vaversatile
New member
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2024
- Messages
- 16
I've been scratching my eyes out trying to decide on one of these two breeds. Most everyone who's hunting with dogs are using them for birds, but I live in Virginia, so big-time bird hunting is low on the list. I've got the basic understanding of these two breeds, but I have questions that I haven't been able to get answered by searching the internet and watching videos.
First and foremost, I have 4 main desires of a dog:
- Be effective pointing cottontails in brush piles and thick cover.
- Point or Tree squirrels
- Retrieve ducks in flooded timber/ marshes.
- Often and reliably be used as a tracking dog for lost pets (tracking off of the scent of an item)
The first and 4th are likely the most important on this list, as I hunt often enough to keep a dog active, but I want to really have the dog trained as good as any search and rescue dog when it comes to that type of nose work.
MY CONCERNS:
I'm hesitant to get a Griffon because I fear it will lack drive to track pets often, lack the drive to constantly train and better its tracking abilities, and end up un-enthusiastically doing anything other than hunting rabbit. I've read that they do not like to train repetitions on anything.
I'm hesitant to get a German Shorthaired Pointer because I fear it will be too high energy, unable to be controlled off leash when doing nose work, and in hunting situations in my part of Virginia (Lots of thick cover, unless you get permission to hunt agricultural fields) he will be hunting much too far to hold a fidgeting cottontail before I can get to him.
Can anyone speak to which dog could fit my needs the best? I'm willing to devote hours a day to get them trained, but I need to know what dog would be the best starting point for that.
First and foremost, I have 4 main desires of a dog:
- Be effective pointing cottontails in brush piles and thick cover.
- Point or Tree squirrels
- Retrieve ducks in flooded timber/ marshes.
- Often and reliably be used as a tracking dog for lost pets (tracking off of the scent of an item)
The first and 4th are likely the most important on this list, as I hunt often enough to keep a dog active, but I want to really have the dog trained as good as any search and rescue dog when it comes to that type of nose work.
MY CONCERNS:
I'm hesitant to get a Griffon because I fear it will lack drive to track pets often, lack the drive to constantly train and better its tracking abilities, and end up un-enthusiastically doing anything other than hunting rabbit. I've read that they do not like to train repetitions on anything.
I'm hesitant to get a German Shorthaired Pointer because I fear it will be too high energy, unable to be controlled off leash when doing nose work, and in hunting situations in my part of Virginia (Lots of thick cover, unless you get permission to hunt agricultural fields) he will be hunting much too far to hold a fidgeting cottontail before I can get to him.
Can anyone speak to which dog could fit my needs the best? I'm willing to devote hours a day to get them trained, but I need to know what dog would be the best starting point for that.
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