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BrittanyWhat type of bird dog, flushing, pointing, versatile?
So what kind of dog? Best hunting and family dog I'll ever own was a $35 mixed breed.Subscribed. Some good info on here already, but looking forward to seeing more fill up.
We recently acquired a pup as well. I have no idea what I’m doing as far as dogs go. It’s an unconventional mix of breeds for a pointing dog, but hoping I can get the thing to find a grouse or two.
I just ordered a load of stuff from Lion Country, including the DVD “Great Beginnings-The First Year, Pointers by G. Hickox” if that’s of any interest to OP.
It’s got some collie, some English shepherd and some kind of retriever. I think it’s going to be more predisposed to want to herd a covey than point it out, haha.So what kind of dog? Best hunting and family dog I'll ever own was a $35 mixed breed.
For field trials, a far ranging dog is preferred. For hunting, it very, very much depends on the situation. My little Britt does not range far for a pointing dog. That is one of the breed's assets. Legend has it that poachers in France developed the Brittany as a small dog that worked close so it could be scooped quickly and stuffed in the game bag when the game keeper was onto them. This fall the prolonged drought continued to cause havoc with upland hunting in Montana. Cover was sparse, over grazing was prevalent (besides lack of range, poor auction prices meant many ranchers held over animals that should have went to market), CPR disappearing, more hunting pressure. It all adds up to much fewer and much spookier birds. My Britt is an excellent pointer but if she didn't go on point within twenty yards and in the wide open, I wasn't getting a shot. The pheasants wouldn't hold. Period. I don't care how good the dog is. The pheasant was up and away before I could get close enough to be able to determine sex, deal with the never ending wind, and get a shot off. For Huns, which were unusually numerous this year, it was a slightly different story. They are covey critters. Even when they have been shot up, they still tend to hold a bit better. I think everyone is waiting for someone to make the decision to bust. This year the roosters I shot (and I did shoot quite a few) were almost all in very heavy cover. It simply was not possible to work my Britt and expect any shooting. I couldn't see her (be damned if I'll listen to one of those beeper collars all day!) and she was usually too far away when she did find them. If my Lab got me one or two roosters then I would let the little dog work. The Lab works very close and she is a good pointer as well. However, this year, even more so than past years, the few pheasants she found were not holding for her. They gave up very few points in places where I could actually see her working. Mostly I had to turn up my hearing aids and listen for her to stop moving. Then get ready. A bird was going in the air ... somewhere. More often than not the birds flushed as soon as they heard us ... often sixty yards away or further. Guys who came cross country with pointing dogs in fancy trailers to hunt that refuge were getting almost no birds. Maybe their far ranging dogs found more birds per acre than mine (a BIG maybe), but their guns weren't getting dirty.Since we are tossing out advice and opinions, I am not a particular fan of Richard Wolters approach for training pointing dogs. One reason is his using the wing on a string sight pointing approach. That might cause a dog to think it needs to see a bird before it points. It is almost never that a dog should see a bird that it's pointing.
Okay, I field trial, full disclosure, but before that I hunted pointing dogs, a lot. Do not obsess over the dog's range. If it ranges further than you are comfortable, but goes with you, you need to get more comfortable with that. The major benefit a pointing dog offers is that it can cover more ground than you can.
You get to decide what you want from the dog, and train it in that direction. There are hunters that want a retrieve to hand, every time, or they aren't satisfied with the dog. Other hunters are fine with the dog finding the bird, bringing it back part way and they meet the dog there. I force fetched a couple of dogs before my field trial journey began. It certainly improved their retrieving. Since then, I have not trained that because there are enough other aspects that have to be solid. Every pointing dog I've had wanted to find the downed bird. The worst natural retriever (one that was force fetch trained) would find the bird, kill it if it was alive, mouth it if it was dead, stand over it for a few seconds, then go back to hunting.
All of the others would retrieve birds. Some of them very well, some half heartedly. Whatever they gave me in that regard, I have accepted. So, it's your decision how important a polished retrieve is to you.
