Challenging the blind in a hunting situation
Posted: Mon Jan 07, 2008 3:42 pm
Here’s a real life hunting/training scenario. Dog is 23 months old. She hunted last season but this is her first year to handle. We’re still pretty rough.
Duck is hit and sails down about 125 yards out. It’s mostly an open field but with some grass/cover. The line to the blind goes through a window between a clump of willows on the left which is about 75 yards out and a pretty much straight line of willows down the right side. There is a straight line to the bird between the willows on both sides. The “window†is probably 25 yards wide. It’s splash water. No swimming. Cripples have been heading to the willows like cats to catnip. So I guess the dog expects the bird to be in the cover somewhere.
I line her up and she takes a decent initial line but then caves left and wants to head to the clump of willows. Whistle. Give her a right back. She overcompensates and heads to the willows on the right. Whistle. Left back. Heads back to the willows on the left. Ping pongs a couple more times and I eventually have to walk out to her and give her a back from right in front of her. Which she finally takes and gets the duck. I don’t know how long the whole fiasco took but it seemed like 10 minutes.
As I’m out in the open, I flare a few ducks that might have worked had I been hidden. I was hunting with my father and a friend of his and I didn’t want to disrupt their hunting time with my training session. What else could I have done? (1) Wait until we’re through hunting to try to get the duck. I was afraid that the cripple would have swum off by then. (2) Line the dog up left of the “window†and left of the clump of willows. Send her past the cover and then try a right over to the bird. In hindsight, that seems to be the least disruptive and quickest way to get the bird. But then she’s not learning to deal with the factors, I would presume. And she’s also learning that the “line†is not always the direct shot to the bird.
While hunting, when if ever would you give the dog a false line and avoid challenging the trouble?
Any other comments?
Duck is hit and sails down about 125 yards out. It’s mostly an open field but with some grass/cover. The line to the blind goes through a window between a clump of willows on the left which is about 75 yards out and a pretty much straight line of willows down the right side. There is a straight line to the bird between the willows on both sides. The “window†is probably 25 yards wide. It’s splash water. No swimming. Cripples have been heading to the willows like cats to catnip. So I guess the dog expects the bird to be in the cover somewhere.
I line her up and she takes a decent initial line but then caves left and wants to head to the clump of willows. Whistle. Give her a right back. She overcompensates and heads to the willows on the right. Whistle. Left back. Heads back to the willows on the left. Ping pongs a couple more times and I eventually have to walk out to her and give her a back from right in front of her. Which she finally takes and gets the duck. I don’t know how long the whole fiasco took but it seemed like 10 minutes.
As I’m out in the open, I flare a few ducks that might have worked had I been hidden. I was hunting with my father and a friend of his and I didn’t want to disrupt their hunting time with my training session. What else could I have done? (1) Wait until we’re through hunting to try to get the duck. I was afraid that the cripple would have swum off by then. (2) Line the dog up left of the “window†and left of the clump of willows. Send her past the cover and then try a right over to the bird. In hindsight, that seems to be the least disruptive and quickest way to get the bird. But then she’s not learning to deal with the factors, I would presume. And she’s also learning that the “line†is not always the direct shot to the bird.
While hunting, when if ever would you give the dog a false line and avoid challenging the trouble?
Any other comments?