Quartering trouble

Post Reply
User avatar
isonychia
Rank: 5X Champion
Posts: 773
Joined: Wed Mar 02, 2011 10:35 am
Location: Southwestern Colorado

Quartering trouble

Post by isonychia » Wed Nov 02, 2011 8:49 am

My dog covers ground really well off-road, but if we are walking a road for grouse he tends to just run down the road, not covering much, if any, of the edges. So I started working on our quartering again. "This way" means to turn and I would run zig-zags with the checkcord saying this way at each turn. He now does this great but the problem is if I walk straight he won't do it, he just thinks this way means to follow me. I thought about putting the cc through a ring in a post so I could pull him in a direction away from me or just having an extra person direct him with the CC while I give the commands. What would you suggest?

User avatar
cmc274
Rank: Champion
Posts: 323
Joined: Wed Feb 16, 2011 9:14 pm
Location: Raleigh, North Carolina

Re: Quartering trouble

Post by cmc274 » Wed Nov 02, 2011 9:35 am

Walk in the thick stuff with him until he figues it out that is where the birds hang out. I think once he realizes there are birds to be found along those edges, there will be no need for any training.

User avatar
4dabirds
Rank: 5X Champion
Posts: 889
Joined: Sun Oct 03, 2010 10:49 am
Location: Long Island New york

Re: Quartering trouble

Post by 4dabirds » Wed Nov 02, 2011 10:36 am

Plant birds for him to find in the areas you want him to find birds if there is a reward for quartering the dog will see it as beneficial

User avatar
ezzy333
GDF Junkie
Posts: 16625
Joined: Fri Aug 20, 2004 3:14 pm
Location: Dixon IL

Re: Quartering trouble

Post by ezzy333 » Wed Nov 02, 2011 10:55 am

isonychia wrote:My dog covers ground really well off-road, but if we are walking a road for grouse he tends to just run down the road, not covering much, if any, of the edges. So I started working on our quartering again. "This way" means to turn and I would run zig-zags with the checkcord saying this way at each turn. He now does this great but the problem is if I walk straight he won't do it, he just thinks this way means to follow me. I thought about putting the cc through a ring in a post so I could pull him in a direction away from me or just having an extra person direct him with the CC while I give the commands. What would you suggest?
Dogs have noses and they really don't need to be in the cover if they run the downwind side. With experience they will learn how to hunt and it isn't always like we think they should. But planting birds in the upwind side of the cover may help teach it to check carefully but doesn't always produce a dog that gets in the cover the way you think they should.

Ezzy
http://www.perfectpedigrees.com/4genview.php?id=144
http://www.perfectpedigrees.com/4genview.php?id=207

It's not how many breaths you have taken but how many times it has been taken away!

Has anyone noticed common sense isn't very common anymore.

User avatar
gittrdonebritts
Rank: 5X Champion
Posts: 1252
Joined: Sun Aug 02, 2009 4:09 pm
Location: Malta,IL

Re: Quartering trouble

Post by gittrdonebritts » Wed Nov 02, 2011 2:51 pm

Just hunting him is gonna teach him more than you or anyone else ever could "create" for him.

User avatar
Sharon
GDF Junkie
Posts: 9115
Joined: Fri May 09, 2008 4:46 pm
Location: Ontario,Canada

Re: Quartering trouble

Post by Sharon » Wed Nov 02, 2011 5:07 pm

ezzy333 wrote:
isonychia wrote:My dog covers ground really well off-road, but if we are walking a road for grouse he tends to just run down the road, not covering much, if any, of the edges. So I started working on our quartering again. "This way" means to turn and I would run zig-zags with the checkcord saying this way at each turn. He now does this great but the problem is if I walk straight he won't do it, he just thinks this way means to follow me. I thought about putting the cc through a ring in a post so I could pull him in a direction away from me or just having an extra person direct him with the CC while I give the commands. What would you suggest?
Dogs have noses and they really don't need to be in the cover if they run the downwind side. With experience they will learn how to hunt and it isn't always like we think they should. But planting birds in the upwind side of the cover may help teach it to check carefully but doesn't always produce a dog that gets in the cover the way you think they should.

