Mate I had a look at what it was and its by the author that Phil attached earlier in the thread.
Herb Spannagl THE DEER INDICATOR DOG
Versatile Hunting Dog Test ASSN (NZ)
Phil has it covered actually. Mine was by the same author. Must have cut and pasted it onto an email for some reason.....he does a piece on Deer indicator dogs.
Herb Spannagl
Good info Tussock.
Seeing as I have a wire-haired pointer, I might look for someone who might have a similar breed.
*eyes Wirehunt suspiciously...*![]()
Read a good training book a very long time ago ,worth a read can't remember author,but title was Gun Dogs For Field or Trial.google that.was in local library. Burnell is the author
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Last edited by Big esky no fish; 28-04-2013 at 08:58 PM.
It takes 43 muscle's to frown and 17 to smile, but only 3 for proper trigger pull.
What more do we need? If we are above ground and breathing the rest is up to us!
Rule 1: Treat every firearm as loaded
Rule 2: Always point firearms in a safe direction
Rule 3: Load a firearm only when ready to fire
Rule 4: Identify your target beyond all doubt
Rule 5: Check your firing zone
Rule 6: Store firearms and ammunition safely
Rule 7: Avoid alcohol and drugs when handling firearms
Beer.
Wow heaps of info there peoples...Thanks
To answer wirehunt
The problems i am having is not what i want it to do but how to stop it from doing the things i dont want it to do.
I have got him heeling primo plus the standard sit stay etc around my own property but when he is in public or the bush it is a totaly different story and he is almost a totaly different dog with a hearing problem and no regard for choker chains.
I think the biggest problem is that i have only had him for a month and he is now 14 months old so at home he does what i want (and amazingly well) but anywhere else and i am having to get him out of old habits that the previous owner has allowed him to do.
When he gets excited he starts to bark and i cant seem to stop this.
Don't worry about the choker chain. Basic train him. He needs to learn to stop. That's it. That is your life until he does. Nothing else.
Then you can move onto other stuff. At a guess he's one of those dogs that's fine if his head is level with your knee, but if he gets a half a head in front he goes?
Walk along with him in tight, stop regularly with the same stop command every time. Walk 10 metres, stop, walk another 2 and stop, walk 50 and stop. Critical to use the same command every time. By voice for a while, then introduce hand then whistle.
Once he is smoking that bring out the longline, tie it to your nice wide belt. Walk him in the short lead at first and do a few stops, then unclip the short and keep doing the stops (long lead dragging behind and best done in a grassy park). If he legs it batten down, when that rope runs out give the stop command. Then back to step one.
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