Would a working cocker spaniel be right for you?
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Here's how to overcome a small dog's retrieving problems!
Would you like to appear on our site? We offer sponsored articles and advertising to put you in front of our readers. Find out more.Small working cocker spaniels are becoming increasingly popular out in the field. Their size has pluses and minuses.
Most small cockers will overcome the problem by themselves. Just give them plenty of practice on cold cock birds and then follow up with plenty of retrieves on freshly shot birds.
Generally the little working cockers develop their own technique of bringing a bird back to hand. But not always; some dogs will continually fumble and mess about with retrieves regardless of the amount of practice they get.
However if a dog can almost close its mouth on a retrieve it will tend to hold things a lot tighter than if it was trying to carry something with its mouth almost fully open.
So I have devised a way of persuading small dogs to pick a pheasant either by its neck or a wing. It may not be so tidy but it stops the quarry being messed with.
There are two ways.
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You can experiment by wrapping cling film around the pheasant’s body. This is useful if the dog has learnt how to stick its nose inside the open end of the bag and pull the pheasant out by the tail. Cling film can be wrapped tightly around the pheasant to stop this happening.
After practising the above for a good length of time, practise without the plastic on and usually the dog will still turn the pheasant to gain a hold on the neck or wing where it can get a good grip and bring it back. If the dog shows any inclination not to do this then there’s only one solution – go back to using the wrapped or bagged pheasant, and start again.
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