For field trials, a far ranging dog is preferred. For hunting, it very, very much depends on the situation. My little Britt does not range far for a pointing dog. That is one of the breed's assets. Legend has it that poachers in France developed the Brittany as a small dog that worked close so it could be scooped quickly and stuffed in the game bag when the game keeper was onto them. This fall the prolonged drought continued to cause havoc with upland hunting in Montana. Cover was sparse, over grazing was prevalent (besides lack of range, poor auction prices meant many ranchers held over animals that should have went to market), CPR disappearing, more hunting pressure. It all adds up to much fewer and much spookier birds. My Britt is an excellent pointer but if she didn't go on point within twenty yards and in the wide open, I wasn't getting a shot. The pheasants wouldn't hold. Period. I don't care how good the dog is. The pheasant was up and away before I could get close enough to be able to determine sex, deal with the never ending wind, and get a shot off. For Huns, which were unusually numerous this year, it was a slightly different story. They are covey critters. Even when they have been shot up, they still tend to hold a bit better. I think everyone is waiting for someone to make the decision to bust. This year the roosters I shot (and I did shoot quite a few) were almost all in very heavy cover. It simply was not possible to work my Britt and expect any shooting. I couldn't see her (be damned if I'll listen to one of those beeper collars all day!) and she was usually too far away when she did find them. If my Lab got me one or two roosters then I would let the little dog work. The Lab works very close and she is a good pointer as well. However, this year, even more so than past years, the few pheasants she found were not holding for her. They gave up very few points in places where I could actually see her working. Mostly I had to turn up my hearing aids and listen for her to stop moving. Then get ready. A bird was going in the air ... somewhere. More often than not the birds flushed as soon as they heard us ... often sixty yards away or further. Guys who came cross country with pointing dogs in fancy trailers to hunt that refuge were getting almost no birds. Maybe their far ranging dogs found more birds per acre than mine (a BIG maybe), but their guns weren't getting dirty.
It has been my experience, and I have a lot of it, that especially in these lean times (which by all accounts are only going to get leaner), a close working pointing dog is most desirable, especially for hunting wild pheasants on public land. For me finding more birds is not as important as getting more shots. Anyway, it's more fun watching a dog work in front of you than out of sight in the next zipcode.
After the first two weeks of season sharptails are pretty much a waste of time. The odd single may hold but better run to the dog because it won't hold long no matter what kind of dog. If a flock busts out of range also run to the dog because often there's a retarded single or pair that leave late.
If you are hunting private land late or public land for planted pheasants, that is an entirely different scenario. And again, the drought has also been a huge game changer. Ten or twelve years ago I could easily dust a limit of public land roosters in a couple of hours working any of my dogs or all three at once (two flushing Labs and this Britt). And I didn't shoot NEARLY as well back then. But now the habitat and hunting availability has dried up 80% at least. What's left is hit hard and taking a beating from climate change. The good old days are gone. I advise future upland hunters to change to meet the environmental changes if they want to shoot pheasants. Places where formerly I could kill roosters over my Britt in tall grass and bullrushes is now burnt bald prairie grazed to dirt. Farmers are tearing up sagebrush and pulling out Russian olive. Cattail ditches and sloughs are stomped to stubble because that's the only place cattle can find any green grass. Wherever there's any heavy cover is where the few birds left will congregate. Good luck using a far ranging pointing dog in thick cattails or Russian olive groves. Where's the dog? Unless you're sitting on a horse, you won't see it. That's where the birds are now. I can hunt the remaining open grasslands on the refuge for days and not find anything to shoot at working both the Lab and the Britt. Get into the cattails and tough it out. That's where they are. The harder the wind blows, the better. Then they can't hear as well. Same if there's lots of new snow. New snow and windy is best but most miserable. Shooting pheasants these days on public land is extremely challenging. Much more so than in recent past decades.
I agree, the "witching hour" last forty minutes before dark can be the best hunting. Pheasants are calling and moving to bunch up and spend the night congregated ... defence against coyotes. But that's not a very long period to hunt. You better already know where the few birds are located. And know where they want to go before dark. I have intercepted hundreds in one evening. But these days finding them in time and without them flushing wild first is mostly luck. During the day if a bird flushes wild, don't shoot, watch where it lands, give it an hour, and go after it again. Don't have that luxury during the last forty minutes.
Anyway, with conditions for hunting changing as they are, I advise switching to a close working dog. Pheasants don't hold like they used to. They are not found in the same country we used to find them. In short, it's just not the same game any more and I really don't see much hope for a return to those golden years. A close working dog will ensure more chance for a shot. I don't see how a long ranging dog can when the long range hunting habitat is disappearing and the birds are becoming wilder. And that's exactly what I've been seeing the last twenty years, especially the last seven years.
