the blank pistol. She never moved. I continued to kick the cover, flushed the bird and fired the blank pistol. She never moved. The last time I worked her she wanted to chase but this time she was steady to wing and shot. With enough repetitions she will remain steady to wing and shot. I tapped her on the head to release her.

Luke and Dolly were steady today. Lucky only took one step. They are getting close to being steady to wing and shot. It will take lots of repetitions of this to carry over to the hunting season but we have the time.

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Training Young Dogs, 5/2/14

I heeled Tur Bo just a short distance, and whoaed him a couple of times, then released him to run. When he came close to me I whoaed him by, holding up my hand like a traffic cop, holding the button on the e-collar around his flanks down and saying whoa. Each time he stopped promptly.

When we got to the retrieving bench he jumped onto the bench. I walked him up and down petting him several times. He enjoys the attention he gets when he is on the bench. I used 2 different retrieving bucks in the hold and fetch game we play. I open his mouth and place the buck just behind the canine teeth, then put my left hand under his chin so he can’t spit it out. I use my right hand to pet him and sometimes I lead him down the bench, so he is walking with the buck. I have him move his mouth off the buck when I say give. After we hold and give 7 or 8 times I put him on the ground.

Today when I threw the retrieving dummy he ran out, picked it up and brought it to me. I threw it 7 times and he brought it back each time. I always pet him until he drops the dummy. I let him run on the way back to the kennel and whoaed him 3 or 4 times. He stopped each time.

Blaze

Blaze

I took Blaze, Whitey, Tur Bo and 6 pigeons to the county park near my home. After hiding 2 pigeons in the tall grass of the field I heeled Blaze down the road for about 150 yards then turned her loose to hunt. She hunted back into a north wind and pointed the birds. I took a couple of pictures then walked in front of her kicking the cover. I let her stand for a while before flushing the pigeon. When I flushed the pigeon and shot, she didn’t move. I continued to kick the tall grass then flushed the second bird and shot. She was steady at the flush but when I shot she took a step and stopped. I picked her up and set her back. I stroked her tail up and petted her then walked back out kicking the cover. I went back, petted then tapped her on the head to release her.

Whitey

Whitey


Whitey was up next. I heeled her down the road and released her to hunt. The wind was 15 or 20 miles an hour out of the north and we have had quite a bit of rain so the dogs could smell the birds from a long distance. I could see her smell the birds and move into the scent cone then point the birds. I took some pictures then walked in front of her kicking the cover. I flushed the bird and shot the blank pistol. She took 1 step and stopped. I picked her up and set her back. I stroked her tail up, petted her then went back to kicking the cover. I let her stand for a while before flushing the second bird. I flushed the pigeon and shot. She never moved. I kicked in front of her some more then tapped her on the head to release her.

Tur Bo

Tur Bo


I had the pigeons within about 10 yards of each other for the dogs I was trying to steady to wing and shot but for Tur Bo I separated them to get 2 points from him. I heeled him down the road then released him to hunt. When he went on point I took some pictures then whoaed him 1 time and walked in front of him. This was the first time I had whoaed him when he was on point and the first time I had walked in front of him. He didn’t move until I flushed the bird and shot the blank pistol. Then he chased.

Tur Bo

Tur Bo

He pointed his second bird and I took more pictures, then whoaed him and walked in front. He held his point until I flushed the bird and shot. Then he chased. Both birds that he pointed I flushed just a few seconds after I walked in front of him. I will let him stand for longer periods of time as he progresses.

I need to get more pigeons. I have 7 pigeons that are old enough to fly back from the park and I use them some times twice a day. They must not mind it too much, sometimes they are home when I get back and they are flying around instead of going into their house.


Writing this blog has made me work my dogs more often than I would have otherwise and the dogs have progressed real well. I enjoy working the dogs and writing the blog so it’s a win, win for me.


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Training Young Dogs, 5/1/14

It finally stopped raining, nearly, and I was able to train dogs today. I put an e-collar around Tur Bo’s neck and another around his flanks then heeled him around the yard. I took him through the bird field and he tried to lead most of the way but the piggin’ string kept him at heel, with a little work on my part. When we got to the back I turned him loose to run, then when he came close I held my hand up like a traffic cop, hit the button on the e-collar on his flanks and said whoa, loudly. The first time he was running all out toward me and he wanted to come all the way to me before he stopped. I held the button down on the e-collar on his flanks and he stopped. After the first time he stopped as soon as I said whoa.

I had him jump on the retrieving bench and walked him up and down, petting him. I had him hold a retrieving buck, then give by actually moving his mouth off the buck. I had him hold and give 6 or 7 times then put him on the ground. I threw a retrieving dummy and he ran out picked it up and brought it straight back to me. I threw it again and he ran out picked it up but dropped it before he got back to me. He wouldn’t pick it up again so I let him run. On the way back to the kennel I whoaed him several times then put him in his run.

I started working all of the dogs on the barrel, then flushing pigeons and firing the blank pistol. They all graduated to the whoa board, except Tur Bo. After flushing the pigeons and firing the blank pistol with them on the whoa board I was going to go through the same exercise with them on the ground beside the whoa board. But this morning I decided to take them to the county park, just a little way from my house and plant some pigeons to see what would happen.

