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So what this conversation seems to be evoling into is "What is the best bang for the buck/effort for having training birds... Pigons, bantums, guinifowl, and??? Which are the best and why?
Quote from: AspenBud on October 04, 2013, 11:12:06 AMQuote from: Happy Gilmore on October 04, 2013, 10:56:10 AMMy dogs will not chase anything unless told to do so- hence "training". I'm hoping you mean that your dogs are trained to whistle sit or "leave it" and not that you tell them when they can or can not flush a pheasant or grouse once they are hunting for you...unless you're attempting to hunt like the Europeans do with pointers.That said, while I'd be leery of encouraging a dog to view chickens as game, I think all dogs are at risk of being chicken killers if they get loose and are unattended by their owners. Not my first choice for training a dog, but birds are birds I suppose.My dogs find chukar left behind from the pointer hunt tests all the time on their morning jaunts. They bring them back alive like clockwork. Properly force fetching a dog(completely) will teach the dog birds are not to be killed by his mouth.
Quote from: Happy Gilmore on October 04, 2013, 10:56:10 AMMy dogs will not chase anything unless told to do so- hence "training". I'm hoping you mean that your dogs are trained to whistle sit or "leave it" and not that you tell them when they can or can not flush a pheasant or grouse once they are hunting for you...unless you're attempting to hunt like the Europeans do with pointers.That said, while I'd be leery of encouraging a dog to view chickens as game, I think all dogs are at risk of being chicken killers if they get loose and are unattended by their owners. Not my first choice for training a dog, but birds are birds I suppose.
My dogs will not chase anything unless told to do so- hence "training".
Quote from: Special T on October 04, 2013, 11:46:43 AMSo what this conversation seems to be evoling into is "What is the best bang for the buck/effort for having training birds... Pigons, bantums, guinifowl, and??? Which are the best and why?Homing pigeons, because they are tough and you can build a pen for them and reuse them. They are also generally stronger fliers than a lot of pen raised quail.
Quote from: Stilly bay on October 04, 2013, 10:30:26 AMyeah they are almost as good as guinea hens.same thing
yeah they are almost as good as guinea hens.
Quote from: AspenBud on October 04, 2013, 02:13:59 PMQuote from: Special T on October 04, 2013, 11:46:43 AMSo what this conversation seems to be evoling into is "What is the best bang for the buck/effort for having training birds... Pigons, bantums, guinifowl, and??? Which are the best and why?Homing pigeons, because they are tough and you can build a pen for them and reuse them. They are also generally stronger fliers than a lot of pen raised quail.I agree 100% bantams and guinea fowl are very helpful for certain applications but not nearly as useful as homing pigeons.Quote from: Happy Gilmore on October 04, 2013, 11:01:38 AMQuote from: Stilly bay on October 04, 2013, 10:30:26 AMyeah they are almost as good as guinea hens.same thingused for the the same situations maybe but bantam chickens and guinea fowl are nothing alike. Nothing beats a guinea fowl for teaching a dog to work running birds. I think they can fly farther than your average Bantam too.The tricky part is finding an area where you can actually use them, those guineas can out run a pheasant.