You and I obviously have different ideas about what is a "waste of time." You say that hunting sharpies late with a big running pointing dog does produce some coveys that will hold for long shots, but just not very often. That is somehow more productive than pushing a limit of roosters up from heavy cattails and taking them home with three or four shots, albeit I have shed four or five pounds in the process.You are WRONG about sharptails, they hold well enough for the first month of the season, becoming increasingly difficult for the remainder of the season. I have killed them into December over points, and not just an odd single. Any sharptail killed that late will involve a dog standing well off the birds, and the hunter making a long shot. It does not happen often but it does happen.
I thought I mentioned hunting where a dog's talents are best used. I don't hunt cattail sloughs. Turn a dog lose where it has a chance to shine. I have owned pointing dogs for over thirty years, never lost one, don't have difficulty finding them on point. While I always train from horseback, I hunt far more often afoot. That transition is not difficult, more work for me thou.
I'll leave it to the next generation to figure out how best to hunt. But there are many reasons a person hunts with any bird dog. One reason is to kill birds. But there are many others. A big one for me is enjoying the scope of a dog's search. I am bored to tears if a dog is not cutting a good lick. That is not for everyone, but it is for some. A person can use a big running pointing dog and kill a lot of birds, been there, done that.
You and I obviously have different ideas about what is a "waste of time." You say that hunting sharpies late with a big running pointing dog does produce some coveys that will hold for long shots, but just not very often. That is somehow more productive than pushing a limit of roosters up from heavy cattails and taking them home with three or four shots, albeit I have shed four or five pounds in the process.
Yes, a person can still kill a limit of birds with big running pointing dogs. But it is a LOT harder these days. This year I shot almost as many roosters during late October to first week in December as I did during the same period ten years ago. Probably saw fifty times as many birds back then. The difference is this Lab is exceptional and my shooting is a hundred times better. Ellie works close and is a fantastic pointer. For productivity, as in putting birds in the bag productivity, that is the perfect combination for current, and I am certain future, hunting conditions. Yes, I enjoy watching my dogs go on point and work a wary bird (if it will even let them get close enough for a point), but the key word there is "watch." I get a lot bigger kick out of being with them when it happens than squinting from the cheap seats in left field.
I did shoot my one and only lifetime triple of roosters this year during what is certainly the worst hunting season I've yet experienced for adverse conditions and poor bird numbers. It would not have happened except Ellie and I were done for the day, exhausted with an empty bag, and walking the road back to the vehicle. We rounded a blind u-curve in a pocket of willow and she went on point ten yards in front of me. I quickly got around the other side of her and five roosters got up almost in succession just as I stepped off the road. Had she been ten yards further down the road I doubt I would have got a shot. They just won't hold that long. Walking down the snowy road in a brisk wind concealed our noise. Lucky.
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You might as well be talking to a person on the television. You’d get the same level of engagement in the conversion.What you seem not to grasp is that every person has their own unique reasons they do anything, including bird hunting. Those reasons are as valid as any you hold.
When I mentioned late season sharptails, I was not targeting them per se. I was bird hunting in an sage brushed area that held pheasants, huns, sharptails and sage grouse. So a point might be any of them. Some of the dogs I've owned never got sharptails pointed from far enough back to make it happen. But if the dog points them from 40-50 yards away, the birds will sometimes hold until you get past the dog a little bit. It still makes for a long shot, but makable with a 12 gauge and a tighter choke.
You will have a hard time finding me dissing anyone's choice of bird dog. If that is how a person wants to do it, that's they way they should do it. I am tired of you capping on big running pointing dogs when you clearly are talking out of your hat. Should everyone own a big running dog, NO. But they are very good bird dogs. They take more commitment in getting them well trained, which I find very rewarding.
Just curious, how far do you let them range before it gets uncomfortable.You are WRONG about sharptails, they hold well enough for the first month of the season, becoming increasingly difficult for the remainder of the season. I have killed them into December over points, and not just an odd single. Any sharptail killed that late will involve a dog standing well off the birds, and the hunter making a long shot. It does not happen often but it does happen.
I thought I mentioned hunting where a dog's talents are best used. I don't hunt cattail sloughs. Turn a dog lose where it has a chance to shine. I have owned pointing dogs for over thirty years, never lost one, don't have difficulty finding them on point. While I always train from horseback, I hunt far more often afoot. That transition is not difficult, more work for me thou.
I'll leave it to the next generation to figure out how best to hunt. But there are many reasons a person hunts with any bird dog. One reason is to kill birds. But there are many others. A big one for me is enjoying the scope of a dog's search. I am bored to tears if a dog is not cutting a good lick. That is not for everyone, but it is for some. A person can use a big running pointing dog and kill a lot of birds, been there, done that.