I only have 7 pigeons so I took Blaze, Whitey and Tur Bo first. I put out 2 pigeons in release traps, put the e-collars on Whitey and heeled her down the road for about 150 yards. The wind was 25 or 30 miles per hour out of the north so I heeled her to the south then released her. Whitey normally is not real hyper on pigeons but it had been a long time since she had been able to point a bird and she was really running. She went on point about 30 yards down wind of the birds. I waited a little while to make sure she was really smelling the pigeons but she never moved so I walked in front of her. I walked back and forth kicking the cover, flushed a bird and fired the blank pistol. Whitey never moved. I kept kicking the cover, then flushed the second bird and fired the blank pistol. She never moved. I went to her and petted her then walked back out to kick the cover. I went to her, tapped her on the head to release her.

Whitey

Whitey

I brought Blaze out next. She had not been real solid on the whoa board but I wanted to see what she would do. I heeled her down the road to the south. She is always really going when I turn her loose and today was no different. She too, went on point about 30 yards from the pigeons. She was really rigid, when I went in front of her, with a high head and tail. I kicked in front of her then released a pigeon and she never moved until I fired the blank pistol. I said whoa, loudly and she stopped. I picked her up and carried her back to where she had pointed originally. I kicked in front of her then released the second bird and when I fired the blank pistol she started moving. I yelled whoa and she stopped. I picked her up and put her back. I walked back in front and kicked around then fired the blank. She took one step and stopped. I picked her up and set her back. I went back in front, kicked the cover and fired the blank pistol. This time she never moved. I petted her then walked in front, kicked some more then went back and petted her, tapped her on the head to release her.

Blaze

Blaze

I had to reload the blank pistol as well as replace the pigeons in the release traps before taking Tur Bo off his stake out. He’s close to 50 pounds now and if I hadn’t taught him to heel he would really be hard to handle. I heeled him to the south down the road. I turned him loose and he was really going when he caught the scent of the birds. When he smelled the birds his head raised and he straightened his body to the scent. He went on point with his head high and a 12 o’clock tail. I hadn’t brought my camera, so I took a picture with my phone, then flushed the bird and shot the blank pistol. I didn’t expect him to be steady. He chased the bird, then came back and pointed the second bird. I flushed the bird and fired the blank pistol. He chased.

Tur Bo

Tur Bo

I had to take these dogs home and wait for my pigeons to come home before working the other three dogs.

The pigeons were flying around my yard when I got back but they didn’t go right back into their house. I gave them a couple of hours to rest up then loaded 6 pigeons, Dolly, Luke and Lucky into the truck for the trip to the county park. After hiding 2 pigeons in the grass I heeled Lucky down the road to the south then turned him loose. He will be 10 years old this month and I still like to see him run. He pointed about 50 or 60 yards from the birds then moved up about 10 yards and wouldn’t move. I walked in front, kicking the cover then flushed the bird and fired the blank pistol. He took 1 step and stopped. I picked him up and put him back. I walked back out front kicking the cover, flushed the bird and shot the blank pistol. He never moved. I walked to him and petted him, tapped on the head to release him.


Lucky

Lucky

I heeled Luke down the road then released him. He’s almost 4 years old and he can really run. He was really moving when he hit the scent but he was so far from the birds I was afraid he wouldn’t see them flush so I had him move up. The second time he pointed he was still 60 yards from the birds. I walked in front, flushed a pigeon and shot the blank pistol. He never moved. I continued to kick the cover, then flushed the second bird and fired the blank pistol. He never moved. I kicked the cover, then walked to him and tapped his head to release him.

Luke

Luke

I took Dolly down the road to the south and released her to hunt. She was closer, to the pigeons, when she hit the scent of the birds. I walked in front, kicked the cover and fired the blank pistol. She never moved. I continued to kick the cover, then flushed the bird and fired the blank pistol. She started to chase. I said whoa, loudly and she stopped. I carried her back where she had pointed before. I kicked around but I didn’t have any more blanks in my pistol. I made her stand for quite a while as I kicked the cover then tapped her on the head to release her.

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My dogs are a lot closer to steady to wing and shot than they have ever been. I thought the exercises I have been doing with them would help now I’m convinced. I will keep working them as I have been doing and they will get where I want them to be.


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Dog Pictures (Raining Today)

Blaze

Blaze

Luke

Luke

Jack

Jack

Tur Bo

Tur Bo

That was Tur Bo and his brother Jack when they were puppies.

DSCN2861

DSCN2860

That was a 20 gauge Browning A-5 that was stolen from me and I found it after 17 years. I wrote the story on finding this in October last year. If you would like to read about it go into the Oct. archives.

Blaze on a pigeon

Blaze on a pigeon

Luke backing Dolly

Luke backing Dolly

Luke

Luke

DSCN2898

Luke

Luke

Another use for duct tape.  Luke's tail bleeds really bad when he hunts.  This stopped the bleeding.

Another use for duct tape. Luke’s tail bleeds really bad when he hunts. This stopped the bleeding.

Blaze

Blaze

Tur Bo

Tur Bo

Whitey

Whitey

Tur Bo

Tur Bo

Tur Bo

Tur Bo

Hopefully the rain is over and I can train tomorrow. Sitting in the house is not my idea of a good day.

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