THE 225 MILE U TURN

walk213

Active member

I am not sure how to get better with in the field medical treament?

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I can recall almost every hunt that Echo and I have experienced over the last 5 years. There are some hunts however that stand out because something remarkable occurs. Most often it is Echo doing something so tremendous that the moment is emblazoned in my mind forever.

On this cold December day, Echo and I took the long drive to our favorite farm in Wray, Colorado. The plan was to meet up with a good friend and his dog by mid-morning. I know the area well, and I wanted to hunt a piece of land that we had not hit too many times over the last few years. The cows had not been let into both the north and southwest corners, so the cover circling the corn field was dense enough to hold birds. The wind was blowing over 10 mph from the northeast, so we started our walk from the opposite corner. Echo and I took a circuitous route to the end of the southwest corner so we hopefully would catch a pheasant napping. Once we got 20 yards out from the combination of grass and tumbleweeds, Echo started to get birdy. While I knew that we were in business, I was feeling a bit groggy from the long drive. When the rooster busted 15 yards to my right, I struggled to square up to the speedy bird. Two shots later, Echo paused her run as she realized that I had missed. My apology was heard, and we continued our work along the edge of the corn field. Echo will point when a bird freezes, and just moments after my failure, she stopped in her tracks. When she suddenly popped up, it caused the rooster to take flight. One shot of HEVI-METAL #4 knocked the bird out of the air.

With a bird in the vest, we continued our walk north into the next corner. There is tumbleweed filled ditches that surround this part of the field. Many times, the birds will evade our pursuit by carefully navigating these channels. About halfway through the middle of the northwest corner, Echo started to move with a purpose. While no birds took flight, I believed that she was pursuing more than one of the targeted species. As we approached the four rung barbed wire fence that abutted a ditch, Echo elevated into beast mode. Fueled by the scent of our quarry, my dog exploded through the bottom rung, but she caught a buckle of her chest protector on a single barb. That contact caused the entire vest to tear off her body. Once I put the fragments of the material in my pack, we started to work both sides of the ditch heading east. Echo remained hot but were not able to get the runners to fly.

My friend Oneal finally arrived, and he and Marley took the north side of the tree line that paralleled the two ditches we had just been hunting. As we walked west, Echo became excited as the northeast wind told her that birds were still present. Once Echo stopped and turned to our right, a rooster got up from the ditch and flew across the road. My first shot was behind the bird, but my next round knocked the bird to the ground. Unfortunately, the long shot was not lethal, and the speedy cock ran through the ditch and under the first fence. Echo was in full stride as she circumvented the lowest wire. She tore across the northwest corner just a few yards behind the bird. As the pheasant cut left it went under a second and then a third barbed wire fence. Echo tackled the bird, and headed back to me with the rooster in her mouth. After grabbing the bird, I noticed that my hand was covered in blood. It only took a few seconds to realize that Echo’s ear was split in half, and blood was gushing everywhere. It took me 30 minutes to slow the bleeding, and make the decision to head home. Almost 4 hours later, we arrived at the veterinarian, and Echo was stitched up.

This was the first major injury Echo suffered in all of our days spent in the field. Unfortunately, it would not be the last. On our first hunting trip after her ear had healed, Echo tore her knee open at some point during the day. The wounds Echo suffered shook me up. I thought I was prepared for handling my dog’s in-field ordeals. I wasn’t, and I am not sure how I am going improve my veterinarian skills.
 
I keep alcohol, super glue and a staple gun to mend any bad skin tares. Also carry drugs for my dog in case she gets a bad cut. Have not had to use the staple gun yet. Last year one of our dogs got something jammed up her nose and she just kept sneezing and sneezing. We could see it but couldn't get it out. there was a vet in the town we were staying in but he had covid when we needed him. The dog finally cleared the obstruction but it wasn't pleasant knowing it could get bad.

