Greetings from Swedish Lapland! I have a year-and-a-half old brittany that I use for hunting birds here in Sweden in the forest and in the mountains (capercaillie, grouse, and ptarmigan). Bird hunting is pretty big in Sweden, and from what I understand we have a different way of hunting with our dogs than you do in America or they do in continental Europe. Here when the dog is on point for birds, we train them to flush out the birds on command while we stand behind them ("Avance!"), then when the bird flies off we tell the dog to sit, and when the dog sits down we shoot the bird and then tell the dog to go retrieve the bird (if the dog has come that far in training). The hardest part of this is getting the dog to sit down immediately while running full speed toward some birds that I just told him to flush out, and we don't shoot the birds unless the dog has sat down so that we don't risk shooting the dog. Some people aren't very consistent with this or maybe don't care to follow this way of doing things here, but they're considered to not have well-trained dogs.
Here's a clip of ptarmigan hunting in the mountains near where I live with some very well-trained dogs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yM16jIxHuKg
Anyway, I've seen some American bird hunting clips on YouTube that seem to show a very different way of hunting with bird dogs than we have in Sweden (I've only watched clips of brittanys), so I joined this forum to see if I might be able to get an explanation from the hunters here about what you do in America once the dog is on point? From what I've seen, you walk in front of the dog when the dog is on point, kick up the birds yourself, then the birds fly up, and you shoot and the dog chases after the birds once they fly up. Is that right? Or is it like here where what people do and what people SHOULD do may be different things? From a Swedish point of view I like the fact that you're scaring up the birds and shooting with the dog behind you, which then requires less training of the dog and minimizes the risk of shooting the dog, but I'd love to hear from you as to what you do and why!
