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September 9th, 2016, 04:54 PM
#11
You're dog is 4 months old now but by mid season it's a 6 month old dog and quite a bit of development can accumulate. I would just be very specific in where I hunted him. Grouse cover is typically tight and good woodcock cover even more so. Hard to beat a good woodcock flight to train a bird dog. I would not take him duck hunting at that age. First that might just be too much gunfire as that high speed steel shot barks pretty loud and secondly he will move around so much he will likely spook game. Just my opinion. You have been given some advice above from some very experienced dog trainers for free. Take notes. Great looking pup by the way.
i see you live in Atikokan. I used to hunt moose out that way and you live in bird "Mecca".
Last edited by terrym; September 9th, 2016 at 05:00 PM.
I’m suspicious of people who don't like dogs, but I trust a dog who doesn't like a person.
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September 9th, 2016 04:54 PM
# ADS
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September 9th, 2016, 05:09 PM
#12

Originally Posted by
Mount Sweetness
I'd bring him out hunting for sure. Just use your head, be safe, keep expectations low, have fun, get some exercise and off leash training. Short hunts with just you and him. Use a .22 or .410, shoot rarely.
I wouldn't waste a season, I'd get him on birds, it's a flushing breed.
I can't buy that, you're not wasting a season, you're laying the proper groundwork for later. Expectations and safety will both be very low as in low level for sure. How do you control him when a bird is flushed?
He hasn't been collar conditioned yet either......so much to do......
Terrym's suggestion are sound.
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September 9th, 2016, 07:04 PM
#13
Not sure how I missed this thread. I'm the Cocker guy alluded to earlier in this thread. I did hunt my dog the first season but he was a January pup so he was 9-10 months old at the time and had been through gun and collar conditioning and force fetch. The basics can not be skipped if you want a flusher that you can enjoy hunting behind instead of one that stresses you out and has you yelling more than shooting. I would certainly take him for runs in the woods but as far as formal hunting I would not push that at all with such a young pup. My bird numbers are low (less simulation in the beginning), he had the basics and he was not a 4 month old pup. I left waterfowl till the following year when he was almost 2 years old to ensure those basics were ingrained when there was more stimulation- more birds, more shots, more dogs and more people hunting. Take him for walks and get him accustomed to cover. If he bumps a bird great. If not, he's still learning valuable lessons. But make sure the focus is on teaching the basics. That is in no way a waste of a season - you'll have many more to come and you'll enjoy them more with a trained dog.
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September 9th, 2016, 07:06 PM
#14
Time in the outdoors is never wasted
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September 9th, 2016, 08:16 PM
#15

Originally Posted by
Cass
The basics can not be skipped if you want a flusher that you can enjoy hunting behind instead of one that stresses you out and has you yelling more than shooting.
Yup. Again, I have a 17-week-old (as of today) Springer. She won't be hunting this season, because she won't be ready.
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"The language of dogs and birds teaches you your own language."
-- Jim Harrison (1937 - 2016)
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September 10th, 2016, 06:59 AM
#16
Also remember at that tender age the growth plates haven't fully matured yet/closed and you shouldn't be hunting such a young pup continuously for long stetches at a time so not do damage its joints.
Also, the puppy hasn't been physically conditioned to hunt long periods of time, so short meaningful outings are better than long meaningless ones where the pup is put to the point of fatigue.
Sure the pup has energy to burn, but doesn't need to at 4mths old be beating the bush for 3+ hours straight all the time.
Let puppy enjoy the bush and what he finds this fall and focus on a successful next year.
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September 10th, 2016, 08:10 AM
#17
Has too much time on their hands

Originally Posted by
maplevizsla
Also remember at that tender age the growth plates haven't fully matured yet/closed and you shouldn't be hunting such a young pup continuously for long stetches at a time so not do damage its joints.
Also, the puppy hasn't been physically conditioned to hunt long periods of time, so short meaningful outings are better than long meaningless ones where the pup is put to the point of fatigue.
Sure the pup has energy to burn, but doesn't need to at 4mths old be beating the bush for 3+ hours straight all the time.
Let puppy enjoy the bush and what he finds this fall and focus on a successful next year.
Well said.