spiderfly 111 Posted May 14, 2016 Report Share Posted May 14, 2016 I have a weird question for you guys, my lamping partner got a lovely pup at 12 weeks old off good working wheaton lines , she is a 3/8 5/8 bitch. She is none 10 months old and she has put in a lot of time with her and we had her on the lure since she was 6 months , nothing major just to get em keen only a small sprint. So i have a pup I need myself a bull x same a month younger and we have been watching run together and they are the same speed but his bitch runs like I've never seen before , her 2 back legs stay together all the time , instead of one in front of the other. It's like the way a terrier runs and she is a very square bitch. Have you ever seen this and is it normal in this cross as I sincerely haven't seen and I seen a lot of lurchers running?? I wondered is she hurt but no lame leg or pain.Thanks in advance!?? Quote Link to post
spiderfly 111 Posted May 14, 2016 Author Report Share Posted May 14, 2016 https://youtu.be/bsthKv0qmV8 Not my dog sorry but this shows a normal lurcher running! Quote Link to post
spiderfly 111 Posted May 14, 2016 Author Report Share Posted May 14, 2016 https://youtu.be/cJHLXzi_KCE This is the closet thing I could find to the way she runs! Sorry should have made own video but no you tune account ! Quote Link to post
lurcherman 887 13,248 Posted May 15, 2016 Report Share Posted May 15, 2016 Thats not a wheaten x mate thats a EBT Quote Link to post
spiderfly 111 Posted May 15, 2016 Author Report Share Posted May 15, 2016 Yes I know I am just using videos to show the way she runs , as a pose to the normal lurcher Quote Link to post
artic 595 Posted May 15, 2016 Report Share Posted May 15, 2016 Young dogs are in the transitional period of their development. As dogs grow they are adapting to their body. His lack of coordination shouldn't last long and go as he matures. If he looks stiff, the bunny hopping gait is constant, or it sits to one side each time, painful to touch then I'd be bringing the dog to the vets to have X-rays to its hips, spine, although at that age no evidence may show up. I don't think you have anything to worry about for now. I'm no vet, you make the call by your own observations. Good luck 2 Quote Link to post
forest of dean redneck 11,686 Posted May 15, 2016 Report Share Posted May 15, 2016 Now I'm slightly worse for wear this morning post bbq lol,but could I just be stating the obvious that the dogs thrown to th wheaten and that's the way it's going to run,like a terrier? Percentages are only a guide line in a breeding. 1 Quote Link to post
spiderfly 111 Posted May 15, 2016 Author Report Share Posted May 15, 2016 Now I'm slightly worse for wear this morning post bbq lol,but could I just be stating the obvious that the dogs thrown to th wheaten and that's the way it's going to run,like a terrier? Percentages are only a guide line in a breeding. yes that is what I taught but I have never seen this before I should add the she is 25inc tall already so not small! Thanks lads two good inputs! Quote Link to post
spindolero 1,111 Posted May 15, 2016 Report Share Posted May 15, 2016 its not uncommon for them to have that gait, one pup i sent to scotland was known as helicopter legs till he was 18 months Quote Link to post
spiderfly 111 Posted May 15, 2016 Author Report Share Posted May 15, 2016 That's puts our mind at rest thanks lads Quote Link to post
Maximus Ferret 2,063 Posted May 16, 2016 Report Share Posted May 16, 2016 When it's behind a rabbit it's through gait will show i'd say. Plus wtf is it with people letting pups run lure so young! The old rag racers got them going to a towel pretty much from the nest. The trick is to give em just enough to get them keen but not enough to piss them off with it. That's what I reckon anyway. I always introduce pups to most things at a young age but keep it fun rather than serious. Quote Link to post
j1985 1,984 Posted May 16, 2016 Report Share Posted May 16, 2016 My bitch hurt herself once after a rabbit that ran between a foot wide gap in between two brick walls!! She smashed both hips on the way through and wasn't right for months, after she ran like you mentioned for a ages. Never stopped her doing her job but I did notice the season after that she had slowed up slightly but maybe that was just her getting older who knows. Anyway she runs normal now, well she would if she wasn't 8 weeks pregnant lol 1 Quote Link to post
FUJI 17,327 Posted May 16, 2016 Report Share Posted May 16, 2016 When it's behind a rabbit it's through gait will show i'd say. Plus wtf is it with people letting pups run lure so young! The old rag racers got them going to a towel pretty much from the nest. The trick is to give em just enough to get them keen but not enough to piss them off with it. That's what I reckon anyway. I always introduce pups to most things at a young age but keep it fun rather than serious. It was more the development of muscle, ligaments and tendons that I was thinking of that may end up damaged. By keeping a young dog on the leash for 14 month or whatever will learn it jack shit mate,just like children & physical education at school which is scientifically proven to be beneficial to them,why not a dog?..letting a dog have a bit of free running,rough & tumble with other mutts is part & parcel of growing up & a spin on the lure for a couple of hundred yards isnt exactly the same as a 3 minute lung buster on the Fens lol,trust me by hardly ever letting a dog off the leash until it's "old enough" will do no one any favours both man or dog imo.. 1 Quote Link to post
spiderfly 111 Posted May 16, 2016 Author Report Share Posted May 16, 2016 When it's behind a rabbit it's through gait will show i'd say. Plus wtf is it with people letting pups run lure so young!The old rag racers got them going to a towel pretty much from the nest. The trick is to give em just enough to get them keen but not enough to piss them off with it. That's what I reckon anyway. I always introduce pups to most things at a young age but keep it fun rather than serious. It was more the development of muscle, ligaments and tendons that I was thinking of that may end up damaged.By keeping a young dog on the leash for 14 month or whatever will learn it jack shit mate,just like children & physical education at school which is scientifically proven to be beneficial to them,why not a dog?..letting a dog have a bit of free running,rough & tumble with other mutts is part & parcel of growing up & a spin on the lure for a couple of hundred yards isnt exactly the same as a 3 minute lung buster on the Fens lol,trust me by hardly ever letting a dog off the leash until it's "old enough" will do no one any favours both man or dog imo.. I rarely have a lead on me when out with dogs young and old, but I tried not to let them run something until they seem physically mature. 100 yards slip on the lure just to keep em keen and learn like the guys said is why we do it! cheers lads that's us happy ?? Quote Link to post
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