View Full Version : Tails
WestCoastHunter
08-25-2009, 05:00 PM
Just how many people out there really care about whether their dog's tail sticks straight up into the sky like the empire state building when it's on point?
Trial dog people with long tailed dogs are obsessed with it. But my question is for the hunters in the crowd, or rather, those of us who don't compete with our dogs. How many of you really care if your dog's tail stands on end as opposed to sitting at 7 o'clock or turned into a cork screw when on point?
If you do care, why? Would you take a dog with a telephone pole tail that needs significant work to make it an effective gun dog over one that has a level or low tail but is easy to work with and knows its game?
I know my opinion and I'm sure several of the rest of you do as well so I'll stop there. But I'm curious what the general consensus in the crowd is on this.
dogwhistle
08-25-2009, 05:27 PM
i'm a hunter and i do care. i like a 12 oclock tail. a lot of hunting is about style. if it wasnt i could just go to the meat market. it would be far cheaper and less work.
BIGSP
08-25-2009, 05:36 PM
Just how many people out there really care about whether their dog's tail sticks straight up into the sky like the empire state building when it's on point?
Trial dog people with long tailed dogs are obsessed with it. But my question is for the hunters in the crowd, or rather, those of us who don't compete with our dogs. How many of you really care if your dog's tail stands on end as opposed to sitting at 7 o'clock or turned into a cork screw when on point?
If you do care, why? Would you take a dog with a telephone pole tail that needs significant work to make it an effective gun dog over one that has a level or low tail but is easy to work with and knows its game?
I know my opinion and I'm sure several of the rest of you do as well so I'll stop there. But I'm curious what the general consensus in the crowd is on this.
Your question is loaded but, I'll bite anyways.
I want a dog that is stylish on point and handles it's game well. You can have both and stylish is different depending on the breeding of the breed. A stylish Ryman dog is going to look different than a stylish field bred setter.
Pointers on the other hand should have a poker straight tail. Those that don't have often had too much pressure put on them or maybe an injury or are just too young and haven't had enough birds to make them sure of themselves or just don't have the muscle yet.
I currently have 2 shorthairs and a pointer. One shorthair is probably the classiest shorthair most people have ever seen. Runs fast, hard, slams his birds and has a 12 o'clock tail. The other shorthair is classy enough but, not really super fun to watch (she has put more birds in the bag though, that may change this year) she is intense on point and has probably an 11 o'clock tail. She isn't nearly as well bred as the other.
I now also have a pointer pup who is almost 7 months old and points pigeons with a crooked 10 o'clock tail but, points grouse and woodcock with an 11 or 12 o'clock tail. Her tail is long so she needs to get some better muscle in it but, the trainer I work with has no doubts she'll have a poker straight tail when she gets older.
So, why not have both if you are really researching dogs and trying to buy the best of your chosen breed why not look for both?
N M Mechanical
08-25-2009, 05:52 PM
I don't care at what level the tail is at but when walking up to them un point I am paying close attention High tail moving = bird moving, Straight out stiff as a board bird locked down. Tail mid level moving = rabbit.
WestCoastHunter
08-25-2009, 06:10 PM
Honest answers.
Let me put a twist on it. The red and white Irish setter points with a low tail, mosly because it's relatively uncommon and fairly recently imported so breeders in this country haven't worked their magic on them yet. Do you skip these because of the low tail or do you make an exception based on the breed (let's disregard rarity and price here and pretend it's an option)? If some kooky breeder does get some to come with an erect tail, do you consider that the pinnicle of breeding and go for those instead at that point?
http://breederinfocenter.com/images2/20080810183013_184049_1.jpg
Birdhuntr1
08-25-2009, 06:31 PM
I don't compete, so how the tail is on point, doesn't really affect me. I've got an older dog whose tail through the years seems to get a little lower each year, this year just about horizontal. But I know when he locks up, there's a bird there. The pups tail stands straight, but with a pretty good bow in it.
I understand that competitions and breed standards are a good thing. I think they keep the overall quality of breeds higher, and we can all benefit from that. Besides, a person could pick up a damn well breed dog that will make a great hunter from washouts that don't make the competion cut.
dogwhistle
08-25-2009, 06:33 PM
i'd pass a dog up that points like that r/w dog in the photo. you are just buying color. in other words, if that were a b/w english setter, would you give him a second look?
i firmly believe if you want the best intincts you buy from trial stock. and if you do t hat, the high tail comes with the package.
Rugergundog
08-25-2009, 06:38 PM
I don't give a rip myself. As long as it aint mov'n around spook'n the bird. My Brittany has a tail so short you can't really tell due to the hair what its doing and my GSP's stick straight out the back, not really up.
griffondog
08-25-2009, 06:51 PM
According to Merganzer my dogs are retarded and slow, so is this why they dock their tails? :confused:
Griff
Hoppe's no.10
08-25-2009, 06:56 PM
Just how many people out there really care about whether their dog's tail sticks straight up into the sky like the empire state building when it's on point?
Your post brings up fundamental cognitive dissonances amongst most newbie bird hunters (those who've been around bird dogs and hunted birds less than 25-30 years) who own a pointing dog. Only you can answer this question which is simplistic on the surface, but rather profound in its essence: Why do you hunt birds with a pointing dog and what do you "existentially" expect from this experience? To be succinct and brutal, what scenario (assuming for the moment these are the only two scenarios available ) would reward you the most: A not so stylish dog that produces a lot of birds or a stylish dog that produces a lesser number of birds?
Most MS correspondents would immediately reply something like: I want a stylish dog that produces a lot of birds. Sorry pal, but at the moment in this argument that option is not available to you.
So again ask yourself: Do I prefer a stylish dog that produces lesser birds for me to shoot at or a not so stylish dog that produces a lot of birds for me to shoot at?
Only when you've established such a bird hunting/pointing dog baseline will you truly be a bird hunter - content and without internal turmoil over what should be given your potentials as a rational and thoughtful human being a truly trivial concern.
So here we find ourselves: bird hunters who are satisfied with either a less stylish bird dog that finds a lot of birds and bird hunters who are satisfied with a stylish dog that finds a lesser number of birds.
Ah yes - but what about those who want a stylish dog that finds a lot of birds? Nothing wrong with that at all. But honestly how many dogs are you and your wallet willing to go through until you find this ideal dog? If you end up with a low tailed bird producer that you and your kids love are you going to dump it OR if you end up with a high tailed lesser producer of birds that you and your kids have learned to love or you willing to dump that one?
In the end it's what you're in the game for and what rewards you the most. I know all of you have heard this ad nauseaum from me but if you're seeking the perfect experience look first to yourself, define the multitudes of rewards that you expect from the bird hunting experience and go for it - because in the end it's really not about the dogs, the birds, the kids, the family, the shotgun, the gauge, the juxtaposition of the barrels etc. - but rather about you - you and only you are responsible for defining your life's realistic expectations.
You want to live in a world of perfection and precise predictability? Go to U of M and get a Ph.D. in mathematics, and once you've accomplished that then ask for perfection and the production of the perfect bird hunting experience from your dumb but loving bird dog .
Or of course you could always get a fat ass lab that will schlepp along 10 - 20 feet in front of you - will they produce a lot of birds - hell yes. Will you worry about high tail or low tail - hell no. See how easily these seemingly difficult problems can easily be resolved.
Hoppe's no.10
Rysalka
08-25-2009, 07:24 PM
My dogs tail wiggles so fast would need a time lapse camera to get the time....12-10-5-3-7-9-4-7-8 o'clock, bought him to find birds and be an everyday companion.
You guys need to get out of the house and maybe practice your shooting skill before your dog starts a thread about your skills and style of gun handling.
Hoppe's no.10
08-25-2009, 07:34 PM
My dogs tail wiggles so fast would need a time lapse camera to get the time....12-10-5-3-7-9-4-7-8 o'clock, bought him to find birds and be an everyday companion.
You guys need to get out of the house and maybe practice your shooting skill before your dog starts a thread about your skills and style of gun handling.
:yeahthat:Amen to that brother! From your profiled age it's obvious you've learned a lot about life and more than a little about bird hunting - something that others on this forum are decades away from realizing.
Hoppe's no.10
Well done Hoppe's !!
Informative, and entertaining, as usual.
2ESRGR8
08-25-2009, 07:36 PM
10 years ago it did not matter to me.
But now that I'm playing around in the coverdog game it is critical and seeings how I only have room for a couple or at most three dogs well........ having straight high tails will be a trait that all my hunting dogs have in the near future.
wirehair
08-25-2009, 07:38 PM
Pretty easy to pick out the empire state building in this photo.
http://travel.nationalgeographic.com/places/images/photos/photo_lg_newyork_state.jpg
It's a simple question.
If 2 dogs are equal at finding birds. Which on would you want?
But What do I know I prefer Dockers.
Lucky Dog
08-25-2009, 07:48 PM
One of the regions that I hunt quail in, is pretty over grown with palmetto, if a dog does not have a 12 o'clock tail it may never be found when standing game.
Now with the Garmin 12 o'clock might not be as important.
But, my god if you are going to leave the tail long, it might as well provide some use, even if it is just to ad some style.
So yea, put me down as 12 o'clock is needed.
Hoppe's no.10
08-25-2009, 07:50 PM
10 years ago it did not matter to me.
But now that I'm playing around in the coverdog game it is critical and seeings how I only have room for a couple or at most three dogs well........ having straight high tails will be a trait that all my hunting dogs have in the near future.
You seem to imply that a "straight tail" is the defining and final predictor of your keeping or dumping a dog or if they don't (have a straight tail) what happens to the dog?
Hoppe's no.10
FindTheBird
08-25-2009, 07:51 PM
Jarl, your question borders on the rhetorical because the human factor plays so heavily into the answer.
Personally, over my 34 years of hunting, I've killed a bunch of critters so the total package--a combination of aesthetics, athleticism, intelligence, biddability and raw, well-bred instincts may score heavier with me than with most.
