Post
by tekoa » Sat May 20, 2017 9:04 pm
This exchange highlights the crux of my dilemma.
It is true that in an ideal situation, dog points, I drive up behind him, dismount, walk or more accurately, hobble to the front of the dog, flush the bird, shoot and send the dog for the dead bird. Easier than shooting quickly from the chair.
Obviously, having had 12 Setters over the last 40 years, I’m partial to pointy dogs. I love to watch them run, cover huge amounts of ground, point with style and intensity, race to pick up and return a quail so he could get back to hunting asap.
I also spent many hours walking many miles in prairie grass, after the speed demons had scattered busted coveys for miles around, walked two hundred yards to a dog on point only to find the birds long gone on foot. Or spent half an hour trying to find dead birds in swamps, berry bushes, ivy tangles, and other nasty brush while my dog points from 10 yards away or half- heartedly dashes in and out of brush tunnels pretending to hunt dead. These dogs would always find the birds again no matter how far they were or how long it took. On many days afield I walked way more than 6 miles chasing birds and dogs.
Hunting from a track chair imposes some serious physical limits on hunting range. The chair, in its current configuration (I have a solution to that, Lithium Batteries, but it’s expensive and I may not be able pull it off) can only cover a maximum of 10 miles on a battery charge; in hilly terrain this could be as little as 6 miles. So, hunting certain species on the prairie, e.g. Grays, (Huns) Chickens, Sharps with big going pointy dogs is problematic.
I could restrict the range of another Setter, and force him to beat the brush on retrieves but hunting Grays, Quail, and Pheasants in riparian areas, pasture, flatish CRP with a close working dog that can handle retrieving from hedgerows, streamside Russian Olives, Hawthorn, Blackberry, Cattails, rivers, swamps, etc. seems more feasible.
And then there’s the size issue. I have trapped myself, at for the next couple of years into a dog that weighs no more than 35 pounds, which leaves me only one pointy dog choice, a Brittany. So, I’m continuing to debate with myself, but I think it’s got to be a Brit or a Cocker.
Thanks again guys for the conversation, it’s helping me clarify how to proceed…………