I like Zach a lot but if he needs to relax to do force fetch then he is gonna needs some Valium
I would laugh at Zach but won't. Instead, I will laugh with Zach. I definitely fit the description as well. lol
That was funny stuff Milo.
I like Zach a lot but if he needs to relax to do force fetch then he is gonna needs some Valium
I don't know much about training retrievers. Remi never picked up a bird until he was 5 and was almost 3 before we even started working on holding/marking/heeling. But at 7.5 and nearly blind, he'll go and get a birds and bring them back. Sort of. Most of the time. I guess it all depends on what you want. You guys are after machines from what I can gather. Can't see me ever getting that detailed with it. It is interesting to read about and follow what you guys are doing, just not something I can see me doing.
Hope your dogs turn out like you want them to Zach. Definitely good looking animals!
Yea I never thought I'd be ate up with dog training like I am either... But that changed pretty damn fast. Once you see first hand what these dogs are capable of, it makes the mediocre stuff almost invisible to you. I enjoy seeing the dog work more than I enjoy pulling the trigger nowadays. When you can send your dog for a bird over 100 yds away that it never saw fall, that is just flat out rewarding and awesome. But it IS a ton of work to get them to that point. I can definitely see that it would be more difficult to accomplish with kids or other responsibilities in the mix.
Couldn't agree more. If there's one thing that annoys me it's begging and nagging a dog to do something. I'm a proponent of being stern and getting my point across... The first time. Seems to yield good results. Not so much because of the approach but because of the consistency I think.This is the tough part for me, a kid, 48 hr. work schedule, on top of hunting season and another dog make it very tough to give the attention needed to thoroughly train CC & FF! I swore on my life I would never send a dog to a trainer, if I couldn't do collar conditioning and force fetching myself I didn't want it done. I quickly learned that by the time you shovel the money out for a dog, its a very small expense over the course of its life to get some help training. Plus why not make your dog the best it could possible be? It's like a kid..... if you can afford to send your kid to private lessons to be better themselves in something you know little about, why wouldn't you? I've seen to many guys who thought they could do it all and ruin a dog that HAD potential or not be stern enough to get important lessons across bc they've become to soft/trained by their own dog. Having a good dog requires swallowing your pride sometimes and either sending them off for a short period, working with a trainer, working with a group of pros, ect.
First hand experience NO means NO, Not 3x from the first NO. Watched my uncles self trained lab chase a running pheasant toward a road, he yelled NO, NO, WHACK! Lack of OB on my uncles part honestly cost the dog his life. Same goes for duck dogs, sometimes its just not safe for a dog to make a retrieve and if the dogs running the show, your just its puppet.
You've got your yard set up similarly to mine. I've got 2 acres of mowed grass and another acre out back that I leave to grow. Makes it really nice when you wanna add just a touch of cover to your marks. The neighbor next door has a 40 acre CRP field with an air strip mowed in the middle. That makes for a nice lane to work on lining. Even so, the ideal training yard becomes less than ideal after you've ran it 100 times. Lol.LOL I hear ya Jim. Sometimes its kind of comical the amount of work WE setup for ONE dog to run right through it. I'm definitely in this boat with Mav because the boy can flat out cover some land. One added benefit is that my front yard (mowed area) is basically the size of a football field. Imagine a football field with a gravel road down the middle, one side cut to standard grass height and the other 8" of hay regrowth. Makes it a nice transition area and allows me to run multiple setups.
Walked out back to our "creek", well it was out of its banks and the boys dove straight in. The "current" in this creek is minimal at best 90% of the time, but after yesterdays rain it was flat out raging! Bad enough that when they jumped it they ended up 20+ yards downstream and the creeks only 20 yards wide. I let them due it bc it was so narrow that I wasn't to concerned but it was flat out kicking their ass! I'll take some more pics of our setup today. I got a feeling Mav is going to blow past Sarge before too long. Concepts seem to stick faster in his mind where Sarge takes several more attempts before he's "good". I truly believe this is where genetics take over and outweigh the average dog.
Field trials are completely foreign to me but it sounds like he's doing well for you. Looking forward to seeing some more progress!