Retriever Puppy Training: The Right Start for Hunting
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Retriever Puppy Training presents a program of basic training that will turn young retrievers into efficient and enthusiastic hunting companions. A step-by-step teaching schedule provides the continuity so important to fostering a puppy’s confidence. A favorite with people starting out with their first retriever or those who want to raise a hunting companion from puppyhood, the program is equally effective with young dogs starting beyond that age.
Clarice Rutherford
Clarice Rutherford was a Labrador Retriever breeder and trainer for sixteen years. She is the author/coauthor of four books, including the popular best seller, How to Raise a Puppy You Can Live With.
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Retriever Puppy Training - Clarice Rutherford
Gervase Markham, in his 1621 essay on training duck dogs stated his opinion on training obedience at a young age. He wrote, If [retrievers] be well-handled at the first, they will ever smell of that discretion, and if they be ill-handled they will ever stink of that folly.
From Ducks Unlimited, January/February 2007
Retriever Puppy Training: The Right Start for Hunting
Copyright 2010 by Cherylon Loveland and Clarice Rutherford
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever, including electronic media, internet, or newsletters, without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews.
The information contained in this book is complete and accurate to the best of our knowledge. All recommendations are made without guarantee on the part of the author or Alpine Publications, Inc. The author and publisher disclaim any liability with the use of this information.
For the sake of simplicity, the terms he or she are sometimes used to identify an animal or person. These are used in the generic sense only. No discrimination of any kind is intended toward either sex.
Cover Design: Laura Newport
Cover Photo: Clarice Rutherford
Editing: Deana Walker
Layout: Laura Newport
Photographs: All photographs by the authors unless otherwise noted.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
Printed in the United States of America.
Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Preface
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1 – Selecting a Puppy
Chapter 2 – Personality Traits
Chapter 3 – Your Seven-to-Sixteen-Week Old Puppy
Chapter 4 – Your Four-Month-Old Puppy
Chapter 5 – Your Five-Month-Old Puppy
Chapter 6 – Your Six-Month-Old Puppy
Chapter 7 – Hold and Fetch
Chapter 8 – Force to the Pile
Chapter 9 – Introduction to the Collar
Chapter 10 – Force to the Pile with the Collar
Chapter 11 – The Mini-T, the Single-T and the Double-T
Chapter 12 – Water Basics
Chapter 13 – Handling and Lining Drills
Chapter 14 – Beginning Land and Channel Blinds
Chapter 15 – Your Hunting Companion
Glossary
Other Sources of Information
About the Authors
Index
PREFACE
Since it’s first printing in 1988, Retriever Puppy Training: The Right Start for Hunting has been a favorite with people starting out with their first retriever puppy or those who want to raise a hunting companion from puppy hood. Most of these dogs will lead a dual life as both family companion and working retriever. However, experienced retriever handlers and those planning to trial or hunt test with their dogs will also find it helpful.
Although the book is directed to owners of retriever puppies in their first year, the program is equally effective with young retrievers starting beyond that age. It gives your retriever the necessary disciplines and skills he will need if he is to become your reliable hunting companion. Throughout the program, lessons that every companion dog needs to learn to be an enjoyable canine citizen are also stressed. We assume that most puppies will grow up as house pets and will live in a family situation and not a training kennel.
Puppies are not born knowing everything they will ever need to know. Many of the refinements required by their human leaders have to be learned, and some things are harder to learn than others. Each pup has his area of strengths as well as weaknesses. We believe that a good training program is one in which the pup and the handler can work through the weak areas of the pup’s abilities and achieve success.
Puppies (adult dogs, too) learn best in a step-by-step progression. If a handler works on obedience commands one week, decides to begin hand signals the next week, doesn’t train at all for two weeks and then decides to steady the dog to birds, he will have a very confused retriever whose performance will progressively get worse instead of better.
Many puppy owners have the desire and the ability to do a good job of training their hunting dog, but they lack a step-by-step program to use as a guide. When your pup has completed this program he’ll be ready to go when you put your hand over his head and say Back.
You will have worked out all the Yes but, Maybe, and I don’t want to,
excuses that all retrievers try to use. You will have a retriever that can go on to be successful in whatever field work you choose—competitive or non-competitive. And, you will have a well-mannered companion.
Happy training!
Cherylon Loveland
Clarice Rutherford
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Over the past thirty years, I (Cherylon) have learned from and with some very talented and knowledgeable people. This book would not have been possible without them.
