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Author Topic: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl  (Read 10091 times)

Offline gasman

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #15 on: December 13, 2009, 05:57:31 PM »
Do they have any clocolates?  Looks like all they had were yellow and black?

I am not against getting a yellow or black but I really like the looks of the chocolates.  Chocolate would be my first choice,Black, and than Yellow.

No Chocolates only Black and yellow.

Kings lab was there recomendation for chocolates to me. They sem to be good people, i have not met with them but have talked with them on the phone. Many people i have met with chocolate labs have recomended them to me. they have a champion dogs and very impresive blood line in there breeding. I did post a link to a thread they have n here in my last post but here is it again if you did nt see it.

http://hunting-washington.com/smf/index.php/topic,37186.0/topicseen.html
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Offline NWBREW

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #16 on: December 13, 2009, 06:02:55 PM »
Michelle, I have owned 2 choc. labs and trained them both myself. As was mentioned on here earlier Wolter's book "Game Dog is the one I used to do it. Weather it's water dog or game dog  those are great books and you start training the pup right away. I would pick up a copy of one of those books first and read a little before you get the pup. If I could find my copy I would send it to you. Follow that book and you will be amazed.

Oh yeah.......get a choc. lab, they don't show the dirt and mud on them.  :chuckle: :chuckle:
Good luck and if I find the book I'll let you know.  :) Also so look at the bloodlines of the parents.....feild champions and such.
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Offline Michelle_Nelson

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #17 on: December 13, 2009, 06:06:23 PM »
Thanks NWBREW.  I have had quite a few people tell me to look at the blood lines.  What am I looking for?  I have never bought a dog of any kind.  I have got a few links to several breeders but most are for Yellow and black.  Where did you get your pups?

Offline Ridgeratt

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #18 on: December 13, 2009, 06:11:17 PM »
don't know anything about him but he's on Craig's list

http://Spokane.craigslist.org/spo/1508644511.html

Having been a Golden Retriever person for more years than I can count. When I had litters of pups and could show 15 generations of linage on both my dogs. Along with OFA's, Eye Certs. Hip Clearances and Brucellious (sp) clearances. Also my dog trial result's I was amazed that it didn't make a tinkers darn to anyone but me! My pups were introduced to birds at 4 weeks and most of them went to people that only were going to have pets. I gave a health guarantee to the cost of the pup or a choice of another pup. My vet would open my dog's files to any person that was intrested in a pup. The one health problem that is unforeseen is cancer I lost my female to hip cancer and my Male was to Mast cell tumor's. But without a doubt the best brace of dog's I ever hunted behind.
« Last Edit: December 13, 2009, 06:26:05 PM by Ridgeratt »

Offline gasman

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #19 on: December 13, 2009, 06:11:49 PM »
I have had quite a few people tell me to look at the blood lines.  What am I looking for?  I have never bought a dog of any kind.  I have got a few links to several breeders but most are for Yellow and black.

Looking at the blood lines refers to looking at the past parents. Are they hunting dogs, field gogs pets. How is the medical of past parents, do they have issues with hips or any other disorded. '

Most good breeders will show you that there dogs have been medicaly tested and show to have no medical problems.

Look at the training, do the parents have JR, Master, SR, etc..... hunt test trails in there bloodline?
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Offline NWBREW

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #20 on: December 13, 2009, 06:24:21 PM »
Thanks NWBREW.  I have had quite a few people tell me to look at the blood lines.  What am I looking for?  I have never bought a dog of any kind.  I have got a few links to several breeders but most are for Yellow and black.  Where did you get your pups?


I am not a dog expert by any means but this is what I saw when I bought mine. If they are registered (and they should be) the parents will have a family history tree that you can see. On it you can follow the parents of the pups and their parents and so on. In my case it listed feild champions and national champions and such next to the registered names of the dogs on both sides....(sire and dam). Any good breader would have records of their dogs I'm sure.

I wish I could remember who I got may lab from. It was back in 1991 and the dog is long gone now. Best dog I ever had. All I know is it was a private breeder in bellingham somewhere. I looked for the old papers on him but don't think I have them anymore.
« Last Edit: December 13, 2009, 07:34:44 PM by NWBREW »
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Offline Wacenturion

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #21 on: December 13, 2009, 07:17:23 PM »
Thanks NWBREW.  I have had quite a few people tell me to look at the blood lines.  What am I looking for?  I have never bought a dog of any kind.  I have got a few links to several breeders but most are for Yellow and black.  Where did you get your pups?