I like a dog who is built like a brick $$$$-house who runs the way he looks, but who is also in perhaps the top 5% in bird finding ability and pointing instinct and is not just a bird nut, but a bird psycho. I also want a dog who hunts for me, not in spite of me and who handles at range with minimal intervention. And yes, I want the dog to have a reasonably high tail too:D. Too much to ask?;)
Hoppe's no.10
08-25-2009, 08:00 PM
And yes, I want the dog to have a reasonably high tail too:D. Too much to ask?;)
But you most circumspectly avoid the thrust of my post: What if your dog meets all your criteria - as written - but, nonetheless, points with a low tail or not a "...reasonably high tail..." What you want - as what we all want - in life and in our bird dogs is one thing and what we end up with or are willing to accept may be quite something else.
So I ask you again: If you get most of what you "want" but not everything you "want" - especially vis-a-vis a "high tail" do you keep the dog or dump it?
Hoppe's no. 10
Hoppe's no.10
08-25-2009, 08:11 PM
So yea, put me down as 12 o'clock is needed.
Needed by whom? It's most certainly not "needed" for the dog to find and point the bird. Finding the dog, once it's done its job, is a demand put upon you given the environment that you and not the dog have chosen to hunt in. Why do you expect the dog to solve your problem ?
Hoppe's no.10
2ESRGR8
08-25-2009, 08:25 PM
You seem to imply that a "straight tail" is the defining and final predictor of your keeping or dumping a dog.
Hoppe's no.10
It's possible. I'll burn that bridge when I get there.
FindTheBird
08-25-2009, 08:46 PM
But you most circumspectly avoid the thrust of my post: What if your dog meets all your criteria - as written - but, nonetheless, points with a low tail or not a "...reasonably high tail..." What you want - as what we all want - in life and in our bird dogs is one thing and what we end up with or are willing to accept may be quite something else.
So I ask you again: If you get most of what you "want" but not everything you "want" - especially vis-a-vis a "high tail" do you keep the dog or dump it?
Hoppe's no. 10
Michael, yours is a highly hypothetical question in light of the fact that getting a dog with a high tail is nothing like catching a glimpse of bigfoot or hitting the lottery--it's just not that hard to do!
That said, sure, I'll play, but I have to answer in two ways.
If I had my heart set on a trial dog, there's no question, the dog would go to a good hunting home (this is assuming the tail is really beyond what is acceptable to win). If I'm in the market for a dog who is intended purely for hunting purposes, I certainly wouldn't be completely satisfied, because I'm partial to the look, but I'd be OK with a mediocre tail. In addenda, I think the other things on my "perfect dog" wish list are a lot more difficult to achieve than a high tail.
Hoppe's no.10
08-25-2009, 09:05 PM
Michael, yours is a highly hypothetical question in light of the fact that getting a dog with a high tail is nothing like catching a glimpse of bigfoot or hitting the lottery--it's just not that hard to do!
That said, sure, I'll play, but I have to answer in two ways.
If I had my heart set on a trial dog, there's no question, the dog would go to a good hunting home (this is assuming the tail is really beyond what is acceptable to win). If I'm in the market for a dog who is intended purely for hunting purposes, I certainly wouldn't be completely satisfied, because I'm partial to the look, but I'd be OK with a mediocre tail. In addenda, I think the other things on my "perfect dog" wish list are a lot more difficult to achieve than a high tail.
Fair enough. Your answer and 2ESRGR8s (sorry but I've never been able figure out how to quote two different posts and BIGSP has been no help whatsoever - want to help, please PM me instructions - most appreciated) reply answered my query. Not making a value judgment but rather just have always been interested as to how dog owners relate to their dogs. Thanks.
Hoppe's no.10
BIGSP
08-25-2009, 09:13 PM
You seem to imply that a "straight tail" is the defining and final predictor of your keeping or dumping a dog or if they don't (have a straight tail) what happens to the dog?
Hoppe's no.10
I'll jump in here a little and add my 02 cents because I don't intend to trial my dogs.
Michael, I know you well enough to know that you are stirring the pot for debate and appreciate you trying to nail people down to a specific answer. Now that being said, Findthebird is right. This isn't like catching lightning in a bottle. Buy from good breeding and almost assuredly the dog will have a nice tail, maybe not nice enough to win, but none the less a nice tail. Why not have both?
Now a question to you Michael. Would you keep a dog that wouldn't hunt?
I would keep a dog that can hunt without a great tail but, I wouldn't keep a dog with a nice tail that couldn't hunt. But again, you can have both if you pay a little attention to the breeding. Hell, you don't even have to spend that much money. Look at the coverdog board. You can find a lot of nice puppies for $500.
wirehair
08-25-2009, 09:14 PM
You guys need to get out of the house and maybe practice your shooting skill before your dog starts a thread about your skills and style of gun handling.
If my dog ever started a thread about my shooting skills I would put a cap in his *****. :lol:
BIGSP
08-25-2009, 09:21 PM
Fair enough. Your answer and 2ESRGR8s (sorry but I've never been able figure out how to quote two different posts and BIGSP has been no help whatsoever - want to help, please PM me instructions - most appreciated) reply answered my query. Not making a value judgment but rather just have always been interested as to how dog owners relate to their dogs. Thanks.
Hoppe's no.10
Don't blame me I am only one step up from you when it comes to computer skills.
Hoppe's no.10
08-25-2009, 09:37 PM
This isn't like catching lightning in a bottle. Buy from good breeding and almost assuredly the dog will have a nice tail, maybe not nice enough to win, but none the less a nice tail. Why not have both?
Now a question to you Michael. Would you keep a dog that wouldn't hunt?
But of course you qualify your first question with the adverb "almost."
As to answering your second question: I wouldn't keep a puppy that wouldn't "hunt" (my qualifying quotation marks - obviously one doesn't take a little puppy "hunting" per se but puppies do demonstrate "hunting" precursors) and a puppy of mine that doesn't "hunt" would never become a dog of mine that wouldn't hunt.
Now let's slightly change the wording in your question: Would you keep a dog that couldn't hunt through no fault of it's own - physical disability, gun shyness due to trauma etc.? Of course I'd keep it. I'd no sooner dump a bird dog under those circumstances then I'd estrange myself from a child gone blind. I've had aged GSPs that by any pragmatic or practical definition could no longer "hunt" but I certainly kept them and cared for them until they could no longer function - not as a hunting dog but as an animal.
Hoppe's no.10
BradU20
08-25-2009, 09:47 PM
So I ask you again: If you get most of what you "want" but not everything you "want" - especially vis-a-vis a "high tail" do you keep the dog or dump it?
Hoppe's no. 10
Hunting dog, he stays.
Trial dog, he goes. (If you want to play the game you have to follow the rules)
(sorry but I've never been able figure out how to quote two different posts and BIGSP has been no help whatsoever - want to help, please PM me instructions - most appreciated)
Hoppe's no.10
Jealous? :evilsmile
(PM sent)
BIGSP
08-25-2009, 09:50 PM
Hunting dog, he stays.
Trial dog, he goes. (If you want to play the game you have to follow the rules)
Jealous? :evilsmile
(PM sent)
Brad that was a very simple yet insightful answer.
I am not a trial guy but, I have hung around a few to understand exactly what you're talking about.
Unregistered4
08-25-2009, 10:03 PM
I'd hunt over that red setter...as long as it finds birds. I don't hunt to be "stylish" or "vogue". People that hunt for that reason make me sick.
I hunt, to find birds, period. Not to get my jollies off over a tail.
Brian (aka - twosetters)
Lucky Dog
08-25-2009, 10:07 PM
Needed by whom? ME.
It's most certainly not "needed" for the dog to find and point the bird. If the dog is going to find and point birds for me is most certainly is needed.
Finding the dog, once it's done its job, is a demand put upon you given the environment that you and not the dog have chosen to hunt in. Since most decent dogs hunt cover that holds birds, the dog did indeed put himself in said cover and therefore must make himself as visible as possible.
Why do you expect the dog to solve your problem ? I don't think it is a problem if a person that hunts long tailed dogs expects a high tail.
Hoppe's no.10
Of course this is all dependent on me ever giving up my dock tailed beauties.....
BIGSP
08-25-2009, 10:18 PM
I'd hunt over that red setter...as long as it finds birds. I don't hunt to be "stylish" or "vogue". People that hunt for that reason make me sick.
I hunt, to find birds, period. Not to get my jollies off over a tail.
Brian (aka - twosetters)
Brian, how many grouse hunters do you know that hunt to be "stylish or vogue"? I doubt very many if any. I don't hunt to just "find birds" and I doubt you do either. It's about the whole package, the dog, friends, the season and of course birds.
Hoppes10 once told me something I'll never forget and is probably more profound to me today than the day he said it. "Brent, you'll long remember the misses after the hits have vanished away in your memories". And it is so true. I have more fun remembering the almosts and the dids.
JGF@Gratiot
08-25-2009, 10:43 PM
In a wild bird trial, it would be safer to say an adequate tail than a "straight twelve oclcock" tail. A trial comes down to a performance more than who has the straightest most uprite tail. In the past few years alone I have watched multiple champions be named with anything from a ten o'clock tail to a sickle tail. There is a lot of other things that separate great bird dogs than how straight and tall their tail is. For me its something that yeah, its hard not to desire, but I put a lot more weight on the other end of the dog. I doubt most hunters are that critical, its their pet AND hunting dog, many would have a hard time getting rid of it for not being a good bird dog let alone what its tail looks like.
Unregistered4
08-26-2009, 05:58 AM
Brian, how many grouse hunters do you know that hunt to be "stylish or vogue"? I doubt very many if any. I don't hunt to just "find birds" and I doubt you do either.
Oh, I've been hunting a long time Brent...and I've ran into a few.
And, I may have misspoke myself or wasn't really clear on my intent. When I said "I hunt", I was referring to the dog and I, since we were talking about dogs and all. And, was only referring to my own feelings...in the "jolly" comment.
