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Author Topic: Weiner dogs  (Read 12025 times)

Offline Buzz2401

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Re: Weiner dogs
« Reply #15 on: April 23, 2020, 09:25:02 PM »
I had a long haired dachshund and she was for sure a hunter.  Loved hiking and would destroy any squirrels or chipmunks she could get.  They are great dogs and pretty smart.

Offline Alchase

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Re: Weiner dogs
« Reply #16 on: April 23, 2020, 09:32:40 PM »
As a breed dachshund is not by any means one of the smartest. They are usually rated in the bottom range for trainability.
If you girl friend has experience training hunting dogs, she would know this.
There are lots of "smart breeds" that can be trained to hunt. Going with a breed that has been hunting for generations would be your best bet.
A dachshund would not be my pick to train as a hunting dog. Most struggle through basic and advanced obedience.
Having said that, the old world dachshunds were supposed to be breed to go after badgers. Not sure I buy that, but there you go, LOL
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Offline nwwanderer

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Re: Weiner dogs
« Reply #17 on: April 24, 2020, 04:30:03 PM »
Hunted with a hound growing up, beagle/walker cross, different stature than yours but just as hard headed.  Not so trainable but certainly game.  Never lost a bird that I can remember.  One we thought he lost was under a hog house in a badger hole, found the feathers when we moved the house the next spring.  Kind of like a hog, smarter than most dogs and more independent than a cat.  Really did not care what we liked except hunting!!! Thanks greaty stuff

Online bearpaw

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Re: Weiner dogs
« Reply #18 on: April 24, 2020, 04:34:06 PM »
Girlfriend wants a weiner dog, she is insisting she can train it to hunt and retrieve birds, she wants to get one from Germany.....

Im skeptical.

Thoughts?

The Germans have exacting standards, they are some of the best dog breeders in the world, many good hunting breeds were developed in Germany. Americans typically screw up hunting breeds!  :twocents:
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Offline Jpmiller

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Re: Weiner dogs
« Reply #19 on: April 24, 2020, 04:42:39 PM »
For reasons unbeknownst to me alot of my family back in North Dakota had Weiner dogs, and my grandparents had them over here. They were all monsters around mice rats and squirells....and children.

I think they could be trained to do just about anything like most dogs could given the right time and individual dogs temperament but I'd be leary, don't know that more than one or two had any real training that I was around but pretty much anyone who wasn't old enough and big enough to kick one of them real good had better have an adult close by. I'm no expert by any means but I don't think I'd ever entertain the notion of owning one.

Offline Curly

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Re: Weiner dogs
« Reply #20 on: April 24, 2020, 04:49:10 PM »
Seeing how this thread was started around 15 months ago, I have to ask the OP......did your gf get a dachshund? :dunno:

And I really did witness a guy hunting by Potholes reservoir years ago with a few wiener dogs and I talked to him for quite a while about his dogs and they were quite birdy and the old guy did quite well behind them so I know it's possible.  :twocents:
May I always be the kind of person my dog thinks I am.

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Offline time2hunt

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Re: Weiner dogs
« Reply #21 on: June 03, 2020, 07:39:26 AM »
The little terrors are hunting machines. Our little dog would hunt 24/7 if we would let her. I would put her nose up against my hounds nose any day of the week.



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