I have had a few hunt ending injuries to the dog. All involved a fence of some sort or another. Last year it was me that went down on the first morning with a back injury, which I am very prone to, that kept me horizontal in bed for all but the last day and I should have stayed in bed the last day too. It took almost 6 months to fully recover. Hopefully this year we will have better luck. Driving two days one way to stay in bed all week in SD was not my idea of a vacation. So looking forward to the hunt this year.
 
I didn't need to see the pic, I knew Echo was a lab after reading your post.

I second SJohn's post, and I'll raise a tube of EMT Gel in my shooting vest dog first aid kit. We also carry Gerber Dime multi-tools. They are a small, light weight tool that has both a really nice small needle nose pliers and tweezers. I can't tell you how often we've pulled quills, cactus spines, and thorns from both the Wrecking Crew and ourselves with them. It is such a handy tool that I carry one not just bird hunting but every day.

BTW, this is what was left of my YLM upland machine Harley's Browning vest after hitting the bottom strand of a barb wire fence with a nose full of hot bird scent a couple years ago. Even with the vest taking most of the damage we had to patch him up a bit with EMT Gel, but Harley being Harley, he would have kept on hunting either way. The Browning vest served it's purpose, but I replaced it with a much more protective Cuga Vest...
 

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I keep alcohol, super glue and a staple gun to mend any bad skin tares. Also carry drugs for my dog in case she gets a bad cut. Have not had to use the staple gun yet. Last year one of our dogs got something jammed up her nose and she just kept sneezing and sneezing. We could see it but couldn't get it out. there was a vet in the town we were staying in but he had covid when we needed him. The dog finally cleared the obstruction but it wasn't pleasant knowing it could get bad.

I have had a few hunt ending injuries to the dog. All involved a fence of some sort or another. Last year it was me that went down on the first morning with a back injury, which I am very prone to, that kept me horizontal in bed for all but the last day and I should have stayed in bed the last day too. It took almost 6 months to fully recover. Hopefully this year we will have better luck. Driving two days one way to stay in bed all week in SD was not my idea of a vacation. So looking forward to the hunt this year.
Thank you for the insights.

I called 3 vets in the general area. All were closed. There was so much blood coming from her ear, my only focus was to stop it.

Echo has experienced the weed in the nose issues. The vet had to go deep in order to pull out the 2 inch twig.

I need training on in field medical situations.
 
I didn't need to see the pic, I knew Echo was a lab after reading your post.

I second SJohn's post, and I'll raise a tube of EMT Gel in my shooting vest dog first aid kit. We also carry Gerber Dime multi-tools. They are a small, light weight tool that has both a really nice small needle nose pliers and tweezers. I can't tell you how often we've pulled quills, cactus spines, and thorns from both the Wrecking Crew and ourselves with them. It is such a handy tool that I carry one not just bird hunting but every day.

BTW, this is what was left of my YLM upland machine Harley's Browning vest after hitting the bottom strand of a barb wire fence with a nose full of hot bird scent a couple years ago. Even with the vest taking most of the damage we had to patch him up a bit with EMT Gel, but Harley being Harley, he would have kept on hunting either way. The Browning vest served it's purpose, but I replaced it with a much more protective Cuga Vest...
We are on the same page. Cuga vests on both labs this season.

I have all of the equipment. I need the tutelage from a pro. YouTube videos are not enough.
 
We are on the same page. Cuga vests on both labs this season.

I have all of the equipment. I need the tutelage from a pro. YouTube videos are not enough.

EMT Gel story from quite a few years back. A guy was hunting down by Valley City ND and his dog ran full on into a bottom strand and cut it's throat. The hunter squeezed an entire tube of EMT Gel into the gaping wound, applied pressure, and like you did with Echo made an emergency run to a vet. That dog survived what should have been a fatal injury.

Vets (and ER docs if you use it on a person) hate the stuff as it's difficult to clean out of a wound, but uniformly recognize it's lifesaving ability to control serious bleeding...
 
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