So...
"The dog hunts, to find birds, period." "I could care less about his or her tail."
And, believe it or not Brent. I'm out in the woods to find birds. I don't really care how many I kill anymore. But, I'm not going to lie. It bothers me when I can't find birds...or I should say, when the dogs can't find any.
It's about the whole package, the dog, friends, the season and of course birds.
Yes, there are a lot of other rewards to hunting. I'd never argue that. But, to say that a certain type of tail is "stylish" and "what's needed" to make it a whole package...is well, absurd, in my opinion. It's like saying I'd "only" marry or love a skinny woman. Because, they're better. Love for your dog, or someone, should be more than skin deep...and not based on appearance.
Brian.
hehibrits
08-26-2009, 06:56 AM
Your post brings up fundamental cognitive dissonances amongst most newbie bird hunters (those who've been around bird dogs and hunted birds less than 25-30 years) who own a pointing dog.
Hoppe's no.10
If 25-30 years is the dividing line between a newbie and a veteran, then where does the veteran/expert cutoff begin, death??? If you have to fallow dogs around for 25 years to get enough experience to know what you like and don't like in a dog, than birds must be very very scarce.
I have Brittanys, so ultimate tail height is irrelevent, but tail set on point is deffinately important to me as is head set. I look for high head high tail. A high tail with a low head (like a lot of female's do) is more of a no no than the opposite.
Now that I have rambled, I will add that I am a bird hunter and enjoy my dogs finding birds no matter where their tail is at. I hunt to spend time with my dad, and friends, to enjoy getting away from my hot, dirty, exhausting occupation, to have a few beers at the end of the day. Somewhere down that list is "to watch a stylish dog" and I am lucky enough to own own a couple.
Dave Medema
08-26-2009, 08:37 AM
The question shouldn't be about a high tailed poor bird finder vs. a low tailed great bird finder. That is a bogus question and unfair.
The question should be about 2 equally talented bird finders - given the choice high or low tail.
I prefer dogs with higher tails.
That said, what bugs me more than anything with some dogs is not knowing whether they are on point or taking a leak, or catching their breath, or smelling a flower. I'd like to see intensity at some point whether it is eyes, tail, head....something.
BTW - 25+ years for me. I get to have my biases.
BIGSP
08-26-2009, 08:39 AM
If 25-30 years is the dividing line between a newbie and a veteran, then where does the veteran/expert cutoff begin, death??? If you have to fallow dogs around for 25 years to get enough experience to know what you like and don't like in a dog, than birds must be very very scarce.
I have Brittanys, so ultimate tail height is irrelevent, but tail set on point is deffinately important to me as is head set. I look for high head high tail. A high tail with a low head (like a lot of female's do) is more of a no no than the opposite.
Now that I have rambled, I will add that I am a bird hunter and enjoy my dogs finding birds no matter where their tail is at. I hunt to spend time with my dad, and friends, to enjoy getting away from my hot, dirty, exhausting occupation, to have a few beers at the end of the day. Somewhere down that list is "to watch a stylish dog" and I am lucky enough to own own a couple.
Matt, that's exactly what I was trying to say. It's on the list when I am going to buy a dog but, I am not going to get rid of the dog because of it. If I trialed dogs and enjoyed those games then yes, I would find a great hunting home for the dog.
Hoppe's no.10
08-26-2009, 09:40 AM
If 25-30 years is the dividing line between a newbie and a veteran, then where does the veteran/expert cutoff begin, death??? If you have to fallow dogs around for 25 years to get enough experience to know what you like and don't like in a dog, than birds must be very very scarce.
Start grouse/woodcock hunting when you're say 15 which makes you a veteran by the time you're in your 50s and still have lots and lots of bird hunting years to look forward to esp. with ObamaCare coming - free health care :D think of all the extra money freed up for gas, guns and gear :lol:.
Hoppe's no.10
Double Gun
08-26-2009, 09:52 AM
The question shouldn't be about a high tailed poor bird finder vs. a low tailed great bird finder. That is a bogus question and unfair.
The question should be about 2 equally talented bird finders - given the choice high or low tail.
I prefer dogs with higher tails.
That said, what bugs me more than anything with some dogs is not knowing whether they are on point or taking a leak, or catching their breath, or smelling a flower. I'd like to see intensity at some point whether it is eyes, tail, head....something.
BTW - 25+ years for me. I get to have my biases.
Best post of this entire mess. A dog neeeds that look when on point. Of course I have only 10 years in and hunt with a short tailed dog.
That said I prefer the higher tail.
Scott Berg
08-26-2009, 10:53 AM
I'd hunt over that red setter...as long as it finds birds. I don't hunt to be "stylish" or "vogue". People that hunt for that reason make me sick.
I hunt, to find birds, period. Not to get my jollies off over a tail.
Brian (aka - twosetters)
Brian,
I have seen this particular debate on a few different occasions. In years when the economy is not so weak we get 400+ inquiries/year. Following your skinny woman analogy, I can tell you from experience that the number ONE factor in people buying Setters is the color and markings. The less experienced they are the more likely this is the case. Now my reaction to that is not as strong as your reaction to the folks who prefer a stylish dog. It is however a bit disappointing when you put as much work into the selection process as we do to sort out the dogs with superior performance. If markings are first and foremost the average level of performance is obviously going to suffer.
I would not say I am sickened by people who only care about killing birds and have no regard for the class of the animal they hunt with so I don’t understand you being sickened by people who want more out of the experience than just bagging a bird. As a matter of fact, when I was in my 20s I measured success by number of birds in the bag. Today, I measure it in quality of experience. I look at athleticism and style much like many people have a strong preference for a certain look or certain markings. I prefer to watch Lebron James score vs Shaq. The points are of equal value on the scoreboard but there is a greater thrill for me in watching a dog with the kind of flair and incredible athleticism that Lebron possesses. I don’t care if they are purple but no way in heck am I going to watch a dog all day that is not exciting to watch. I also want that athleticism to be functional. In other words, I want it to help produce an inordinate number of pointed birds. Color or the shape of the head which is often a primary consideration has to functional value whatsoever. In the same way I want stellar application and ability to handle game to produce more pointed birds. And yes, I want them to stand tall with intensity and impeccable manners. Just getting the bird pointed is simply not enough for my taste. If someone else does not care about style, that’s definitely their prerogative. For many people success is only measured by birds in the bag, not dog work. I would guess that pointing dog owners who shoot only pointed birds represents less than 5% of pointing dog owners, probably closer to 1 or 2%. For me, a bag limit behind a phenomenal athlete with impeccable manners around birds from a dog that looks like the one below. You are welcome to approach your experience any way you choose.
SRB
http://i406.photobucket.com/albums/pp141/BergBros/Pete_75.jpg
Scott Berg
08-26-2009, 10:58 AM
But of course you qualify your first question with the adverb "almost."
As to answering your second question: I wouldn't keep a puppy that wouldn't "hunt" (my qualifying quotation marks - obviously one doesn't take a little puppy "hunting" per se but puppies do demonstrate "hunting" precursors) and a puppy of mine that doesn't "hunt" would never become a dog of mine that wouldn't hunt.
Now let's slightly change the wording in your question: Would you keep a dog that couldn't hunt through no fault of it's own - physical disability, gun shyness due to trauma etc.? Of course I'd keep it. I'd no sooner dump a bird dog under those circumstances then I'd estrange myself from a child gone blind. I've had aged GSPs that by any pragmatic or practical definition could no longer "hunt" but I certainly kept them and cared for them until they could no longer function - not as a hunting dog but as an animal.
Hoppe's no.10
Michael,
I understand the scenario you are trying to nail down. Should someone get rid of a dog because it’s not straight up on point. I think I understand where you are coming from ... That is is a very narrow view of what makes a great dog. I agree. A very good bird dog that is a great companion should be appreciated. An owner should be satisfied with a dog that has great functional attributes and is a great companion. However, as a breeder, the answer for me is more complicated than presented. The tail thing is grossly over simplified. It is made out to be of primary importance when in fact it is part of a package demanded by a segment that demands a great deal from their dogs. This segment of pointing dog fanciers tend to demand their dogs be great athletes with a functional build, proper gait, running style, and the kind of fire that is fun to watch. Just getting the bird pointed is not adequate. The folks who demand a dog that looks great on point tend to demand more of every other aspect of the dog as well. Never in the thousands of inquiries I have had has someone said to me I want a poker tail but I am OK with an average bird dog. The trailers and the hunters looking for great style also looking for a superior bird dog and possess the knowledge to break down the various aspects that collectively produce more pointed birds. By this I mean quality of application and manners around birds which as I am sure you know are prerequisites for a dog we could call superior. They are the same folks who demand stamina and heat tolerance and understand the appropriate build and gait have significant influence on stamina.
The question is not are folks who value style are justified in accepting great style and sacrificing bird finding ability. That’s not an accurate representation of the value proposition at all. The question is actually should pointing dog enthusiasts accept mediocre or poor style and be satisfied if they have a good meat dog and family companion. The answer to that of course is simply YES. If they don’t care why should we care? However, let’s not twist this into a scenario that guys who care about style are OK with dogs that are mediocre bird dogs. That’s not what is happening. I cut about a 15 dogs last year that were poker straight or very nearly poker straight on point. I sold one last week that looked phenomenal on point but he was a little too soft to use at stud. Some of the dogs we cut did not have the mental make-up we demand for dogs we are going to breed. Others may not have been physically ideal or gaited well enough to breed, etc. The point is that those of us who tend to demand dogs that look great on point tend to me more demanding in other areas too.
SRB
hehibrits
08-26-2009, 12:49 PM
Just a friendly question since we are analogizing:
How many championships has Shaq won?
How many championships has Lebron won?
I don't care for basketball, so I don't watch either one score anything. Mama said, "Pretty is as pretty does."
