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- From: bigdog@bones.et.byu.edu (Dan Canfield)
- Subject: Re: German Short-haired Pointers
- Organization: Brigham Young University, Provo UT USA
- Date: 25 Jan 93 07:39:54 CST
- Approved: hunting@osnome.che.wisc.edu
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.073954.19383@doug.cae.wisc.edu>
- Lines: 61
- Originator: hunting@osnome.che.wisc.edu
- References: <1993Jan21.105211.20615@doug.cae.wisc.edu>
-
- In article <1993Jan21.105211.20615@doug.cae.wisc.edu> robert_walton@NeXT.COM (Robert Walton) writes:
- >
- >I went to the Cow Palace Sport and Boat Show yesterday and saw some German
- >Short-haired Pointers from Nelson's Kennels. My wife and I are looking
- >for a dog (not now but soon) that is smart, good natured, good with kids,
- >clean, doesn't shed, good in the house, and (for me) will also be a good
- >upland hunting dog. Of course my wife could care less about this last
- >item, and she is pushing for a yellow lab. Good retreiver, but that's not
- >the type of hunting I do. I went pheasant hunting with a friend and his
- >black lab once, and it worked out O.K., but the dog is hardly an ideal
- >upland dog.
- >
- >Thoughts on (or better yet experience with) the German Pointers? How do
- >they do on the above criteria? Yellow labs? Other breeds? Advice
- >appreciated.
- >
-
- A German Short-haired Pointer was the first dog I ever owned. A
- friend of the family gave him to me when he moved. He was well
- trained and I loved to hunt with him.
-
- Things I experienced where that he was VERY mild mannered. I don't
- remember him ever even growling at another person. He loved to play
- by rolling around in the grass with me and was great company when I
- went hunting(sounds funny doesn't it?). I can't tell you how he was
- around kids, because he was never around them. I was the youngest and
- the only one left at home when I got him. He was a fairly smart dog
- and seemed to learn quick even though I got him when he was 3 years
- old. He learned quickly where to sleep, that he couldn't go to the
- road, and not to bark at night. He was fairly hyper when we would go
- hunting for the first few times, but I think it was because he hadn't
- been very much. I got hime when I was 12 and we hunted every other
- day until I was 18 and he died. After a few times out and a couple of
- stern talking too's, he calmed down and turned into a great hunting
- dog.
-
- The only concerns I would have would be the size of the bread for
- being in the house. My dog was fairly tall and my mom often said he
- was too big to be in the house although he often ended up laying at
- her feet in front of the fire. Also, make sure that a pointer is what
- you want. When mine would go on point, there wasn't anything except
- for the bird to flush that would bring him off point. This was a
- hassle sometimes becuase I would hunt thick briars and he would go in
- and go on point and I would have to climb in and flush the bird. It
- was actually kind of funny sometimes.
-
- My dog was an upland game hunter. He could out perform any of my
- friends dogs when hunting pheasant/pine hens/ or the likes. I did
- teach him how to water fowl hunt, and he learned how to sit still in a
- duck blind and how to swim out and retreive a duck for me.
-
- I don't have a hunting dog now, but if I were to buy another one, it
- would be a German Short-hair.
-
-
- Dan Canfield
- bigdog@bones.et.byu.edu
-
- DoD #0071,RP90
- '89 FJ1200
- '89 Indy707
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- "Excuss me while I kiss the sky" - Jimi Hendrix
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