Not only are you looking at the bloodlines on both sides, but the success of those individuals in it.  The first three generations are the ones that contribute to your pup.  How do those 14 individuals pass their genes on in a way to ensure your chances of having a great hunting dog?  How many have shown success...i.e. field champions, amateur, open, master hunter, etc?  

There's an old dog breeding phrase....

"Like begets like", which means your potential pup will not only have the desirable traits of it's parents and to a lesser extent Grandparents and great Grandparents, but also any undesirable ones.  What you want and why you pay a premium for exceptional bloodlines and breeding, is that you pretty much only get desirable traits as the breeder and his breeding program have eliminated the undesirable ones.  Hopes that makes sense.  When you consider a pup will be your companion in the blind, in the field and at home as a family member for it's lifetime, cost is really insignificant.  Somewhat like your profession........you get what you pay for in a trophy mount.

I would suggest you take your time and educate yourself and shop around.  Plenty of good lab breeders in the Puget Sound Area and eastern Washington.  Check into some of the local field trial clubs.....they also have fun trials, and you get lots of help and training tips from members, as well as a leads on good potential pups.  Color is a personal preference thing, although I perfer black.  One only has to attend field trials or look at the number of champions by color to see the black lab's obvious success.  That's due to the longer history and efforts on behalf of breeders in this country when compared to yellow or chocolate.  Don't get me wrong, they are all capable of being molded into great hunting dogs, but that is not only a result of breeding but the effort one dedicates to that dog.

Good luck...........it's a wonderful experience you're about to venture into. :tup:
"About the time you realize that your father was a smart man, you have a teenager telling you just how stupid you are."

Offline Wacenturion

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #22 on: December 13, 2009, 07:37:15 PM »
Here's a link to a bunch of kennels and breeders in the Northwest.  Do some looking and you start to get a feel for what you need to look for.  Enjoy.

http://www.pslra.org/html/breeders.htm


Forgot to mention..........the titles you want to see in those three generations are as I mentioned above, especially AFTC (Amateur Field Trial Champion) of FTC (Field Trial Champion), or Master Hunter, etc............seeing just Ch. in front of a name usually means show champion, as in conformation.  Nothing at all wrong with that if you want a pretty lab, but you won't get what you want in the field if your main purpose is a duck or upland dog. 
« Last Edit: December 13, 2009, 07:47:02 PM by Wacenturion »
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Offline gasman

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #23 on: December 13, 2009, 07:57:24 PM »
but you won't get what you want in the field if your main purpose is a duck or upland dog. 


What do you mean by your statement?
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Offline Joe_Hunter

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #24 on: December 13, 2009, 08:07:54 PM »
gasman:
 I think what wacenturion means is that if you pick a show dog based on confirmation you may not get a good hunting dog.

Offline gasman

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #25 on: December 13, 2009, 08:15:31 PM »
gasman:
 I think what wacenturion means is that if you pick a show dog based on confirmation you may not get a good hunting dog.

I know this is the theary, but a dog is a dog is a dog.

My last lab was a pet, nothing more but a pet. he had a show dog in the blood line but no known huntng blood. He was the best hunting dog a person could ever ask for (up untill he was hit and killed by a car). even the best hunting dogs can put out a dog that has no will to hunt. Each dog has there own personality.

One day they will be top notch and the next they will look at you like, "you want me to do what", I know, because i have experanced it first hand  :bash:

Each dog is what you make of it.........
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Offline NWBREW

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #26 on: December 13, 2009, 09:23:33 PM »
Gasman I think you are exactly right. I have heard people say that american labs are for hunting and the english labs are more for show. The two labs I had were both english labs....big block heads and thick stout bodys. The first lab turned out to be the best hunting dog a person could ask for but he also had champion bloodlines (field). I do believe some will do better than others but unless your going to go to field trials and such a good lab will do everything a hunter could ask for......if trained and I trained mine myself with just a book.

The second lab is still with me but was hit by a car when he was 1 1/2 years of age. He doesn't hunt due to injuries, just sleeps by the fireplace and barks when someone wakes him up.  :chuckle: He is 13 now. He also was very well trained with that book and would have been a great hunting dog. No champion anything in his bloodlines. You can train a lab for show or hunting...either way you will have a great addition to the family but training is the key.  :twocents:
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Offline Wacenturion

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #27 on: December 13, 2009, 10:11:09 PM »
A good hunting dog is a product of breeding and training.  A show dog is also a product of breeding and training, in a different sense...the show ring.  One's perception of a good hunting dog is just that, the owner's satisfaction with what his or her dog will do in the field.  Not how it measures up against the best of the breed.  I wasn't trying to knock someone's dog.  My intent was only to point out that one's chances of having a dog that with the right training will be what one hopes for, exponentially goes up with the right breeding and background.  Nothing more, nothing less.