Just stirring the pot
Scott Berg
08-26-2009, 04:26 PM
Just a friendly question since we are analogizing:
How many championships has Shaq won?
How many championships has Lebron won?
I don't care for basketball, so I don't watch either one score anything. Mama said, "Pretty is as pretty does."
Just stirring the pot
OK - switch the analogy to Michael Jordan. For that matter Akeem Olajuwan. I find it much more entertaining to watch that type of talent and athleticsm Bryant has and Olajuwan had vs bowling over guys in the lane. I never could figure out why it was within the rules for Shaq to bang people backward until he was next to the basket and toss it in off the glass from 6 feet. The same analogy can be made of European hockey. They don't allow all of the tactics that negate hockey skills in Europe.
Your position that style does not put more birds in the bag is absolutely correct. In South Dakota many hunting groups line up literally 20 wide march through the field and shoot a limit of 60 birds in an hour or two. Many people measure the quality of the hunt by the number of birds in the bag. I met a local in a sandwich shop in a little town near where I grouse hunt who kills 150 grouse/yr when the population is up by driving a ATV down trains a gound swatting them. His logic was also that it was effective.
There are many ways to be effective. I don't think any of us who value exception style would argue you can't be just as effective with a dog that has a 9:00 tail. For anyone who finds no value in a dog with exceptional style and athleticism, so be it. BUT ... the positioning I see frequently where people suggest that the guys worried about style are willing to sacrifice bird dog is not in the least bit true. It's simply is an additional requirement and the same guy that will get rid of a dog with a low tail will also get rid of one that is an average or even above average bird dog.
What this is really about is that the folks who don't have dogs with class on point feel slighted when others speak proudly of dogs with class. You will read some pretty harsh comments suggesting the idiocy of those who value this attribute. It really bothers some people because there is a basic suggestion that they have lesser dogs if they don't value these attributes and that creates some animosity.
We all need to be a little more accepting of what others value and do not value in a bird dog. The basis of a good percentage of internet discussion is people defending their definition of a perfect dog or the perfect breed or whatever. There is no such thing! Just be glad if you have the canine companion(s) you have and don't worry if someone else thinks they have something better.
SRB
WestCoastHunter
08-26-2009, 05:03 PM
I will throw three points out there and then I'll leave it to you guys.
1. To the best of my knowledge, a high tail is not bred for in trial dogs outside of North America. I don't think that makes them less impressive.
2. Ever watch a border collie work? You'll often see them run around with a low tail that slightly twitches as they think through what their next move is going to be. There is something eerily cool about that and I think the same can be said for a well bred pointing dog that does something similar when it's on point. Don't get me wrong, I appreciate the high tail, both my dogs point with an elevated tail to one degree or another but I appreciate a knowing, intense, point with or without that.
3. My worry, and it may be unfounded, is that people are slowly breeding out superior scenting/pointing abilities in the name of the "perfect package." The dogs available are excellent specimens, no doubt. But are they really truly the best hunting dogs that could be bred? It's not a vitally important question to answer, but I do wonder. How many dogs with superior instincts that could better a breed get culled on the basis of something as simple as a low tail?
I don't think it's unfair to ask that question no matter how many dogs one has seen or how many years one has or has not hunted over dogs.
chewy
08-26-2009, 05:22 PM
If you have a dog with a long tail it better be high... In my opinion its not only gentics but a sign of confidence.. that red setter looks like a nervous dog to me.. Dogs wagging their tail is genetic or too much pressure put on them,, trust me i own one..
i wont be politically correct here... You are asking this question because based on your pictures your pointer has a low lying tail... and it was mentioned in a post because you started making comments on when a breeder should breed or not breed a dog.. I would never buy a pointer or setter from a breeder who has dogs with low lying tails.. with that said it doesnt mean someone else wont.. just my opinion and most others people on what a pointer or setter should look like on point..
What a border collie have to do with the price of rice in china??
You can get a high tailed dog that is a good hunter from any reputable breeder and it wont break the bank..
And many that say style doesnt matter yet they are the ones with the fancy shot gun looking like a walking orvis catalog, with all the electrical gadgets. driving the cadilac escalade to go on a hunting trip, live in a 4000 sq foot house alwaystrying to keep up with the joneses.. and they have the nerve to say style doesnt matter... come on be real.
i have to go to kmart to get a hunting vest see ya
chewy
08-26-2009, 05:31 PM
.
3. My worry, and it may be unfounded, is that people are slowly breeding out superior scenting/pointing abilities in the name of the "perfect package." The dogs available are excellent specimens, no doubt. But are they really truly the best hunting dogs that could be bred? It's not a vitally important question to answer, but I do wonder. How many dogs with superior instincts that could better a breed get culled on the basis of something as simple as a low tail?
I don't think it's unfair to ask that question no matter how many dogs one has seen or how many years one has or has not hunted over dogs.[/quote]
to summarize your question....i have a dog who doesnt have great style but is a great bird finder.. how can i convince people i should breed him or justify why i should breed him to make myself feel better??..
you just dont get it... to better the breed you have to have superior instincts with the tail and style and gait.. there is more to a bird dog than pointing and finding birds..
What good is a dog who can find a million birds if only he could last more than hour because his gate is soo bad that he wears himself out? What good is a dog with awesome style if he cant find birds..
Can you breed the high tail into an awesome bird finder, sure you can how many years did it take wehle?
BIGSP
08-26-2009, 05:43 PM
.
3. My worry, and it may be unfounded, is that people are slowly breeding out superior scenting/pointing abilities in the name of the "perfect package." The dogs available are excellent specimens, no doubt. But are they really truly the best hunting dogs that could be bred? It's not a vitally important question to answer, but I do wonder. How many dogs with superior instincts that could better a breed get culled on the basis of something as simple as a low tail?
I don't think it's unfair to ask that question no matter how many dogs one has seen or how many years one has or has not hunted over dogs.
to summarize your question....i have a dog who doesnt have great style but is a great bird finder.. how can i convince people i should breed him or justify why i should breed him to make myself feel better??..
you just dont get it... to better the breed you have to have superior instincts with the tail and style and gait.. there is more to a bird dog than pointing and finding birds..
What good is a dog who can find a million birds if only he could last more than hour because his gate is soo bad that he wears himself out? What good is a dog with awesome style if he cant find birds..
Can you breed the high tail into an awesome bird finder, sure you can how many years did it take wehle?[/QUOTE]
HUH?
BIGSP
08-26-2009, 05:51 PM
If you have a dog with a long tail it better be high... In my opinion its not only gentics but a sign of confidence.. that red setter looks like a nervous dog to me.. Dogs wagging their tail is genetic or too much pressure put on them,, trust me i own one..
i wont be politically correct here... You are asking this question because based on your pictures your pointer has a low lying tail... and it was mentioned in a post because you started making comments on when a breeder should breed or not breed a dog.. I would never buy a pointer or setter from a breeder who has dogs with low lying tails.. with that said it doesnt mean someone else wont.. just my opinion and most others people on what a pointer or setter should look like on point..
What a border collie have to do with the price of rice in china??
You can get a high tailed dog that is a good hunter from any reputable breeder and it wont break the bank..
And many that say style doesnt matter yet they are the ones with the fancy shot gun looking like a walking orvis catalog, with all the electrical gadgets. driving the cadilac escalade to go on a hunting trip, live in a 4000 sq foot house alwaystrying to keep up with the joneses.. and they have the nerve to say style doesnt matter... come on be real.
i have to go to kmart to get a hunting vest see ya
That makes sense. Your quote marks didn't show up right in that last post.
I agree with you totally. I have seen dogs that may not be trial class but, still show intensity on point and I have seen dogs like that Red Setter, No Thanks.
To answer Westcoasthunters question "Are breeders breeding out superior scenting for a high tail?" Come on, are you serious. Not if you are buying from a reputable breeder. It goes back to only the best of the best get bred. They need to be the whole package. Why settle for anything less. Even when breeding the best to the best you are going to get subpar dogs within those litters.
Personally I don't want a trial dog but, I would be willing to bet that those dogs even the bottom half, will out find my dogs almost every day of the week in a 1 hour stake.
Scott Berg
08-26-2009, 06:11 PM
That makes sense. Your quote marks didn't show up right in that last post.
I agree with you totally. I have seen dogs that may not be trial class but, still show intensity on point and I have seen dogs like that Red Setter, No Thanks.
To answer Westcoasthunters question "Are breeders breeding out superior scenting for a high tail?" Come on, are you serious. Not if you are buying from a reputable breeder. It goes back to only the best of the best get bred. They need to be the whole package. Why settle for anything less. Even when breeding the best to the best you are going to get subpar dogs within those litters.
Personally I don't want a trial dog but, I would be willing to bet that those dogs even the bottom half, will out find my dogs almost every day of the week in a 1 hour stake.
Guys,
Just for the record. That photo is of an Irish Red & White Setter not a Red Setter. Very BIG difference! These are Red Setters (sire and two daughters).
http://i406.photobucket.com/albums/pp141/BergBros/Ed-900.jpg
http://i406.photobucket.com/albums/pp141/BergBros/Jenny-Email.jpg
http://i406.photobucket.com/albums/pp141/BergBros/Sam_400.jpg
BradU20
08-26-2009, 06:26 PM
Guys,
Just for the record. That photo is of an Irish Red & White Setter not a Red Setter. Very BIG difference! These are Red Setters (sire and two daughters).
Thanks, I was just going to clarify that.
dogwhistle
08-26-2009, 06:26 PM
i think the high tail is like a trademark, it indicates that the dog has other superior traits as well. there are some pretty nice dogs with high tails being bred today.
griffondog
08-26-2009, 06:56 PM
So should we be culling more dogs to get the traits you want? Or just selling off the one's who don't make the grade with no breeding rights?
Griff
wirehair
08-26-2009, 07:28 PM
I like watching Shaq. :lol:
Hoppe's no.10
08-26-2009, 07:29 PM
i think the high tail is like a trademark, it indicates that the dog has other superior traits as well. there are some pretty nice dogs with high tails being bred today.
