lurcherlamper 0 Posted March 2, 2010 Report Share Posted March 2, 2010 (edited) would like to know peoples views on how they train there dogs to look down the beam of the lamp. i own a lurcher and he is running well but just looking for some help Edited March 2, 2010 by lurcherlamper Quote Link to post
lamping boy 2 Posted March 2, 2010 Report Share Posted March 2, 2010 i run my pups with an older more experienced dog and they learn that way mate Quote Link to post
cooper101 86 Posted March 2, 2010 Report Share Posted March 2, 2010 would like to know peoples views on how they train there dogs to look down the beam of the lamp. i own a lurcher and he is running well but just looking for some help its somthing a dog learns through experiance really!! when you get a squatter walk the dog up to it with the beam on it all the time dont take the beam off and when your sure the dog has seen it slip it!! eventually the dog should learn to look to the end of the beam!! you may find you have to walk all the way too it if it struggles to see it but be patient dont get the rabbit to kick up and run yourself let the dog find it!! you may have to reapeat this a number of times before you can send it from a distance but it will crack it it the end!! also with a puppy i start off with a rabbit skin dummy i throw it when the pups not looking at night then lamp it up and send the pup thats how mine start to learn the beam!! patience is the key if its only seeing moving rabbits you'll have to teach it that they arent allways moving and the dog needs to run to the end of the beam wether of not it can see the rabbit and trust your judgment enough that if you say its there its there!! Quote Link to post
ferreter.al 22 Posted March 2, 2010 Report Share Posted March 2, 2010 walk up on them.they soon pick it up.plenty of practice Quote Link to post
lurcherboii14 0 Posted March 2, 2010 Report Share Posted March 2, 2010 i like ur self had this problem with a bull cross i baught a few months back and had only ever seen a fox and had never seen a rabbit before it was 16 months [bANNED TEXT] i baught her and all i done was take it out with my dads friends dog and just let it watch for 1 night and went out one day in the week [bANNED TEXT] the same person and walked up on a squatter and she caught it and retrieved it live back to hand lol then i had a phone call of my mate last night asking if i could take him and his dog out who is only 4 moths old and let it watch and my bitch caught the rabbit and live back to hand so i let it run agen and let his pup catch and retrieve it and it did + now the pup as only been out 3 times on the lamp and once u make a scithing noise looks at lamp u should try the same [bANNED TEXT] but deffanutly need to give her a good chance of catching the rabbit atb [bANNED TEXT] and happy hunting hope ur dog comes along nicely Quote Link to post
lurcherlamper 0 Posted March 2, 2010 Author Report Share Posted March 2, 2010 thanks guys real good help last night he had a real good course. getting better at looking down the beam and coursed one brilllianltly for good 2 minutes. wore the dog out lol but was a proud owner Quote Link to post
sh 08 17 Posted March 2, 2010 Report Share Posted March 2, 2010 i live in hereford mate come out with me for the night, it better to show rather than tell Quote Link to post
watchman 256 Posted March 2, 2010 Report Share Posted March 2, 2010 (edited) would like to know peoples views on how they train there dogs to look down the beam of the lamp. i own a lurcher and he is running well but just looking for some help its somthing a dog learns through experiance really!! when you get a squatter walk the dog up to it with the beam on it all the time dont take the beam off and when your sure the dog has seen it slip it!! eventually the dog should learn to look to the end of the beam!! you may find you have to walk all the way too it if it struggles to see it but be patient dont get the rabbit to kick up and run yourself let the dog find it!! you may have to reapeat this a number of times before you can send it from a distance but it will crack it it the end!! also with a puppy i start off with a rabbit skin dummy i throw it when the pups not looking at night then lamp it up and send the pup thats how mine start to learn the beam!! patience is the key if its only seeing moving rabbits you'll have to teach it that they arent allways moving and the dog needs to run to the end of the beam wether of not it can see the rabbit and trust your judgment enough that if you say its there its there!! very well put mate would not run it doubled up as others have said Edited March 2, 2010 by watchman Quote Link to post
lurcherlamper 0 Posted March 3, 2010 Author Report Share Posted March 3, 2010 cheers guys] yh i got adviced not to bother with doubling them up but just let them watch Quote Link to post
blackpack 70 Posted March 3, 2010 Report Share Posted March 3, 2010 as said plenty of going out on the beam some dogs pick it up straight away some take a little longer. I go out with a new dog on a poor night so rabbits dont squat and let him see the bunnies running in the beam around the field, then after a few sessions the dog usually follows the beam, then i start then to walk the dog up to squatters and let the rabbit jump out of his seat so the dog sees it. Practice makes perfect, more outings more experience they will gain. Never doulble up on the lamp, recipe for disaster, and if your dog is retrieving it wont do after doulbling up, 2 dogs pullling on game doesnt look to attractive. Then its only fit for ferret food. Good luck in all you do Quote Link to post
sh 08 17 Posted March 3, 2010 Report Share Posted March 3, 2010 to be honest b ullet it nd start again Thats not the attitude to take is it realy Quote Link to post
J Darcy 5,871 Posted March 3, 2010 Report Share Posted March 3, 2010 Single handed on rabbits the dog can see. Avoid squatters at first IMO, the dog needs to be able to see something down the beam for things to "click" good luck....JD Quote Link to post
cooper101 86 Posted March 3, 2010 Report Share Posted March 3, 2010 Single handed on rabbits the dog can see. Avoid squatters at first IMO, the dog needs to be able to see something down the beam for things to "click" good luck....JD I assumed because he was allready running his dog and he said it was running well it was struggling too see squatters!!! Yes I agree to learn the beam from scratch better off on moving targets!!!! Quote Link to post
turnerboi 27 Posted March 4, 2010 Report Share Posted March 4, 2010 to be honest b ullet it nd start again Thats not the attitude to take is it realy nah only jokin i know the lad and say it to him any way he dont take it seriously Quote Link to post
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