There is a knack to getting educated roosters pointed. When your dog gets that knack, you can get by with not having it more. First and foremost, you have to be quiet. In WWII, they found in Britain that pheasants could hear cannon fire from 500 miles away. Transfer that to door slamming, hollering, and all the other clatter you hear from some groups, and the birds have the edge. Second, knowing where and how the birds will be/act is important. Being off by 60 yards or more may be the difference between your thinking there were no birds in the field and having most or all of a limit when you leave. DON'T park where you think the birds ought to be. Park one or two sides away and try to plan it to come at the birds from down wind. Read the dog. I've seen far too many handlers grabbing for their whistle to tell the dog to stay with the group when the dog was telling them that the birds weren't staying in front of the group. A good dog will adjust to the circuitous antics of an educated rooster, let him! Trust the dog. If he points and it seems unproductive, the bird moved, the dog wasn't lying. Tap him on the head and keep at it. I've tracked running roosters well over a mile before they screwed up. Then the responsibility shifts to you! Lots of folks teach their dogs to be staunch and hold to shot and flush. With roosters, I want the dog to not only think, but I want him to cheat when it means he gets the bird pointed and I get to take a shot. If he's honest, the transition back to more gentlemanly birds will be an easy one! Oh yeah, don't expect to get most of them pointed. If it were that easy, we wouldn't chase them!