See, this is precisely what I'm trying to get across in my replies. Why does a dog (in the end a dumb animal) have "superior traits" because it points with its tail straight up. Why is the "superior?" What are these traits and if these traits are important to you - and that's OK if they are - why should they be important to
Unregistered4 who posted:
"I don't hunt to be "stylish" or "vogue". People that hunt for that reason make me sick.
I hunt, to find birds, period. Not to get my jollies off over a tail."
Have you achieved something that Unregistered4 hasn't or has he achieved something that you haven't?
You unknowingly put forth my contention that the way most of us (including me) oftentimes view and define bird dogs and bird hunting has virtually nothing to do with birds, bird dogs, bird hunting and the like but rather a metaphor for how we view ourselves. What is most important is an understanding of why we use these terms - (high tail vs.low tail/ Dogwhistle vs.Unregistered4) to in part define ourselves.
For those who want a better understanding of why they in part define themselves as a "hunter" - birds or otherwise my suggestion is for them to read beyond "Pointing Dog Journal," "Upland Almanac," Michael McIntosh, Burton Spiller and the like which are well worth reading but in the end superficial letters of why we hunt. But also read "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber" by Ernest Hemingway (arguably the greatest "hunting" story ever written ) and after you've read it put it aside and read it again a year later and then after that year's hiatus think about what "hunting" means to his fictional characters and why they are motivated to hunt and how it relates or doesn't relate to you. And please, Hemingway's short story is neither pro nor anti- hunting - in fact it has little to do with hunting in spite of the fact that much of it's very exciting narrative concerns shooting dangerous animals.
But please keep in mind it's not imperative as to whether or not you agree or disagree with that which motivates Hemingway's characters to hunt. What is important is that it will help you - somewhere down the line in your life's hunting experiences- to come to a better understanding of why you call yourself a "hunter" if such things are important to you.
There is no right or wrong (high tails vs. low tails etc. ) to any of this. And in the end what's relevant is not so much what you want but rather an understanding of "WHY" you want it. This is the essence IMO of the difference between a "newbie" bird hunter and a "veteran" bird hunter and age - in spite of what I previously and admittedly superficially wrote - has little to do with it. Some bird hunters will always be "Newbies" and others will be, beginning at the moment they first carry a shotgun in pursuit of a bird, veterans - high tails or low tails notwithstanding.
Hoppe's no.10
or since many of you have suddenly gone over to my given name - Michael
JGF@Gratiot
08-26-2009, 08:22 PM
Why is it so wrong for a breed to have a desired trait, IE Why is it wrong to expect a English Setter/Pointer in America to have a nice high straight tail? It's obvious it has nothing to do with finding birds, but neither does an over/underbite, neither does a bad coat on a german wirehair, or a short choppy gait in general. There is an awful lot of "why's" well why not, why so wrong for say the breed standard to be a class dog. Lots of things don't define dogs as being good or not, but if you had an ideal, what is so wrong with holding that standard? Not to say these dogs are not good or even great, but for everyone of them, there is one that can do it just as good and have class to boot! If you had two in front would you really choose the one with less style or class?
chewy
08-26-2009, 08:34 PM
I like watching Shaq. :lol:
LOL how was it ?i missed it yesterday
Unregistered4
08-26-2009, 08:44 PM
If you do care, why? Would you take a dog with a telephone pole tail that needs significant work to make it an effective gun dog over one that has a level or low tail but is easy to work with and knows its game?
Scott Berg,
This is one of the original question asked, by the original poster.
So, in my opinion. Someone that picks a dog on account of it's tail, over one that has better bird finding abilities while hunting...is a boob.
That was the question. I'm sorry you don't like or understand my answer.
Nowhere, did I see the original poster ask about breeding dogs, trialing dogs (if anything, he mentioned this question being for those that "don't" and for those that primarily hunt), betterment of dogs or determining super qualities through style.
So, when I said it makes me sick to think that someone would pick a dog solely on it's tail...it does. And, many posters here said it was paramount or the means to all ends of bird hunting, in their opinion. There are so many other factors to consider when purchasing a dog that the tail should be the last thing you should look at.
Oh...and thanks for replying in large type to Micheal and I...and nobody else. It says something...
Brian.
Double Gun
08-26-2009, 08:59 PM
For the record I believe the high tail is nothing more than an American thing. Nothing to do with bird finding, just what we think looks nice.
midwestfisherman
08-26-2009, 09:15 PM
Not to get my jollies off over a tail.
Brian (aka - twosetters)
Well then that depends on what kind of tail you're referring to doesn't it? :one_eye::one_eye::one_eye:
Steelheadfred
08-26-2009, 09:20 PM
Well then that depends on what kind of tail you're referring to doesn't it? :one_eye::one_eye::one_eye:
Thats what I am talking about Jim....walk nasty fer yer daddy one time!:lol:
Merimac
08-26-2009, 09:29 PM
Brian,
Scott uses Word and transfers it over. He does it all the time so don't take it personally as I am sure it was not meant that way.
The original question is a loaded one. The answer I would give is, I don't want either one.
If you are picking a puppy at 8 weeks, do you pick the best bird finder? At 8 weeks you would never know which pup this would be. I would never go buy a puppy out of parents with low hanging tails. Why would I? Should I pick one with an underbite?
I am not looking to buy an older dog that does not appeal to me. So I am not taking either of the dogs listed.
Ben
WestCoastHunter
08-26-2009, 09:31 PM
i wont be politically correct here... You are asking this question because based on your pictures your pointer has a low lying tail... and it was mentioned in a post because you started making comments on when a breeder should breed or not breed a dog.. I would never buy a pointer or setter from a breeder who has dogs with low lying tails.. with that said it doesnt mean someone else wont.. just my opinion and most others people on what a pointer or setter should look like on point..
Let me correct you on three points.
1. Not being politically correct would be more like saying, "Chewy, if I wanted crap from you I would squeeze your head."
2. The dog of mine that you mention as being criticized is actually the world's worst bird hunter and the person talking him down didn't even realize that.
3. Actually I'm asking the question because I think it's legit and I think a smart person always questions what is accepted as gospel truth.
You are welcome to disagree.
What a border collie have to do with the price of rice in china??
Do you see many being bred for a high tail?
What good is a dog who can find a million birds if only he could last more than hour because his gate is soo bad that he wears himself out? What good is a dog with awesome style if he cant find birds..
We agree there.
To answer Westcoasthunters question "Are breeders breeding out superior scenting for a high tail?" Come on, are you serious. Not if you are buying from a reputable breeder.
Personally I don't want a trial dog but, I would be willing to bet that those dogs even the bottom half, will out find my dogs almost every day of the week in a 1 hour stake.
I'm dead serious.
I don't disagree, but I also think you should question the assumptions that exist out there more. The dogs you speak of are first class, but could they be better? You would do well to ask yourself that. We all would.
Guys,
Just for the record. That photo is of an Irish Red & White Setter not a Red Setter. Very BIG difference! These are Red Setters (sire and two daughters).
http://i406.photobucket.com/albums/pp141/BergBros/Ed-900.jpg
http://i406.photobucket.com/albums/pp141/BergBros/Jenny-Email.jpg
http://i406.photobucket.com/albums/pp141/BergBros/Sam_400.jpg
Glad someone noticed :lol:
midwestfisherman
08-26-2009, 09:35 PM
Thats what I am talking about Jim....walk nasty fer yer daddy one time!:lol:
Sorry I don't swing that way......:16suspect
k9wernet
08-26-2009, 09:46 PM
And many that say style doesnt matter yet they are the ones with the fancy shot gun looking like a walking orvis catalog, with all the electrical gadgets. driving the cadilac escalade to go on a hunting trip, live in a 4000 sq foot house alwaystrying to keep up with the joneses.. and they have the nerve to say style doesnt matter... come on be real.
i have to go to kmart to get a hunting vest see ya
I think you and I would get along pretty well Chewy.
I shop at Walmart; drive a 2001 vehicle with over 200,000 miles on it; buy second-hand gear and clothing with some regularity; and don't have cable or satellite for my family's one, 19" tv. The computer I'm typing on right now was probably built the same year my car was, but I don't know -- I'm its second owner (bought it a year ago for $100).
Despite all that, if Ed McMahon showed up at my house with a shiny new Cadillac Escalade "hunting vehicle", I'd first ask how my dead grandpa is doing, and then happily accept the keys.
I'm not going to take food out of my kids' mouths so that I can show the world how "stylish" I am. I'm not going to go out of my way to have exceptionally nice or new things, especially when the old ones are doing their job; however, I'm not going to refuse nice things either if a reasonable opportunity comes along.
My dogs aren't going to find themselves looking for a new home over a lack of style (have you seen my goofy GSP/Brit mix with her crooked tail and limping gait?), or lack of bird finding either. However, all other things being equal, why would you settle for less than the best if there are other, better options out there?
WCH, lets say you have a female you want to breed. There are two studs with similar titles, similar build, similar disposition, but one points with a high tail and the other points like that R&W setter you posted. Same stud fee -- would you even think twice? Really? How much cheaper would that low-tailed pointer have to be before you considered paying for that stud service?
Again, I'm no snob (at least I don't think I am) and I'm probably the least knowledgeable guy here when it comes to breeding: but I really don't think I'd LET a low-tailed stud breed my pointer. I think there are plenty of dogs out there that fit both requirements -- bird finding machines WITH style -- that you don't have to sacrifice one to have the other.
KW
Unregistered4
08-26-2009, 09:55 PM
The answer I would give is, I don't want either one.
Ben,
I can totally understand that.
My point is...for someone to buy a dog just on account of it's tail, so they can watch it stack-up once in a blue moon, while out in the back yard or woods...is stupid in my opinion.
And, for someone to think that the tail is the "all end to bird dogs" is well...in my opinion...
