Jump to content

Bit of advice for my pup please?


Recommended Posts


i have a dog of the same breeding he didn't catch anything untill he was 12 1/2 months and he caught that with his feet but now he is 2 and potentially going to be one of the best dogs i have ever owned. i would personaly take him with you to watch the other dog but not slip him. his tendons and bones are still very soft if he has a knock it could potentially ruin him for life. atb adam

Link to post

 

im never sure whether bringing a pup out to watch another dog is good or bad, for one thing the other dog needs to be shit hot with a1 retrieve if i were to take him out,

it also builds a lot of excitment in pup which is not ideal , when learing the game, i prefare to take a pup out cold, if you know what i mean, when hes in a calm frame of mind, and not bursting at the seems , not fond of another dog there when trying to work on retrieve either,

when starting a pup i try not to focus too much on the catch ,which will come but start as you mean to go on as far as walking to heel, doing what he's told, coming straight back when lamp is knocked off, the bigger picture as such,,the pup will catch in time, without a doubt, use the summer to bond , he seems a little shy, get a ball and play with him over the next few months, and by winter, he.ll be bigger ,stronger , and more conifident in himself and around you,,best of luck with him,

  • Like 1
Link to post

all dogs/pups/breeds all come on at different stages ,,my bullx first time out on the lamp at 9 month old let him watch for a few runs started 2 pull my son of his feet on afew slips so i just let him ,first caught 9 out 13 runs and all the dog had seen before nothing before ,goodluck with you pup ,i would leave for a bit and then take him my heself and get him on some young easy rabbits :thumbs:

Link to post

 

im never sure whether bringing a pup out to watch another dog is good or bad, for one thing the other dog needs to be shit hot with a1 retrieve if i were to take him out,

it also builds a lot of excitment in pup which is not ideal , when learing the game, i prefare to take a pup out cold, if you know what i mean, when hes in a calm frame of mind, and not bursting at the seems , not fond of another dog there when trying to work on retrieve either,

when starting a pup i try not to focus too much on the catch ,which will come but start as you mean to go on as far as walking to heel, doing what he's told, coming straight back when lamp is knocked off, the bigger picture as such,,the pup will catch in time, without a doubt, use the summer to bond , he seems a little shy, get a ball and play with him over the next few months, and by winter, he.ll be bigger ,stronger , and more conifident in himself and around you,,best of luck with him,

Spot on :yes: and I THINK you should learn to spell :blink:

Link to post

 

my personal opinion is they are the up and coming thing. i have had the experience of seeing three of these work including my own and i must say i am very impressed.

they seem to have plenty of stamina (comes back after a hard run and there is almost no panting), they all seem to be able to turn on a six pence and have speed to burn but they use it when they need it not like some of the dogs i have owned and seen, flat out from the start only to blow out half way through the run. i suppose what i'm saying is they suit me, the land and quarry that i run. atb adam

Link to post

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.

×
×
  • Create New...