I'm sure most of us have had at least one outstanding dog. Let's hear about them. I have been fortunate enough to have 2 of them. First one was a French Brittany. She was great on Grouse, but outstanding on Quail. When she pointed you could tell if it was a single or a covey. If it was a Covey she would look away. She loved to hunt singles after the covey flush. Second one was an American Brittany. He was an excellent tracker. We almost never lost a hit bird. On one retrieve in KS, the bird dropped a foot and that dog went almost a quarter of a mile and brought the bird back. Damn I missed them...
Birdman2 said ---
All Brits.
Starting out 45 years ago I had no experience training bird dogs. Deer hunting buddies did, and I got the disease.
My dogs -
1. Duchess 1978 - Only hunted ruff grouse in mountains of East TN. Late 70s. She attacked a skunk one time. Not a pleasant drive back home in my Chevy II. She taught me how little I knew about bird dogs.
2. Lady 1994 - pointed and retrieved my first KS pheasant in a blizzard maybe 1992.
3. Dakota (1) 1997 - Big dog out of Georgia. Taught me a lot about SD roosters.
4. Bandit 1999 - out of Dakota (1) and Lady -- A decade of pheasants and ruff grouse. Nothing flashy, just solid dependable and always ready.
5. Dakota (2) 2006 - Daughter of Nolan's Last Bullet, best instinctive dog I've ever had, extremely athletic, made it look so easy. Lost her way to early.
6. Frankie 2004 - Bought her on a whim, probably the least I ever paid of a puppy. Bloodline was not impressive, smallest Brittany I've had, but she was solid and had lots of natural style.
7. Bear 2008 - out of Dakota (2) and Bandit, never outstanding, just solid. Best memory was in SD hunting some grass next to a picked corn field just dirt. We knocked a rooster down that hit hard on the dirt, looked very dead. Continued hunting the rest of the grass to the corn field, crossed the fence and expected to just pick the rooster up, but could not find him. Started looking back in the grass, then could not find Bear. Called, whistled - no Bear. We were more focused looking in the cover, not the corn which was just dirt. Happened to walk past a fresh gopher hole and there was Bear own the hole. His back end was about a foot below ground level. He started backing out of the hole with a dead rooster. Did not get a picture.
8. Kate 2013 - Daughter of Grand Junction Jake. She is still hunting great, but understandably slowing down. She is my grandsons' favorite.
9. Rocky 2013 - Son of Peter Gunn. Hunts much better alone.
10. Reece 2017 - Kate and Rocky pup. Will be my last. Sadly, in some ways at my age, he is by far the best I have ever had, well except for maybe retrieving. He retrieves halfway back then waits on me to come to him to get the bird. 20 years ago, that would have been a problem, not a problem now. I'm headed in that direction anyway.
Best Dog? Thats not a fair question. Good question, but not fair.
To me it's more about the heart and the time spent in SD together.
I have had more "best" bird dogs than I deserve.
Just as they deserved more time hunting and a better shooting partner.