I just find it funny, that "westcoaster" ask a simple question...and the twelve o'clock tail guys come out of the woodwork voicing their defense/position...or just spouting off that this is the only tail a bird dog should have.
Brian.
P.S. Fritz and Jim...get a room...you two are weirding me out.
BIGSP
08-26-2009, 10:04 PM
Ben,
I can totally understand that.
My point is...for someone to buy a dog just on account of it's tail, so they can watch it stack-up once in a blue moon, while out in the back yard or woods...is stupid in my opinion.
And, for someone to think that the tail is the "all end to bird dogs" is well...in my opinion...
I just find it funny, that "westcoaster" ask a simple question...and the twelve o'clock tail guys come out of the woodwork voicing their defense/position...or just spouting off that this is the only tail a bird dog should have.
Brian.
P.S. Fritz and Jim...get a room...you two are weirding me out.
Brian,
Do you really think anyone of the "12o'clock boys" would buy a dog just because of it's tail? I think most guys are buying dogs that have great pedigrees and maybe even some wins/championships themselves. With the wins comes the tail. So, if you're looking for a bird dog, I would assume most of these guys just assume the dog is going to have a nice tail.
Brian,
I've seen dogs like yours run. They are stylish in their own right and dammed pretty too. I don't think 12 o'clock is the end all be all but if your buying a dog in that caliber it sure as hell better have a nice tail.
k9wernet
08-26-2009, 10:31 PM
See, this is precisely what I'm trying to get across in my replies. Why does a dog (in the end a dumb animal) have "superior traits" because it points with its tail straight up. Why is the "superior?" What are these traits and if these traits are important to you - and that's OK if they are - why should they be important to
Unregistered4 who posted:
"I don't hunt to be "stylish" or "vogue". People that hunt for that reason make me sick.
I hunt, to find birds, period. Not to get my jollies off over a tail."
Have you achieved something that Unregistered4 hasn't or has he achieved something that you haven't?
Michael, I like the depth/philosophy of your thought here. However, lets throw out the term "superior" and replace it with "more aesthetically pleasing". That's really what we're talking about here, right?
Why is an '09 vehicle more aesthetically pleasing than an '08? Why is a Van Gogh more aesthetically pleasing than a comic strip? Why is a sunset more aesthetically pleasing than the noonday sun? Why is my wife more aesthetically pleasing than anybody else's? :D
If you want to turn it into the classic art imitating culture/culture imitating art debate: Are people drawn to high-tailed dogs because that's what we see on magazine covers and in paintings; or do high-tailed dogs end up on magazine covers and in paintings because that's what people are drawn to?
Or is it that aesthetic value follows utility? Does my mouth water at the sight of a new SUV because its earlier models have proven their worth? Am I attracted to er, buxom, females because somewhere in the depths of my psyche I know they'll be functional moms? Do we like high-tailed dogs because, at one time, a high tail was the best way to find your dog on point, kill a bird and feed your family? I don't know.
I do know that I like what I like, and I make no apologies for it. I get the best of what I can with what I have, and I really don't worry a whole lot about what other people think. I like my kinky-tailed pointing mutt just as much as my "stylish" EP for a whole variety of reasons -- many of which I couldn't put into words if I tried.
Hope that helps.
KW
Scott Berg
08-27-2009, 01:35 AM
Ben,
I can totally understand that.
My point is...for someone to buy a dog just on account of it's tail, so they can watch it stack-up once in a blue moon, while out in the back yard or woods...is stupid in my opinion. And, for someone to think that the tail is the "all end to bird dogs" is well...in my opinion...
I just find it funny, that "westcoaster" ask a simple question...and the twelve o'clock tail guys come out of the woodwork voicing their defense/position...or just spouting off that this is the only tail a bird dog should have.
Brian.
P.S. Fritz and Jim...get a room...you two are weirding me out.
We come out of the woodwork because as several people have pointed out it is way off-base to think that the people who demand more in terms of style are going to be satisified with a mediocre bird dog. As I wrote earlier, in my experience they are likely to be more demanding in terms of the traits that contribute to finding and handling birds. So yes, I would expect a number of people to correct you when you suggest that we are willing to accept marginal bird dogs provided they have style. This is something you have convinced yourself is common when if it exists at all it is a very rare case.
By the way, I wrote my response to you and Michael in the same Word document at the same time and pasted them over. They were the exact same font so whatever it is you found offensive was completely unintentional.
SRB
Unregistered4
08-27-2009, 05:39 AM
We come out of the woodwork because as several people have pointed out it is way off-base to think that the people who demand more in terms of style are going to be satisified with a mediocre bird dog.
First off...I never said "twelve o'clock dogs" were inferior or that that's the only reason the twelve o'clock tail guys choose their dog(s).
The original posters asked a question (which I re-posted earlier) that asks a specific question. I answered it. And, I'll answer it again. If someone chooses a marginal bird dog with a poker tail, just because of the style of the tail, over a better bird finding/handling low tailed dog...I find that sad.
So yes, I would expect a number of people to correct you when you suggest that we are willing to accept marginal bird dogs provided they have style.
Secondly...I never said anything about anyone...I said, "If" someone were to choose a dog for a certain reason, as in tail position or hunts with a certain dog too be in "style". It would make me sick. That's all, period. If you read into that and came up with something else...I don't know what else I can say.
This is something you have convinced yourself is common when if it exists at all it is a very rare case.
Thirdly...I never said it was "common"...if I did please show me.
Fourthly...since this "tail thing" has become the standard for acquiring a "great bird dog". I'm going to do a little experiment...or lets make it interesting and call it a wager.
If Scott (2ESRGR8) would be interested, I'll put up my numbers/stats from last season, from my dog Deputy. Who's been trained (and I use that term loosely) and handled only by me, against his dog Kate this season. Last season Deputy was one year and one month old when the season began. And, Kate will be one year and nine months when this season begins this year, and has been to a trainer a few times, out west last spring - for a month or so, trialed, etc. With all of that being said. I'm willing to wager that Deputy's number on birds pointed - will be more; birds shot over him - will be more; unproductive - will be less and bumped birds - will be less.
The reason I picked Scott and his dog Kate is...I know him and hunt with him often (unfortunately...lol), and know that he keeps/takes stats exactly the same way I do, hunts very similar to me, hunts more than one dog, hunts my spots half the time (the bast***...lol), hunts around the same amount of hours, prides himself on being able to put his dogs into birds...and he's honest...Oh, and most importantly Kate has a pretty straight, twelve o'clock tail.
Oh, the wager will be...the owner of whoever's dog does the best...doesn't have to do dishes at the cabin and gets his cigar lit for him...and has his beer retrieved from the fridge for him...all season long.
Oh and by the way...the dish soap is under the sink...
Brian.
2ESRGR8
08-27-2009, 07:34 AM
Dude, you only killed like 4 birds all year, that's a good day for me. :D
Kater will take that challenge!
Back woods
08-27-2009, 08:02 AM
I'd take that wager if I was Scott. But I'd raise, you would have to clean and cook all the birds shot as well pour that beer into a nice frosty mug.
BradU20
08-27-2009, 09:30 AM
Now this thread just got interesting. :evil:
Dave Medema
08-27-2009, 09:39 AM
I want in.
I agree with Brian that this conversation is way off from what was originally asked but, with that said let's see if I can throw in my 2cents.
I believe that wanting a dog with a high tail is nothing more than personal preferance or a requirement for field trialing their particular breed.
I personally own Ryman type setters, by choice, that don't have high tails. I chose this type of dog for it's beauty, grace, bird handling ability and personality. If I went to purchase another one and had a choice between one with a high tail or a low tail, i would pick the low tail because a Ryman with a high tail is odd and was probable cross bred to a field setter to get that tail, which is not what I want to buy.
If I was buying a Pointer or Field Setter for trialing I would buy the one with the high tail because that is what I'm looking for.
If I'm buying a GSP, GWP, Brittany..... I obviously don't give a s..t about the tail angle.
So, to say that a dog with a high tail is a better dog, or more stylish dog is an over-generalized statement that needs to be more specific as to what breed and the intended use of the dog to be correct.
Originally Posted by chewy http://www.michigan-sportsman.com/forum/images/buttons/viewpost.gif (http://www.michigan-sportsman.com/forum/showthread.php?p=2817298#post2817298)
And many that say style doesnt matter yet they are the ones with the fancy shot gun looking like a walking orvis catalog, with all the electrical gadgets. driving the cadilac escalade to go on a hunting trip, live in a 4000 sq foot house alwaystrying to keep up with the joneses.. and they have the nerve to say style doesnt matter... come on be real.
This is about as intelligent as saying that "anyone that has a dog with a twelve o'clock tail but lives is some ramshakel old house with a broken down pickup and dresses on holey old hunting clothes and acutally believe that style matters........come on be real.
Jim
Steelheadfred
08-27-2009, 10:44 AM
I want in.
Who is the bookie on this action?
Hoppe's no.10
08-27-2009, 01:21 PM
Michael, I like the depth/philosophy of your thought here. However, lets throw out the term "superior" and replace it with "more aesthetically pleasing". That's really what we're talking about here, right?
KW
Great post, :yeahthat:
Hoppe's no.10
crosswind
08-27-2009, 01:27 PM
Just how many people out there really care about whether their dog's tail sticks straight up into the sky like the empire state building when it's on point?
Trial dog people with long tailed dogs are obsessed with it. But my question is for the hunters in the crowd, or rather, those of us who don't compete with our dogs. How many of you really care if your dog's tail stands on end as opposed to sitting at 7 o'clock or turned into a cork screw when on point?
If you do care, why? Would you take a dog with a telephone pole tail that needs significant work to make it an effective gun dog over one that has a level or low tail but is easy to work with and knows its game?
I know my opinion and I'm sure several of the rest of you do as well so I'll stop there. But I'm curious what the general consensus in the crowd is on this.
Hey aren't you the same guy that does not believe in teaching a pointing dog whoa ??????? Now your back trying to convince all that there is nothing wrong with a low tail. Man you just don't get this stuff do ya.