Ezzy

Exactly . Mine would take the one edge and possibly come back on the other edge ( not good for a trial). :) A dog with experience knows what he is doing . Today we were in a huge plowed farmland. There was one bush . Guess where the dog headed before he did the edges?
" We are more than our gender, skin color, class, sexuality or age; we are unlimited potential, and can not be defined by one label." quote A. Bartlett

User avatar
isonychia
Rank: 5X Champion
Posts: 773
Joined: Wed Mar 02, 2011 10:35 am
Location: Southwestern Colorado

Re: Quartering trouble

Post by isonychia » Wed Nov 02, 2011 7:26 pm

Thanks, good advice all! I won't have any birds to train with until the spring, and hopefully I can afford to lease some land to work birds on then!

jimbo&rooster
Rank: 5X Champion
Posts: 1252
Joined: Tue Mar 16, 2010 4:22 pm
Location: Sullivan IN

Re: Quartering trouble

Post by jimbo&rooster » Thu Nov 03, 2011 6:27 am

I dont really like a pointing dog to quarter, but when I hunt old oil roads and farm lanes I do like my dogs to get off of the road. If i have a dog that wont get off the road I will take short casts myself off of the road with the dog to the front and give a quick "over here" which is what i use to bring my dogs around. when they are in the cover i will get back on the road and walk. if they come back to the road I will use the same thing but will go off the opposite side of the road.

It doesn't take long for a dog to figure out there are birds off of the edges once you start to get into some.

Jim
A limit on the strap is nice, but the kill has nothing to do with tradition.

User avatar
Sharon
GDF Junkie
Posts: 9115
Joined: Fri May 09, 2008 4:46 pm
Location: Ontario,Canada

Re: Quartering trouble

Post by Sharon » Thu Nov 03, 2011 11:17 am

isonychia wrote:Thanks, good advice all! I won't have any birds to train with until the spring, and hopefully I can afford to lease some land to work birds on then!
Don't plant them too close to you,or you'll make a dog that shortens its range to hang around you.
" We are more than our gender, skin color, class, sexuality or age; we are unlimited potential, and can not be defined by one label." quote A. Bartlett

User avatar
gonehuntin'
GDF Junkie
Posts: 4868
Joined: Tue Dec 12, 2006 5:38 pm
Location: NE WI.

Re: Quartering trouble

Post by gonehuntin' » Thu Nov 03, 2011 3:03 pm

cmc274 wrote:Walk in the thick stuff with him until he figues it out that is where the birds hang out. I think once he realizes there are birds to be found along those edges, there will be no need for any training.
+1. To me, a grouse dog HAS to quarter. Most of the birds are, one side or the other, within 50 yards more or less of the edge of a road. I want a dog that works BOTH sides, not just runs back and forth on the road until he smells something.
LIFE WITHOUT BIRD DOGS AND FLY RODS REALLY ISN'T LIFE AT ALL.

ZMan079
Rank: Just A Pup
Posts: 9
Joined: Tue Oct 27, 2009 1:40 pm
Location: Windber, PA

Re: Quartering trouble

Post by ZMan079 » Wed Nov 23, 2011 6:15 pm

Not sure how you have your dog trained, but if I am walking down a road and I have the dog at heal, he is by my side, when I tell him to hunt em up he'll go to quartering. just wondering if you had your dog in that scenario, and he was just being a good dog...

Thanks,
ZMan079

User avatar
isonychia
Rank: 5X Champion
Posts: 773
Joined: Wed Mar 02, 2011 10:35 am
Location: Southwestern Colorado

Re: Quartering trouble

Post by isonychia » Wed Nov 23, 2011 7:12 pm

I think he just doesn't know where the birds are yet. Going to train this spring/summer on pigeons, looks like my land lord is going to let me have a pigeon house and the blm will let me train there

Post Reply