What Should You Expect from Quality Gun Dog Training Programs?

Gun dog training programs are key components when it comes to training a puppy or older dog in the fine art of quail hunting or the perfect handling of other game birds that you harvest. Yet where can you find the right type of help? While plenty of kennels might hang out shingles that claim to assist with gun dog training programs, there are some features that are found only with high-quality facilities and expert trainers. Do you know what they are?

  • An introductory phase. Contrary to popular believe, your pointer puppy will not take to retrieving pheasants like butter to a biscuit. Instead, the noise of the hunt, the shots of the guns and the dogs that accompany other hunters are major distractions – even for a puppy that comes from a long bloodline of established gun dogs. A quality training program understands that it takes your puppy a little time to get used to the commotion as well as to the training collars and other hardware. We allow it to sniff things out and investigate to increase prey drive.
  • Owner perspective. Particularly if you are a newcomer to the sport yourself, you need a bit of a reality check. The romanticized images of the lone hunter with the dog carrying a perfectly presented duck during a dusk still shot are not really the reality. Instead, become familiar with the training levels other hunters have reached, see what dogs in your puppy’s age group are accomplishing and find out how other owners train their dogs to enhance their natural instincts. This is why group setting classes are a great way to start the training process.
  • Experienced trainers. This is where the kennel with the haphazard shingle is the most different from the well-established gun dog training program. Experts in the discipline are thin on the ground. It is not enough for the training director to be a hobbyist who has partially trained a gun dog and has “seen it done” plenty of times. No, what you want is the professional who has been part of the training scene for years – preferably decades – and is training gun dogs for your type of hunting and not just focusing on passing tests.

Since you are wondering how to train a gun dog, talk to the friendly folks at Valhalla Bijou Hunt Club & Kennels. Contact us today for in-depth information on kennel rates, policies, reservations or just to tour the kennels for a closer look at what makes us different from the rest.

Range

I’m addressing a question I get asked on a daily basis by clients, “How far should I let my dog range”. This is a reasonable question.  First I’ll define range.  This is the distance that your dog hunts in front of you.  Let’s not over complicate this simple idea.  I could break this down to breed specifics, talk about pointers vs. flushers, scenting conditions, wind directions, cover density, ect.  For the sake of discussion I’m going to keep this as basic as possible.

I put a great deal of time into training a gun dog.  I start each pup in a specific manner and methodically move them through the training process, with the ultimate goal being a finished gun dog.  That being said, how far should we let them range?  Simple, if I’m hunting and my dog is flushing birds out of gun range, the dog is too far out in front of me.   If I’m hunting and the dog is pointing at greater distances, let’s say 200 yard out, sticking birds, holding them rock steady until the flush and shot, and making flawless retrieves, then that is a range the dog is capable of handling.

I think a better question to ask is “how do I control my dog’s range”? Whether you have a 40 yard bootlicker or a 200 yard rocket you still need to maintain control and adapt to conditions.  I preach to my clients, that many people have sporting breeds but very few have hunting dogs and the difference is how the puppy is started from day one.  So let’s remember the basics. We start off with every pup dragging a check cord.  We do this for a reason.  Yard work is the foundation for every future gun dog. 

If we do not lay the foundation, range will be just one of the many problems you have with your dog.   Maybe you need to go back to quartering drills to bring them into check.  Maybe some reinforcement with the whoa command or sit to the whistle.  All the simple drills we spent endless hours training before we transitioned the dog to the electronic collar need to be revisited.  Remember guys, we should be able to drive our dogs through the field like high dollar sports cars. When a command is given we require an immediate response from our dogs or they are instantly corrected.  So my general rule is I give my dogs enough rope to hang themselves.  If they are doing great and sticking points I let them range.  If they need to be brought in a bit we go back to our quartering and whoa work and the basic foundation we laid in the beginning. 

Meet Buck

Hello,

My name is Buck and my dad accidentally fed me too much Dog Chow this summer. One day he looked at me and realized that I wouldn’t be able to keep up with him during hunting season. So Dad sent me to Doggie Fat Camp at Valhalla.

Through a high protein diet and lots of daily exercise I hope to drop 20# over the next month. You can track my progress on a weekly basis. Wish me luck!!!

Buck's Signature

8/7/04 ~ 84#

8/17/04 ~ 83# but looking leaner!

Doggy Fat Camp

Attention all supple canines!

Do you have a hard time going between meals? Is the Jenny Craig diet not working out for you? Well don’t go away; I have a story to tell.

Doggy Fat Camp TestimonialMy name is Lady and I was overweight. I had a hard time getting off the couch to go hunting. Once out in the field, I was winded after 5 minutes and ready to take a nap. As if that wasn’t enough, my owners referred to me as Buddha and our friends at the trials called me Table Top. I was feeling pretty low.

So you ask yourself, what is a dog to do? The answer is

RUSSELL’S DOGGY FAT CAMP!!!!

That’s right; Russell has a doggy fat camp. In just over 2 weeks I went from 75 lbs and doggie size 15 to under 65 lbs and a doggie size 8. Russell was in charge of exercise and Stephanie was my personal dietitian. I spent every day being exercised and was put on the Bil-Jack diet.

When Mom and Dad came to pick me up, I was a whole new dog and they didn’t recognize me!!! I was so pleased.

I felt just like a puppy again!!

So if you need help shedding those unwanted pounds in time for the hunting season, see Russell and Stephanie. They are here to pump you up!!!

Lady Testimonial