Hey if you don't mind lookng at it then so what.The questions you pose above is rediculous.
You try to make it out as if the people that have or want a high tail only want that, and are not concerned with anything else such as bird finding ability.
Someone else asked you the question of, giving all other abilities being equal would you buy the dog with a 12 oclock or the one with a low tail.
I see you never answered the question, why?????????
WestCoastHunter
08-27-2009, 03:31 PM
Hey aren't you the same guy that does not believe in teaching a pointing dog whoa ??????? Now your back trying to convince all that there is nothing wrong with a low tail. Man you just don't get this stuff do ya.
Hey if you don't mind lookng at it then so what.The questions you pose above is rediculous.
You try to make it out as if the people that have or want a high tail only want that, and are not concerned with anything else such as bird finding ability.
Someone else asked you the question of, giving all other abilities being equal would you buy the dog with a 12 oclock or the one with a low tail.
I see you never answered the question, why?????????
So much for this thread.
.........
Crosswind, you crack me up. But I'm tiring of you.
You should go back and read what I posted in that thread. I said I find the command useless without associating it with birds eventually and, get this, I even said I had taught it to the dog I used as an example. I never said to not teach "whoa" and to say otherwise, which you've done a lot, is well, just wrong. Go back and read it a little more carefully, find where I said not to teach it, then come back to me with questions or comments.
I will admit that I said I think the pointing instincts should be so strong in a dog that it will point without me needing to say "whoa" however and I stand by that. But that shouldn't be construed to mean I said "whoa" shouldn't be trained or that such a dog won't need some work to keep it pointing like that.
But that's another thread.
So I'll indulge you here on the purchasing question. The simple answer is I'd take either. I'm not picky. But I'm just a hunter.
The questions I asked aren't ridiculous, they should be asked. In any given year I'm sure you cull several dogs for this or that reason (I chose to pick on tails here). But do you ever bother to think that you might just have taken out some one in a million genes that would make your line of dogs better instinctual pointers (small p)? All because of something like a tail? The way you write about my questions being ridiculous, it sounds like you might not. Maybe that's an unfair worry/accusation, but I don't think it's unreasonable to bring up such questions and I don't think they're ridiculous. You as a breeder should be thinking about that kind of stuff, and who knows, maybe you do. Additionally, people who purcahse hunting dogs should think about the consequences of what they purchase. Yes, we can all buy high tailed dogs with superb pointing instincts and they look great. But are we perpetuating a practice that may ultimately lead to dogs that, well, could be better but aren't due to our selective purchasing which in turns leads to more of the same selective breeding?
That's rather deep, and I'm not sure you understand that kind of stuff Crosswind, but I've made my attempt.
But I have one thing to add...
Since you're in the game of reading things into my posts Crosswind, I'll read into yours from here and the one you referenced. I think you don't like online forums because you see them as a threat to your business (I'd argue otherwise, but I think this is how you feel about them). I also don't think you like people questioning breeding practices, yours or anyone else's, because you see that as a threat to your business as well. So, in an effort to stem that, you start pounding on the keyboard as someone put it in regards to me, and do your best to tear the person(s) and the questions they ask down.
Your posts haven't been rational at times, they definately haven't been pleasant, and to make it all worse, you've misread what was said in one case recently (it's actually not the first time) and stuffed words into my mouth.
Really guy? This is how you want to represent yourself and your business?
chewy
08-27-2009, 04:12 PM
I would say there isnt anyone who likes someone questioning breeding practices whent he person questioning is a complete moron and very ignorant and already has his mind made up and just starts threads fishing for a bite to prove a point he thinks is correct.....
Based on your expertise.. how many one in a million gene dogs do you have? sounds like you have this all figured out?
I dont think scott ever said that his dogs doing instinctly point.. he said he has people send him dogs that dont..
I also dont think scott culls german shirt hair pointers because the tail isnt 12 oclock... they have short tails for a reason...
sounds like maybe your parents should have culled you for a lot of empty space between your ears.
BradU20
08-27-2009, 04:16 PM
........
Joel, can you just delete Chewy's post so we can continue to discuss this maturely?
Firemedic
08-27-2009, 04:29 PM
I was going to stay out of this thread, but I guess I am not now. WCH, I believe the only reason you started this thread in the first place was to defend and try to rally up support in your defense when someone in the whoa thread said the style your dog has wouldn't make it in a trial.
Do you ever stop to think the real reason the PRO trainers, i.e. Jonesy, Crosswind, etc. do not post much here is because of the lack of intelligent answers regarding training that are received when a question is asked? If you want a real answer, don't listen to a horse trainer, or a bovine breeder, but a REAL everyday professional dog trainer. Just because someone spend a few weekends out at NAVHDA with their pup does not mean they should be giving advice. For a newbie trying to get a straight answer and having to weed through all the BS answers from armchair trainers is just rediculous!
And believe me, I don't think anything you say, or what is said on this site, will affect Crosswinds business. He is a no bullshit trainer that gets results. Hell, maybe take that pointer of yours down there and see if Scott can get that tail to where it's supposed to be.
WestCoastHunter
08-27-2009, 04:52 PM
I was going to stay out of this thread, but I guess I am not now. WCH, I believe the only reason you started this thread in the first place was to defend and try to rally up support in your defense when someone in the whoa thread said the style your dog has wouldn't make it in a trial.
Do you ever stop to think the real reason the PRO trainers, i.e. Jonesy, Crosswind, etc. do not post much here is because of the lack of intelligent answers regarding training that are received when a question is asked? If you want a real answer, don't listen to a horse trainer, or a bovine breeder, but a REAL everyday professional dog trainer. Just because someone spend a few weekends out at NAVHDA with their pup does not mean they should be giving advice. For a newbie trying to get a straight answer and having to weed through all the BS answers from armchair trainers is just rediculous!
And believe me, I don't think anything you say, or what is said on this site, will affect Crosswinds business. He is a no bullshit trainer that gets results. Hell, maybe take that pointer of yours down there and see if Scott can get that tail to where it's supposed to be.
I stand by my comments, and my question(s).
Read into them what you want. That seems to be the norm here these days.
shorthair guy
08-27-2009, 04:55 PM
best post of the thread
I was going to stay out of this thread, but I guess I am not now. WCH, I believe the only reason you started this thread in the first place was to defend and try to rally up support in your defense when someone in the whoa thread said the style your dog has wouldn't make it in a trial.
Do you ever stop to think the real reason the PRO trainers, i.e. Jonesy, Crosswind, etc. do not post much here is because of the lack of intelligent answers regarding training that are received when a question is asked? If you want a real answer, don't listen to a horse trainer, or a bovine breeder, but a REAL everyday professional dog trainer. Just because someone spend a few weekends out at NAVHDA with their pup does not mean they should be giving advice. For a newbie trying to get a straight answer and having to weed through all the BS answers from armchair trainers is just rediculous!
And believe me, I don't think anything you say, or what is said on this site, will affect Crosswinds business. He is a no bullshit trainer that gets results. Hell, maybe take that pointer of yours down there and see if Scott can get that tail to where it's supposed to be.
crosswind
08-27-2009, 05:15 PM
So much for this thread.
.........
Crosswind, you crack me up. But I'm tiring of you.
You should go back and read what I posted in that thread. I said I find the command useless without associating it with birds eventually and, get this, I even said I had taught it to the dog I used as an example. I never said to not teach "whoa" and to say otherwise, which you've done a lot, is well, just wrong. Go back and read it a little more carefully, find where I said not to teach it, then come back to me with questions or comments.
I will admit that I said I think the pointing instincts should be so strong in a dog that it will point without me needing to say "whoa" however and I stand by that. But that shouldn't be construed to mean I said "whoa" shouldn't be trained or that such a dog won't need some work to keep it pointing like that.
But that's another thread.
So I'll indulge you here on the purchasing question. The simple answer is I'd take either. I'm not picky. But I'm just a hunter.
The questions I asked aren't ridiculous, they should be asked. In any given year I'm sure you cull several dogs for this or that reason (I chose to pick on tails here). But do you ever bother to think that you might just have taken out some one in a million genes that would make your line of dogs better instinctual pointers (small p)? All because of something like a tail? The way you write about my questions being ridiculous, it sounds like you might not. Maybe that's an unfair worry/accusation, but I don't think it's unreasonable to bring up such questions and I don't think they're ridiculous. You as a breeder should be thinking about that kind of stuff, and who knows, maybe you do. Additionally, people who purcahse hunting dogs should think about the consequences of what they purchase. Yes, we can all buy high tailed dogs with superb pointing instincts and they look great. But are we perpetuating a practice that may ultimately lead to dogs that, well, could be better but aren't due to our selective purchasing which in turns leads to more of the same selective breeding?
That's rather deep, and I'm not sure you understand that kind of stuff Crosswind, but I've made my attempt.
But I have one thing to add...
Since you're in the game of reading things into my posts Crosswind, I'll read into yours from here and the one you referenced. I think you don't like online forums because you see them as a threat to your business (I'd argue otherwise, but I think this is how you feel about them). I also don't think you like people questioning breeding practices, yours or anyone else's, because you see that as a threat to your business as well. So, in an effort to stem that, you start pounding on the keyboard as someone put it in regards to me, and do your best to tear the person(s) and the questions they ask down.
Your posts haven't been rational at times, they definately haven't been pleasant, and to make it all worse, you've misread what was said in one case recently (it's actually not the first time) and stuffed words into my mouth.
Really guy? This is how you want to represent yourself and your business?
http://www.michigan-sportsman.com/forum/image.php?u=33105&dateline=1238867336 (http://www.michigan-sportsman.com/forum/member.php?u=33105)
The only part of the above post that makes any sence to me is that you are not picky.
