Free: Contests & Raffles.
Now I'm starting to think my wife is just being contrary. I finally started making progress on the lab, then she went from "it's to big" to "i don't want a puppy, i want a dog that is already potty trained." to "I don't want to think about it now cause we aren't getting a dog until summer". Sent from my DROID BIONIC using Tapatalk 2
Quote from: Atroxus on October 24, 2012, 06:59:48 PMNow I'm starting to think my wife is just being contrary. I finally started making progress on the lab, then she went from "it's to big" to "i don't want a puppy, i want a dog that is already potty trained." to "I don't want to think about it now cause we aren't getting a dog until summer". Sent from my DROID BIONIC using Tapatalk 2Potty training is the easy part, IMO. My lab puppy I brought home when he was 8 weeks old and I crate trained him. He was potty trained real quick and only had one accident in the house. The puppy was a babe magnet; the ladies would flock to be able to pet the cute little guy. Maybe she's worried about you getting a puppy and having all the ladies fawning over him..........
I have had 3 vizslas that were good at ducks and excellant for upland. I had one that busted 1/2 inch ice to retrieve geese and if they were alive she killed them quick! They have the shortest hair! I'm not recomending them as your best choice, but they have been my favorite for 40 years. I have 1 vizsla now (40 lbs wet) and 2 choc labs (mother & daughter 60 lbs). I hunt all 3 toghether. I would also recomend a Britanny although it's one of the few I haven't owned, they have a very good nose and smaller size.
That Boykin's name is Earl, Elroy is the owner. He is only 39#. I know because he's bred my bitch twice. The largest Boykin that was from any of my litters was 52#. His name is Tank and he lives in Oregon. Most of my male pups are right at 40#. The females range from 32-however much they were overfed. Are they tougher to train? You don't train a Boykin....you " introduce" them. They tend to get things the first time around and get bored quickly. Regimental training is a big no no for Boykins. Show them.once then let them show you. Now, a lab will jump over a cliff for you of you tell it to. A Boykin will tell you to kiss its arse. They reason. Getting them to do a lot of the odd things requited during hunt tests (imho) they will require more work. But in the field, they will flush and retrieve with the best. Some people argue they are too small for duck hunting. Their mouths won't hold a goose. BS. As for being slow in the water, they are half the size of a lab, so they might take a bit longer to get out there and come back. They don't get stuck in mud like bigger dogs. They don't knock you over when you come home. They can sit right next to you in the car without their big heads in the way. They eat less than a bigger dog. They ate easier to pull onto the boat and don't rock it. You can canoe and kayak with them without dumping you. There are other breeds out there, don't get hung up on any one of them.
There's others I think get the same respect, water spaniels, poodles and the like. I don't judge others decisions, I just admire their choices.