There's lots of hunting dogs out there in the world, there's fewer really good dogs, and even fewer really great dogs.  Just the way it is.  A mediocre dog can be good with the right training, an exceptional dog can be ruined with wrong training.  To say that I have a dog with show blood or without the fancy bloodlines that does everything I ask of him is great, and rightfully so.  Be proud of him.  But to assume that dog is better than a dog from a long line of field trial or hunting titled dogs with years of trying to perfect the bloodlines to set desirable, trainable traits and exposed to the right training is a stretch, to be polite.

It comes down to what one wants out of a dog.  In the case of a duck dog, do you want the dog steady marking multiple ducks falling and not going till given the command.  Being able with a dog trained to be steady to direct him or her on a long blind retrieve to make sure you pick up a cripple rather than just jump in after birds laying in front of the blind dead.  Being trained to the whistle and stop on command and take hand signals to retrieve birds not seen.  It's all in the what satisfies the owner.  It takes time and the right dog that is bred to do what he is being trained for, to have a chance at being a truly exceptional dog, whether it's a retriever, bird dog, hound or otherwise.  Like I said before........lots of hunting dogs.  I'm sure you have all witnessed guys screaming at their dogs in the field because they won't respond to their wishes.  Are they hunting...you bet.  Are they good...I guess it depends on how you look at it.  

Again.......no offense intended.  
« Last Edit: December 13, 2009, 10:21:02 PM by Wacenturion »
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Offline Wacenturion

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #28 on: December 13, 2009, 10:41:43 PM »
Michelle............when you get to the point of purchase and you're dealing with making a choice out of a litter of pups, here's something I relied on for years in helping to make that decision.

Once you have decided on a pup of good breeding, there are some additional things you can do to help make the selection.  Those include watching littermates play and romp, judging dominance, aggressiveness, alertness etc.

One of my favorites is to take something along like a piece of cooked hamburger, chicken etc. in a zip lock and keep it in the rig until the pups are outside and have initially gotten over you being there.  In other words, now ignoring you somewhat and playing amongst themselves.  You can even get someone else to play with them to keep the attention off of you.  Get the burger, chicken, or whatever from the rig and get upwind from them at a fair distance....hopefully there is a slight breeze.  Move in say 5 feet at a time and squat down to their level until all of a sudden one or two heads pop up out of the play pile, smell the food and head your way.  PICK ONE OF THESE IF IT FITS YOUR OTHER REQUIREMENTS SUCH AS SEX ETC.

You can't train an "EXCEPTIONAL" nose....they either have it or they don't.  Although all the pups will probably have good noses, these "early smelling the bait little buggers" will wind birds much quicker and farther than the average hunting dog.  Pays immense dividends over their lifetime....believe me on this one...you won't regret it.    :tup:
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Offline lokidog

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Re: Picking out a Lab for Waterfowl
« Reply #29 on: December 14, 2009, 08:36:32 AM »
WA Cent is correct in that having good blood lines doesn't guarantee an exceptional hunting dog, nor does not having a high brow pedigree guarantee a mediocre dog.  That is all about training.  What having good blood lines does do, is that it ups the percentage of having a dog that responds to good training as much as possible and has your desired physical traits.

I have met some rescue dogs that were trained incredibly well, and have met some pedigreed dogs that I wouldn't allow in my boat. 

You don't have to break the bank to find a great hunting dog and family companion.  If I had a set amount of money to spend on the purchase and training of a hunting dog, I would put more of the money to the training.  I have had three dogs as an adult, one was a lab/healer mutt (I wish I could have afforded professional training at the time because she would have given any pedigreed dog a run for their money), the second a golden that a friend found when it was a puppy (another great hunting dog that I wish I could have had some training done), and a pedigreed golden whose dad was a field champion and mom was an agility champion with field champs in her bloodline as well.  The last dog was purchased sight unseen for $$$.  She has also had some professional training (the trainer said she had potential to be a field champion if I wanted to go that route, but wished he could have gotten her when she was younger.  I have fallen down on keeping up with what the trainer started but she loves to hunt.  The only problem with her is that she has a very thin coat and gets very cold in real-life hunting situations.

In the end my humble advice would be to see the pups in person and spend the bulk of your budget on training, find out what age the trainer wants the dog (if going that route), and finally, as D. Wolters would emphasize, get the pup at 7 weeks old.  And have fun!

 


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