Grouse Dogs
Excellent analysis by Nimrod above. And he proves my point about why I prefer FBECS for grouse hunting, which we do 50+ days a year, in UP North MI, 'da UP and WI too. Thank you.
The pattern and pace of good field Cockers simply works better in the "thick and gnarly places" where 'ol ruff likes to hang out. They hunt to the gun better in the overgrown clearcuts, squeeze into and out of blowdowns etc, and generally keep in touch better in the grouse woods. Have hunted xxx days, over many years, gunning grouse over both field Cockers and Springers and have seen the differences in the grouse woods. Up Close and Personal.
Here are a couple of examples:
Exhibit A: Grouse Camp in Maine
This was a few years ago. A guy with a "Great" English Springer ,from Boston, was there too. He had a male ESS, black and white, who weighed 80#, had a coat like a sheepdog, and a gait like a Clydesdale draft horse. The dog didn't hunt a lick, simply trotted a few yards ahead of his master on the two track and kept looking back to make sure he didn't get lost. That guy hunted by himself the rest of the week.
Exhibit B: Grouse Camp in 'da UP last year
A hunting buddy and I make the trip every year. We were joined one day by a guy from WI with a FBESS. We heard at breakfast what a fantastic grouse dog this was. She was on the small side, almost all white, and skinny. Her name was "Lovely Lady". His wife named her.
The guy wanted badly to show us how great his dog was, so we let him put her down first. We went to a known cover, waaaaay out in the woods, a 15yo aspen cut and thick. He put a bell on her, TG. She took off like a rocket and soon her bell faded from hearing. The guy started yelling and screaming and running through the woods after his dog; "Lovely Lady, Lovely Lady, Lovely Lady,........" Shot the gun, several times, no "LL" showed up.
So our grouse hunt quickly became a "lost dog' hunt. No small matter, compounded by the known wolf pack in that area of 'da UP.
She probably got into birds quickly and she chased them to ........... We had two trucks so we split up and started cruising the two tracks and few roads in the area. Happily, she was found, uninjured, a couple of hours later. The guy immediately left for home (I think he called his wife)
But we wasted a perfectly fine morning and a wonderful grouse cover on a bolter.
So I'll take hunting Cockers for hunting 'ol ruff anytime.