Jawilor
Active member
I started the thread about a dogs "aha" moment which was specific to my 2 1/2 year old female ESS. This is her 2nd full season and she is very good at finding dead birds, but is still figuring out the live birds. I also hunt with my 5 year old male black lab and it took him a couple of seasons to figure it out.
We hunted all day last Sunday, mostly on public, and we put up about 12 hens which were mostly sitting tight. Even though I didn't see a single rooster, this was a great experience for her as she found and flushed several birds. We hit some private ground in the afternoon and she got real birdy along a creek bank and a rooster ended up flushing out of range. She is slowly putting it together.
For us, this has been a challenging season for roosters on public ground and not an ideal classroom setting for a learning dog. That said, I was in the same boat as you the last year and a half, but she has consistently made progress which is what I want from a young dog.
One option for you would be to obtain some live pigeons and keep them in your vest while hunting, plant them when she's not looking, then call her over and make her stay in the area until she finds and flushes it. A few sessions of this should help her tremendously. Don't give up on her as long as you're seeing progress.
We hunted all day last Sunday, mostly on public, and we put up about 12 hens which were mostly sitting tight. Even though I didn't see a single rooster, this was a great experience for her as she found and flushed several birds. We hit some private ground in the afternoon and she got real birdy along a creek bank and a rooster ended up flushing out of range. She is slowly putting it together.
For us, this has been a challenging season for roosters on public ground and not an ideal classroom setting for a learning dog. That said, I was in the same boat as you the last year and a half, but she has consistently made progress which is what I want from a young dog.
One option for you would be to obtain some live pigeons and keep them in your vest while hunting, plant them when she's not looking, then call her over and make her stay in the area until she finds and flushes it. A few sessions of this should help her tremendously. Don't give up on her as long as you're seeing progress.