hunting dogs Guide

Hunting Dogs Used In The Netherlands Section


 

Hunting Dogs Used In The Netherlands Navigation


|

Hunting Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Hunting Dogs Names |
Dog Box Hunting Dogs |
Hunting Sporting Dogs |
Hunting Prairie Dogs South Dakota |
Hunting Tracking Collars For Dogs |
First Aid For Hunting Dogs |
Canes Venatici The Hunting Dogs |
Deer Hunting Dogs |
Griffon Hunting Dogs |
Kinds Of Hunting Dogs |
Dogs Louisiana Hog Hunting |
Trained Hunting Deer Dogs For Sale |
Photos Of Hunting Dogs |
Hunting Louisiana Hog Dogs |
Hunting Coy Dogs |

List of hunting-dogs Articles


Hunting Dogs Used In The Netherlands Best seller

Buy it Now!





Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on hunting-dogs
First Name:
Email:



Main Hunting Dogs Used In The Netherlands sponsors

 

Latest Hunting Dogs Used In The Netherlands link added

...

Submit your link on Hunting Dogs Used In The Netherlands!



Training the Versatile Hunting Dog
-By: Chuck Johnson
-Price: $24.95 (New)

Little Lions, Bull Baiters & Hunting Hounds: A History of Dog Breeds
-Price: $9.19 (New)
$6.79 (Used)

The Labrador Shooting Dog
-By: Mike Gould
-Price:
$82.98 (Used)

The Training and Care of the Versatile Hunting Dog
-By: Sigbot Winterhelt, Edward D. Bailey
-Price: $15.50 (New)
$14.89 (Used)

Best Way to Train Your Gun Dog: The Delmar Smith Method
-By: Bill Tarrant
-Price: $13.12 (New)
$10.99 (Used)

Hunting Dogs
-By: F. Philip Rice & John I. Dahl
-Price:
$2.50 (Used)

Training Your Pointing Dog for Hunting and Home
-By: Richard Weaver
-Price: $13.53 (New)
$13.86 (Used)

 

Welcome to hunting dogs Guide

 

Hunting Dogs Used In The Netherlands Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

Hunting Dogs

from:

Many sportsmen have dreamed of owning and training a hunting dog. They are sometimes
better companions than man. They will not desert you in trying times. They are useful
companions on your forays out into the fields.

Training these dogs can be sometimes exasperating. Females usually respond better to
training than male dogs. Some dogs only want to please you Some dogs only want to drive
you to your wits end. I have owned several springer spaniels and several other birdy dogs.

One springer was a joy to have and to train. She tried extra hard to please me and learned
commands very eagerly and quickly. Within a matter of months I had taught this dog
everything that I could teach it out of every book at my disposal. We were fast friends and
she never did anything to cause my blood pressure to go up. I took her to the field without
the benefit of a shock collar. In fact I never had to use those collars on this dog. She was a
pleasure to be around and a joy to have in my family. Her manners were impeccable around
children and other family members. She died suddenly one day. I came home from work
one day and she lay dead at my back door step. I wept over this dog's death and still grieve
over her to this day. It was like losing a member of the family.

I obtained another springer spaniel to fill the void that Chelsea left in our lives. I chose a male
springer from a breeder and took him home. This dog was obstinate from the very
beginning. I had never used a shock collar on Chelsea and figured that this dog would be
just as easy to train. Was I ever wrong. The first time that I took the dog to the field he
showed no interest in hunting and refused to obey my simplest command. He even refused
to walk at my side. He locked his legs and refused to move. I started the dog out with a 22
pistol because I did not own a starter pistol. I was in the midst of my training regimen and
was on the verge of a stroke when I heard several gunshots near to me. I could not figure out
who could be shooting this close to the dog and I. I looked around and did not see a soul in
sight. I happened to look down at my feet and observed 6 small holes in the dirt not two
inches from the end of my toes. I took that dog back home and never tried to train him
again. He has made a wonderful family dog and is great with the kids.

Max got cancer. I treated him the best way that I could. Everyone told me to put him down.
I did not have the heart to do this. I let him live and die in his own time. I next obtained a
weimaraner male puppy. His dad weighed 95 pounds and I thought that this dog would be
good protection for my wife and myself. The trying times began. He tore my whole back
yard up. He ate the siding off of my house. He invaded the neighbor's yards and made
foraging runs with the spoils left at my back door. I was urged to buy an electric fence in
order to keep him from straying all over the neighborhood. After a few training sessions I
bought a shock collar in order to properly train him. This dog is immune to everything. I even
began to be convinced that he appreciated training sessions with the shock collar. I read in
a book that one-third of weimaraner owners give the dogs up before they reach maturity.

Behavioral problems are the number one complaint against these dogs.

I was ready to give him back to the dog rescue squad when I happened to observe him
through the back window on point at a squirrel. This dog still had a chance. All was
forgiven. I forgot the past and continued with the training regimen. None of my neighbors will
speak to me except in angry tones. The family next door has had to replace a set of towels

used after time spent swimming in their pool. I found a brand new mop at my doorstep
yesterday. There is still hope. On excursions out into the woods the dog seems to have a
keen nose when confronted with scent left from deer and coyotes. He has a biting problem.

My arms are bloody from trying to pet him on occasion. My wife says that he is still a
puppy and that he will outgrow these annoyances. I know that somewhere in the recesses of
that hard head lives the heart of a great hunting dog. I just wish he would stop hunting for
play things in my neighbors back yards.

Steve Graham is an avid hunter and fisherman and shares his experiences and knowledge with others.

http://buckskinnews.blogspot.com/

http://goodstuffintexas.blogspot.com/

http://huntn-n-fishn.blogspot.com/




Other Hunting Dogs Used In The Netherlands related Articles

Dogs Hunting
How To Train A Hunting Dog
Hunting Dogs For Sale In Georgia
Hunting With Dogs
Hog Hunting With Dogs

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Hunting Dogs Used In The Netherlands News

No relevant info was found on this topic.

 

Warning: fopen(./cache/hunting-dogs-used-in-the-netherlands.html) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/letsgohu/public_html/dogs/datas/pages.php on line 105

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/letsgohu/public_html/dogs/datas/pages.php on line 106

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/letsgohu/public_html/dogs/datas/pages.php on line 107