Rex Carr provided me, and many other dog trainers, with a fundamental structure for training dogs. At the time, his ideas were revolutionary. Now, they are accepted as the building blocks for any training program. My best friend, the late Jackie Lauenroth, and I spent hours together working to incorporate Rex’s ideas into our daily training schedule.
My appreciation also to Judy Aycock and Danny Farmer, both of whom helped me expand my understanding of the dogs and approach training from an even more heightened perspective. To all my competition clients who have kept me informed in detail as to the current testing trends, and to all the hunters who have kept in close touch, both of which have called me from the field to relate a bird just flushed and retrieved or a test that a dog has just completed.
Each day, I enter the field with my dogs with a sense of anticipation and wonder. I know how fortunate I am and how much the people I have mentioned have contributed to my passion for the dogs. To each of them, I owe great thanks.
Cherylon Loveland
Special thanks go to Sandy Whicker, Abigail Bridges, and Barbara Fleming, all of whom aided in making the first edition of this book a reality. To Bill Rutherford, for always lending a willing hand. To the staff of Alpine Publications for their continuing loyalty and support in the production of four successful titles over the years. And finally, to the many good friends in the retriever world who have helped us grow and learn and made it all worthwhile.
Clarice Rutherford
CHAPTER ONE
SELECTING YOUR FUTURE RETRIEVER
The day your new retriever comes home is a great day! That bundle of energy has the potential for a great partnership for many years ahead. Therefore, it pays to spend some effort in locating litters and in selecting your puppy. If you haven’t yet decided on a specific retriever breed, read as much as you can about the history as well as the current trends of each breed. Talk to different owners and breeders. Then decide which one seems right for you. Two excellent sources of breeders and litters currently available are Retriever Field Trial News and the Gun Dog magazine. You can also go to the American Kennel Club web site, www.AKC.com, to connect with names of retriever club secretaries in your area who can refer you to local breeders.
Good breeders are conscientious and raise puppies with great care. Take the time to find the right one and to ask a few basic questions about the litter. Reliable breeders will not only answer your questions but will help you distinguish between responsible breeders and individuals who raise puppies only for the money, caring nothing about the quality of breeding stock or the needs of the puppies.
Ask plenty of questions. Are the parents from hunting dog, field trial, or show stock? Have the sire and dam been used as hunting or trial dogs? Have either the sire or dam been proven (had previous litters that are now performing well)? Your puppy will not be a carbon copy of either parent but will likely have some behavioral characteristics of each. If either the sire or dam is inferior, or lacking in retrieving desire and soundness, the puppies might be inferior. Retrieving ability and trainability are hereditary factors just like body type, coat, and type of head.
Healthy puppies in a clean environment get the best start.
DID YOU KNOW?
There are seven retriever breeds:
Labrador: 3 colors, easily trained, mature early, athletic, intense, short coated, favorite breed of the professional trainers
Golden: lush coats, personable family dogs, great hunters, loves to please, get along with other dogs, easily trained, slow to mature
Chesapeake Bay: largest and strongest breed, independent, love water but not as adept in upland terrain, weather resistant coat, can be over-protective
Flat-Coat: moderate shake-dry
coat, versatile hunters, fun-loving family dogs, insatiable desire to retrieve, soft temperament, slow to mature.
Curly-Coat: large, strong, durable, coat resists burrs and tangles, relatively rare in America, love water, develop more slowly than other retrievers both mentally and physically, definitely a one-family dog.
Nova Scotia Duck Toller: double coats ranging from tan to dark red-gold, small, hardy, docile, outstanding family dogs, can retrieve, flush upland birds, and also toll
(bringing ducks in off large lakes).
Water Spaniels and some Pointers also retrieve.
Equally important is information about the physical condition of the sire and dam. Ask about the parents’ hips. If they have an Orthopedic Foundation for Animals (OFA) number, they are certified as being free from hip dysplasia. If they don’t have an OFA number, have the hips been x-rayed and evaluated elsewhere? If so, by whom? Do the puppies’ grandparents have OFA hips? Don’t settle for anything less than verification of soundness; just because the parents run without limping is not a guarantee that their hips are sound. Also, check if there’s any history of eye problems. Many retrievers periodically have their breeding stock checked to insure they are free of cataracts and other hereditary eye problems.
OBSERVING THE LITTER
After you’ve located a litter, see the puppies, if possible. By six weeks of age, puppies will respond in different ways; by seven weeks, the pups will be ready to leave their littermates. There may be only a few puppies to select from, depending on how many have already been sold and on