Guest Moscow Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 (edited) There has been lengthy debates on this forum about shouting dogs off quarry, staying or chasing on command etc. People will never agree. Iam of the opinion a dog needs its prey drive questioning if it can be shouted off game they have been entered to, right or wrong its my opinion! Stopping a stock trained dog from chasing STOCK its been broke to is totally different from stopping a dog chasing game its been entered to, comparing the two is silly. Edited August 25, 2012 by Moscow 3 Quote Link to post
GrCh 856 Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 credit to you lads mine would of been off. 1 Quote Link to post
matthews 88 77 Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 There has been lengthy debates on this forum about shouting dogs off quarry, staying or chasing on command etc. People will never agree. Iam of the opinion a dog needs its prey drive questioning if it can be shouted off game they have been entered to, right or wrong its my opinion! Stopping a stock trained dog from chasing STOCK its been broke to is totally different from stopping a dog chasing game its been entered to, comparing the two is silly. i agree with what you say but he never said tht he had entered the dog to deer Quote Link to post
birddog 1,354 Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 is it much different from working a lamping dog off the lead and the handler tells it what rabbit, when he can see the sitter 40yds into the field is a better option than a hopping teaser 5 yds from home ? Quote Link to post
richie c 11 Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 I see a well trained dog, well done. a good lamping dog dosnt need a lead. 1 Quote Link to post
wirral countryman 2,110 Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 I think lads that lack the ability and patience it takes to train a dog properly will always respond with the obvious shouts of lack of drive etc,I find if the dog is within 10-20ft of me it will listen but if it gets up in front of it when quartering a field then there is no stopping even the best trained lurcher,its like when you're ferreting,you would'nt allow your dogs to interfere with quarry in the nets or nose about knocking them,basic obedience should be taught from day 1 as a pup,the word "NO" is a very basic command but also a very important one for keeping control on your dog,allowing your dog to run anything it wants can only end in disaster one way or another,my dogs are broken to cats as every farm and estate I have permission on has them,it does not effect how many rabbits I catch by maintaining control over my lurcher and terrier's,you must also consider the choice of lurcher you are running if you want some assemblance of control over it,a collie based dog will obviously listen more than a bull based one,I like fast obedient lurchers but that not to say they are for everyone,atb,WM 10 Quote Link to post
birddog 1,354 Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 wm, you talk about less control when your dogs is quartering a field, when we're quietly going about our business and i'm sat gateside waiting by a net and mines is quartering the last thing i want her to do is 'riot' on an out of bounds species ie a roe and perhaps catch it a couple of fields away screaming enough to waken the dead, for me it's not about control because she could be a hundred yards or more away and it's dark it's more about basic training, and for those who harp on about lack of drive...have you never seen a real driven staying terrier that doesn't 'riot' on rabbits but concentrates on the intended prey ? Quote Link to post
Guest first light Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 nice bitch mate my bitch is the same not run them tell i let her same on the moors tell her to go on she will be doing her hunting up if she get to far stop her put my hand up left or right and she will go 1 Quote Link to post
bird 9,887 Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 you saids its just a rabbit dog for you pest control, and it looks thats (all) it is. Not everybody just wants a rabbit dog, and its that in a nutshell .! pre ban .! Quote Link to post
Guest Leveller Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 Quite right Bird, and to sum up Birddog's post it's all about the task in hand, when I leave home with that bitch be it daytime, night time whatever we have no interest in anything other than rabbits. I have shotguns and rifles if I wanted to bring anything else to the table. I'm not after an all rounder I'm merely trying to hone a half decent rabbiting dog out of this one. I'm not claiming to be some amazing dog trainer either I just thought I'd take the pic and get a few views and discussions going it's always interesting hearing differing views. Quote Link to post
birddog 1,354 Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 i'm no amazing trainer either (my other bitch is a nutter by comparison) but it's not hard to train a dog what to chase, it's not even that hard to teach them when to chase certain things, there are many examples of this all through the working dog world but to say a dog has no or less drive because it's been trained to a specific task is obviously nonsense, there hasn't been anyone disagree with my gundog or terrier examples which to be honest are nothing more than the required norm in their respective disciplines. Quote Link to post
KittleRox 2,147 Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 (edited) p Edited August 25, 2012 by KittleRox Quote Link to post
Moll. 1,770 Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 There are just so many variable to training that it is impossible to cover everything in a post. Type of dog (Not just breed but the individual dog) type of trainer type of training type of prey expectations of dog = type of hunting/prey required situations. And variables within the variables! Quote Link to post
Guest born to run1083 Posted August 25, 2012 Report Share Posted August 25, 2012 Quite right Bird, and to sum up Birddog's post it's all about the task in hand, when I leave home with that bitch be it daytime, night time whatever we have no interest in anything other than rabbits. I have shotguns and rifles if I wanted to bring anything else to the table. I'm not after an all rounder I'm merely trying to hone a half decent rabbiting dog out of this one. I'm not claiming to be some amazing dog trainer either I just thought I'd take the pic and get a few views and discussions going it's always interesting hearing differing views. Out of interest can you call it off a rabbit Quote Link to post
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