519vx
Member
Ok - so here goes. I have a female golden retriever who is just short of 2 years old. Purebred, with a very strong hunting pedigree. I worked with her and hunted her a little last year with the other golden I have, a 6 year old very bird dominant female. Twice last year, the older dog got very possessive and growled at the young one when I had a bird down in the field or in the truck where the two dogs were close together.
Last year's final hunt was in late December and I only took the younger pup. She put up a bird, I dropped it. She ran over in the area where the bird was down but wouldn't pick it up. When I walked over to it, she stood about 5 or 6 feet away and looked at it but wouldn't come closer. Consensus after talking with some other hunting friends was that she was afraid to get the bird as she remember getting growled at for getting too close to dead birds when the other dog was around. I've also had mild issues of gun shyness with her.
Fast forward to this year. I've been doing some retrieval training/practice in the yard with frozen quail, working with just the younger dog and leaving the older one inside the house. She's eager and has been doing a good job scenting and retreiving (I do a lot of this training at night, as though the grass in the yard isn't high, she can't see the bird and is forced to use her nose).
Saturday was our first time this year with some live birds. I bought three hen pheasants and went to a training grounds with nice tall weeds/grasses. I cut all the feathers off one wing on the first bird, dizzied it, and hid it in the grass. She found it, and had a ball with it, chasing, jumping when it flew,etc then brought it back to hand when commanded. I didn't fire.
Second bird I clipped just the ends of one wing. Dizzied it, hid it. She found it quickly, flushed it, I shot it, and she retreived it. YEAH!
The last bird I just dizzied and hid. I worked her in a big circle and led to the bird. She got birdy, and worked to within about 6 feet of the bird and wouldn't go in any further. I walked up to see if the bird had taken off, it hadn't and was still there. I encouraged her but she wouldn't flush the bird. From training her to retrieve, I tried the "walk away". Told her come on this way and started to walk away from the bird. She went in and flushed it, I shot it and she gave a so-so retrieve then dropped the bird. I had to do the walk away to get her to pick it up again.
The sequence of events with those three birds was what has me confused.
Bird one she couldn't get enough of...bird three was me having to pretend to leave to get her to flush it. I'd prefer not having to pretend to walk away this fall during the season if she pins a bird...so I really appreciate anyone's thoughts or ideas about any of this.
thanks a bunch. :cheers:
Last year's final hunt was in late December and I only took the younger pup. She put up a bird, I dropped it. She ran over in the area where the bird was down but wouldn't pick it up. When I walked over to it, she stood about 5 or 6 feet away and looked at it but wouldn't come closer. Consensus after talking with some other hunting friends was that she was afraid to get the bird as she remember getting growled at for getting too close to dead birds when the other dog was around. I've also had mild issues of gun shyness with her.
Fast forward to this year. I've been doing some retrieval training/practice in the yard with frozen quail, working with just the younger dog and leaving the older one inside the house. She's eager and has been doing a good job scenting and retreiving (I do a lot of this training at night, as though the grass in the yard isn't high, she can't see the bird and is forced to use her nose).
Saturday was our first time this year with some live birds. I bought three hen pheasants and went to a training grounds with nice tall weeds/grasses. I cut all the feathers off one wing on the first bird, dizzied it, and hid it in the grass. She found it, and had a ball with it, chasing, jumping when it flew,etc then brought it back to hand when commanded. I didn't fire.
Second bird I clipped just the ends of one wing. Dizzied it, hid it. She found it quickly, flushed it, I shot it, and she retreived it. YEAH!
The last bird I just dizzied and hid. I worked her in a big circle and led to the bird. She got birdy, and worked to within about 6 feet of the bird and wouldn't go in any further. I walked up to see if the bird had taken off, it hadn't and was still there. I encouraged her but she wouldn't flush the bird. From training her to retrieve, I tried the "walk away". Told her come on this way and started to walk away from the bird. She went in and flushed it, I shot it and she gave a so-so retrieve then dropped the bird. I had to do the walk away to get her to pick it up again.
The sequence of events with those three birds was what has me confused.
thanks a bunch. :cheers: