I have been a pointing dog guy all my life, though I have a real appreciation for the flushing dog also. I have to say that I find the big running dogs to be objective runners, and somewhat cover averse, preferring to run edges, and as Pointer says, run the whole field edge. Used to work great with quail, and in mixed country, pheasant and quail, you have the odd pheasant point here and there. But you get a lot of unproductive points, because the birds run, or a lot of hen points, because they tend to sit. In either case you better be able to run like Usian Bolt, if your going to get there before anything but a green first two weeks of the season bird is going to wait around while you get to a find "way out on a limb", as the field trial people call it. Very seldom in my experience, and I have had dogs which placed in national open horseback continual course trials, will a dog that runs like that, hack down and hunt thick heavy cover for very long, much less pattern hunt like a spaniel or lab. I have to say that I fall into the category of believing that close working dogs are more effective a producing birds to the gun. As far as always working into the wind, I wish I could do that, but some places, you just have to play the hand your dealt. Cattails, like your talking about, big running dogs skirt,hit the edge, maybe twice even, might get the continental pointers in there, if their not horseback field trial dogs. But to wade into the marsh and mud, to hunt for a bird which may or may not be there, the next one I see make more than a cursory effort will be the first. There are of course pointing dogs of all breeds that work on a pattern, but that dog won't be taking any 1/2mile hedgerow without you walking the whole thing either. I'm sure that somewhere, there is at least one paragon of virtue, that can do it all, and proves me wrong, but I say it only proves the rule. Lucky the guy who owns that blue hen.