Jim is turning out to be quite a bird dog. I've had him out several times this season hunting both chukar and pheasant. Chukar seem to be a bit easier on him than these cagey old roosters. The chukar have been holding a little better, and even if they do run a little in front of the dog, you can usually put them up. When a dog points chukar you generally get some form of bird-work; even if it's chasing them across a hillside and having them flush wild on you. Roosters just seem to disappear; vanish. It's aggravating. Prior to pointing this old bird Jim had several very staunch points which had me running to the front of him and flushing like a mad man; to no avail. He was pointing with such intensity I thought a bird was there; hen or rooster I just wanted to flush him a bird. After trying to kick a bird out for a minute or so, I'd release him, and off we'd go hunting again. When this rooster hit the ground I cut Jim loose so he could get his mouth on the bird; he pounced on it, he mouthed and pawed at it, he snarfed it and got a general nose-full. Based on his reaction after reaching the bird, it seemed to be just what he needed......
Saturday, December 26, 2020
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
Pheasants are truly aggravating for a young bird dog. I have had success with dogs that learn to relocate when the bird moves... often a bird moves, dog relocates and establishes point, bird moves again, etc. Often the bird will reach cover that he will hold in and we get a flush and (hopefully) a successful shot.
You're right Mike. But Jim has so much point right now he hasn't made that connection. We'll see if he makes the transition next season....
Post a Comment