dakotasj
Well-known member
Awesome!Nice! Great to have those moments on video. Watching the dogs do their thing is super fun!
Here's our latest.
Awesome!Nice! Great to have those moments on video. Watching the dogs do their thing is super fun!
Here's our latest.
Great video A5! Does Ace always stop prior to him flushing? If so that is pretty awesome, love his energy and excitement you can tell he love hunting and pleasing you. I dont know how many times I've been down on myself for poor shooting in the fields and stop to hunt a ditch and find on e with birds and tag out quickly. They can your day in a heart beat. Thanks for sharing.Nice! Great to have those moments on video. Watching the dogs do their thing is super fun!
Here's our latest.
No, he doesn't always pause, but he does it more than my previous dogs did. And that last one on this video was very uncommon. His longest pause ever.Great video A5! Does Ace always stop prior to him flushing? If so that is pretty awesome, love his energy and excitement you can tell he love hunting and pleasing you. I dont know how many times I've been down on myself for poor shooting in the fields and stop to hunt a ditch and find on e with birds and tag out quickly. They can your day in a heart beat. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks! This was Ace's 3rd season. He'll be 3 in April. We don't train to a high level (as you can probably tell), but that's just how we roll. He's definitely improved, as you say, & nearly lives up to my personal expectations in every sense. Keeping track of me, staying closer, understanding that ultimately those birds go in MY vest. Recently he started occasionally stopping (briefly) to check my location WHEN HE'S ON A BIRD. To make sure I'm with him & that I understand something's up. That's something neither of my other dogs ever did, & it's pretty neat. We have a blast together!Nice video A5 and thanks for posting. I enjoy watching what I will call home-made videos, for lack of a better word, of a guy and his dog. The ditch angle was great for the camera to pick up Ace. Good job. I still get amazed how much nerve a rooster has to hold that tight with danger a few feet away. I've watched some of your other videos and it appears to me that Ace has improved this season at the idea that you and he are a team. He is a fun dog to hunt behind. Thanks for the vid.
I agree they roosters have nerves of steel. Interesting info about he rooster being able to release his tail feathers. This past year in SD i had two occurrences where we had a winged bird pinned and I reached down to grab them only to have they start moving, my slow reflexes both time came up with tails feathers and came out like a hot knife thru butter. It would not surprise me that they could do this.As for a rooster's nerve...they are amazing. Especially when you consider how jumpy they can be at other times. That last bird in the video came back without tail feathers, & I know Ace didn't pull them out chasing him down. I halfway suspect the bird may have ejected them immediately prior to flushing as a defense mechanism. Years ago, my first springer Walt was running down a wounded bird out on the open snow. He was a few feet behind the bird, closing quickly, & all of a sudden all the birds tail feathers just fell out onto the snow. An ornithologist told me they can eject them. I hadn't known that.
Per Dr. K.C. Jensen, Dept. of Wildlife & Fisheries at SDSU, in 2011.Eject them?? Kind of like a porky shooting quills?? Might be April 1st Remy. Not in my bird book. Put a smile on me.
The GWR is an amazing creature. Their will to survive & ability to do it are unsurpassed, in my book anyway.All hail GWR
Re-read my post from earlier this morning. It's what prompted my question to the expert I quoted above. I saw a rooster eject nearly every last tail feather with my dog in hot pursuit. No, not like a bunch of bottle rockets, but they fell out, all at once, as he was running, with zero outside force applied. Didn't save him that time though.Maybe extract easier, but not eject. Like a SxS. Still takes a mouthful of tail feathers to remove them. Talk to people that catch them at game farms or raise them. Never grab them by the tail, ruins the "trophy"
Yes, several times I've shot fully mature birds (possibly even 2nd year birds) who had 1 or both of the primary tail feathers (the 2 "long" ones) just growing back, only a few inches long. All other feathers appeared normal for a mature bird.On a quick search, I read that if feathers are "pulled out" (not broken-off) they will grow back...I didn't know that.
One more -- HopefullyOK, this old man may have gotten the first video to the point I would share. Quality of video and editing not too great. Hope video no. 2 is better or I guess I could be voted off the site.
Right click and open - I think.
https://gopro.com/v/V2RWzo765zRE0
Another great clip, dakotasj!! I am enamored by your pups and how they appear to be synchronized at times. Anyway, thanks so much for sharing!!One more -- Hopefully
Thanks! Rocky is 10 and is slowing down some. Reece is 3 and starting to figure things out. We are going to work on his retrieving during off season.Another great clip, dakotasj!! I am enamored by your pups and how they appear to be synchronized at times. Anyway, thanks so much for sharing!!