It's the photo. The fore ground is in focus, the dog not so much.Wow is that upload quality horrible.
Zest was so locked up should have taken vid instead of pictures I thought he had frog or snake
im curious about the collars strapped in front of the hips. I have 0.00% experience trinaining pointers, but I'm begiing my research for when my lab gets to old to join me. What are the rear collars for?Here is my 2.75 yr old shorthiar named “Cora”. We finished her FC AFC and Master Hunt title this spring. She also has a SHR retrieving title we finished last fall. She won the Arkansas Classic Amateur NBHA Trial, and was runner up at the GSPCA National Amateur Gundog Championship this year.
FC AFC SHR Blazin Cora of Dixie MH
View attachment 11120View attachment 11121View attachment 11122View attachment 11123
gps- that is an e-collar. I like to use one on the belly strictly for "whoa" and steadiness. I do this to eliminate confusion since a stimulation on the neck could mean a multitude of different things. (Whoa, come, leave it, etc..) A dog's natural instinct when stimulated on the belly is to raise up their back end and essentially stop. Therefore, when they feel that zing on the belly, they know exactly what that means and there's no question. I now have control of that dog when they are out say 200 yards. I can correct on an honoring situation, a bird flushing, or maybe even before they cross the road with oncoming traffic when they need to stop. Very powerful tool when applied correctly. (These are all pictures I took during training so she has the belly collar on.)im curious about the collars strapped in front of the hips. I have 0.00% experience trinaining pointers, but I'm begiing my research for when my lab gets to old to join me. What are the rear collars for?
TIA