c_d
New member
I wanted to post this last week after our training session, and while things went a bit differently this week, they weren't all that different. I thought we were doing pretty. but the last two weeks practice on live birds left me a bit frustrated. it's more my fault that hers, but oh well.
1) don't cut corners when planting birds. Fillmore made a 90 degree turn right when she hit my foot scent, even tho the bird was downwind. nailed that sucker and flushed the bird while I was out of position. couldn't shoot anyways as it was a looooow flyer. she got it once it hit the barn. I thkn it was still dizzy.
2) knock that bird down when she does it right. Serves me right for missing the shot and her chasing a good couple hundred yards before she finally came back.
3) see #2. work on getting her STOPPED before she gets out 300 yds.
Maybe she was out of range, but I turned that collar up a notch. nothing. turned it up another notch. nothing. finally ran out of notches to go up. our yard work is fairly solid and MILD stimulation is all it takes. distracted recall seems to be fine when working around here. out in the field, a whole different story. I know there's a difference, but it shouldn't be that much. Maybe stim was too low before she got out of range?
4) hunting with a steady dog will be much more fun than not. Season is coming up soon here, so not sure if I'll get her steadied in time, but getting her to a dead stop to the whistle no matter what will sure make life easier, and huntin more fun.:cheers:
what about you guys? any new lessons learned from your recent training?
1) don't cut corners when planting birds. Fillmore made a 90 degree turn right when she hit my foot scent, even tho the bird was downwind. nailed that sucker and flushed the bird while I was out of position. couldn't shoot anyways as it was a looooow flyer. she got it once it hit the barn. I thkn it was still dizzy.
2) knock that bird down when she does it right. Serves me right for missing the shot and her chasing a good couple hundred yards before she finally came back.
3) see #2. work on getting her STOPPED before she gets out 300 yds.
4) hunting with a steady dog will be much more fun than not. Season is coming up soon here, so not sure if I'll get her steadied in time, but getting her to a dead stop to the whistle no matter what will sure make life easier, and huntin more fun.:cheers:
what about you guys? any new lessons learned from your recent training?