Thursday, October 27, 2016

Tips For Bird Dog Training Holly Hill Hunters Utilize

By Marie Price


One of the most important aspects of any hunter's success in the field is a good hunting dog. For those who especially love the excitement of pursuing birds, a reliable, talented and well trained bird dog is crucial. There are specific traits and characteristics that determine whether or not a pointer puppy will be successful when it comes to pursuing game. Following are tips and suggestions for bird dog training Holly Hill hunters use to ensure their animals obey commands and know how to perform when the critical moment comes.

Sportsmen will go to great lengths to ensure their animals come from the finest canine stock. Their hound's ancestry can often be traced back as far as some humans. A puppy's inherited bone structure and coat are evaluated along with its potential for speed, agility, and endurance. These animals must possess an excellent work ethic, have a superior sense of smell, and limitless patience. Only the best specimens will be picked from the litter to be trained as hunting dogs.

There are many things a hunting puppy must learn in the first year if it is going to have a chance of becoming a competent adult hunter. It is no good to start your little pup out in fields and expect it to know what to do. It is better to teach them the basics of obedience such as no, sit, and heel commands first. These can be mastered in the home and treated as fun and games with your puppy.

Socialization is an important skill these dogs must learn early. Over their lifetime, they will be placed in unfamiliar surroundings with people they don't know and other canines that have been trained similarly to themselves. They will have to feel at ease being transported in dog crates and confined in them for long hours.

Dogs that have been in kennels with concrete foundations may have to learn how to adjust to the feel of dirt beneath their feet. Taking them on long walks through fields and meadows and letting them roam and run off leash will help make them comfortable.

Retrieving is a very important part of the hound's training. They must love the water and be willing to swim in cold murky lakes occasionally. They must also learn to ignore being wet and muddy for hours at a time. They should be taught that their time in the water, on a hunt, is work and not play. They have to maintain focus and concentration.

Those with experience in training suggest using a dead pigeon when the puppy is first introduced to birds. There is less chance that the dog will become frightened or confused if the bird is not struggling or flopping around. Hounds also must become acclimated to guns and the sound of gunfire.

Some dedicated sportsmen would rather have a good bird dog than almost anything else in this world. In a very real sense the two are partners in one of man's favorite past times.




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