And I have no problem with that. Until you try to bait people in with a thread like this.Your intent was to imply that because people have dogs with 12 o clock tails is that they are not concerned with the rest of the traits in their dogs. There have been some pretty knowledgable folks on here that have tried to rationally set you straight, but as usual with you , you just don't get it.
By the way I am booked up for around 6 months, does it sound like Im threatened by this or any forum.
Rysalka
08-27-2009, 05:52 PM
Good read, got some good laughs, and might have learned a few things.
Me thinks, we are spending to much time discussing the wrong end of our dogs, maybe we should discuss the end that holds the brains, does the smelling, points at the birds and not the end that leaves deposits in the yard.
Tail up, Tail in the middle, tail down, all is good in the eye of the beholder.....12 oclock tail is the rage now in trials someday it might change for some reason.
I for one would not complain about hunting with a dog of any style as long as he/she produces, trained well.
Love my dog, love to hunt with him.
Hoppe's no.10
08-27-2009, 06:13 PM
Tail up, Tail in the middle, tail down, all is good in the eye of the beholder.....12 oclock tail is the rage now in trials someday it might change for some reason.
Attitude change amongst sportsman? You think so? Nah? But since you brought it up....I remember a time when skeet shooters thought (obviously delusional) that a 26" barreled dedicated skeet O/U gun was De rigueur. Now try and find a manufacturer of a dedicated two-barreled skeet gun with barrels less than 28".
You are absolutely right in your statement that sooner or later (something) .....will be less of a "rage" (and might even be considered a fault) and (something else) that was once looked upon with disdain will be viewed as a requirement. To paraphrase KM: Low-tail lovers of the world unite - all you have to lose are your leashes and collars. :yikes:
Thanks for a great post.
Mikhail a.k.a. Hoppe's no.10
k9wernet
08-27-2009, 07:01 PM
Would you rather have a car with A/C or a CD player? The two aren't mutually exclusive. Neither are pointing ability and style. Hopefully a majority of breeders are intelligent enough to consider both. Could we have better cars though if auto manufacturers stopped designing fancy sound systems (cars with more efficient cooling maybe?)? It's possible. I like my car the way it is though, and I'm pretty happy with my dogs too.
I do think they're interesting questions Jarl, and you don't deserve the abuse you've been getting here. Subtlety is lost in computerland, and people say a lot of things they wouldn't dream about saying to your face. I think everyone has said about all there is to say on this, which is good -- I sense the padlock approaching!
KW
Hoppe's no.10
08-27-2009, 07:24 PM
I think everyone has said about all there is to say on this, which is good -- I sense the padlock approaching!
KW
All there is to say? Padlock coming? Have you not read Sarte's "No Exit"?
Just kidding :lol::rolleyes::lol:
Hoppe's no.10
Unregistered4
08-27-2009, 07:45 PM
I want in.
Cause, you could kill more birds in a week, with a German shepherd and one arm tied behind your back, than the Deputy and I could in an entire season.
Brian.
Back woods
08-27-2009, 07:57 PM
I would keep and hunt over a pointer with a less than a 12 o'clock tail that hunted his ass off and pointed a ton of birds than a picture perfect straight tailed pointer that did not. I would not breed to either dog
I had a dog Hifive's Powerhouse "Fatboy" He was the best damn grouse dog that I have ever hunted over. He was a 12 o'clock tailed dog and hit his birds fast and hard unlike any I have ever seen. He was winning at field trials and was on his way to being a great one. He ended up with a tail injury that left his tail limp. I did not get rid of him.
I think that you need to give breeders more qudos that you do. It take more than a pretty dog to make into a breeding program. All of the stud dogs I use are based on their ability to produce game then we look at the confirmation. They need to be a complete package.
dogwhistle
08-27-2009, 08:20 PM
Would you rather have a car with A/C or a CD player? The two aren't mutually exclusive. Neither are pointing ability and style. Hopefully a majority of breeders are intelligent enough to consider both. Could we have better cars though if auto manufacturers stopped designing fancy sound systems (cars with more efficient cooling maybe?)? It's possible. I like my car the way it is though, and I'm pretty happy with my dogs too.
I do think they're interesting questions Jarl, and you don't deserve the abuse you've been getting here. Subtlety is lost in computerland, and people say a lot of things they wouldn't dream about saying to your face. I think everyone has said about all there is to say on this, which is good -- I sense the padlock approaching!
KW
you are being the logical lifeboat in a sea of illogic and thinly veiled insults.
N M Mechanical
08-27-2009, 08:22 PM
Is it Sept. 15th yet:dizzy:
GNS Shorthairs
08-27-2009, 09:15 PM
Just how many people out there really care about whether their dog's tail sticks straight up into the sky like the empire state building when it's on point?
With everything else being equal, I would have to say that i care about the style of a dog's point. Is it a deal breaker with me in purchasing a pup? Absolutely. Two equal dogs, one with a low tail, I pick the other. I believe that everybody should seriously critique their dogs, both good and bad.
Trial dog people with long tailed dogs are obsessed with it. But my question is for the hunters in the crowd, or rather, those of us who don't compete with our dogs. How many of you really care if your dog's tail stands on end as opposed to sitting at 7 o'clock or turned into a cork screw when on point?
I think that trial people are obsessed with it because there are a lot of very nice dogs on the circuit and a high tail, high head, four on the ground could be the difference between placing a dog and not placing a dog. However, give a trial guy a really, really, nice running/hunting machine and they may be willing to sacrifice a "little" on the tail. But a dog with terrible style, no matter how good of a hunter he is, the competition is too close to be wasting the handler's time or the owner's money. In fact, the dogs that win are the dogs that breed (more often than not). I think that the trialers are doing the breed justice by running with the best dogs ... and that include's style as well, even if they are sacrificing some poor tailed dogs.
If you do care, why? Would you take a dog with a telephone pole tail that needs significant work to make it an effective gun dog over one that has a level or low tail but is easy to work with and knows its game?
I think that you should care about what the dog looks like on point, especially if you plan to produce offspring from that dog, whether you're a field trialer or not. Just like you should care about the dog's hunting abilities, stamina, drive, and temperment. NOw if you said that I could only pick four out of the five attributes that i listed above, I would definitely drop the style because I prioritize the other four attributes higher (and that is just my personal opinion). I guess for the above scenario I would have to ask a question back to you. What is the attribute that is more easily gained? To me, bird drive and biddability are much harder to get "out of a dog" than style. Give me that drive, any day of the week.
I know my opinion and I'm sure several of the rest of you do as well so I'll stop there. But I'm curious what the general consensus in the crowd is on this.
I think that the average hunter wants a hunting dog ... and if they don't have this ... then they send him to the pound ... because that's why we have pounds, right:dizzy:? But seriously, I also think that the average hunter may not know what the [insert your breed here] pointing dog should look like on point either. Should they care? I'll leave them to answer this question. But i can guarantee that some of those "non-carers" will now take a closer look at their next pup and they may even make their choice based on the tail.
k9wernet
08-27-2009, 10:41 PM
GNS/WCH, see I think we're going down the wrong road in asking if you'd purchase a pup with ... [fill in the blank].
A page or two ago, I asked if you'd sire a litter with a dog that had style issues. While a lot of people (myself included) would in fact pick up a pup at the pound with some issues, loving them and hunting them for better or worse, it's a much tougher sell when you start talking about breeding the dog.
And in that situation, I honestly believe that you can have your cake and eat it too.
KW
Unregistered4
08-28-2009, 05:42 AM
I'd take that wager if I was Scott. But I'd raise, you would have to clean and cook all the birds shot as well pour that beer into a nice frosty mug.
Well Bruce...the boy's had twenty four hours to think about it...and...still no raise.
But, that's OK...I like my beer out of a bottle or can anyways...and I've had his cooking, too...so I'll pass on the offer...(assuming he were man enough to make it to begin with)...
Brian.
P.S. I know all of these smarta** remarks are going too come back an bite me in the *** and another thing I've been thinking...I wish I wouldn't have used a pen in Deputy's 2008 stat/log book...lol
Unregistered4
08-28-2009, 06:03 AM
OK...
Some of the rules.
1. No cherry-picking covers that offer great bird numbers/shooting and then pounding them too death.
2. No automatic shotguns allowed. (must use 0/U or SXS)
3. No electronic devices allowed. (I hunted Deputy with a bell only)
4. No hunting Kate more than two hours a day. (so she can't get into any kind of rhythm..he has to hunt her as I hunted Deputy...as if he has three other dogs to hunt that day)
There may be more...but that shoud do it for now.
Brian.
P.S. Man, all of these "no's" probably remind Scott of the last time he tried to get a little from the wifey.
Induna
08-28-2009, 06:45 AM
OK...
Some of the rules.
1. No cherry-picking covers that offer great bird numbers/shooting and then pounding them too death.
2. No automatic shotguns allowed. (must use 0/U or SXS)
3. No electronic devices allowed. (I hunted Deputy with a bell only)
4. No hunting Kate more than two hours a day. (so she can't get into any kind of rhythm..he has to hunt her as I hunted Deputy...as if he has three other dogs to hunt that day)
There may be more...but that shoud do it for now.
Brian.
P.S. Man, all of these "no's" probably remind Scott of the last time he tried to get a little from the wifey. Hmmm. When someone puts up a wager and then starts adding in dos and don'ts they're usually getting a little worried.
FindTheBird
08-28-2009, 06:59 AM
OK...
Some of the rules.
1. No cherry-picking covers that offer great bird numbers/shooting and then pounding them too death.
2. No automatic shotguns allowed. (must use 0/U or SXS)
3. No electronic devices allowed. (I hunted Deputy with a bell only)
4. No hunting Kate more than two hours a day. (so she can't get into any kind of rhythm..he has to hunt her as I hunted Deputy...as if he has three other dogs to hunt that day)
There may be more...but that shoud do it for now.
Brian.
P.S. Man, all of these "no's" probably remind Scott of the last time he tried to get a little from the wifey.
The challenger is changing the rules after the challenge has been proposed and accepted? Whatsamatter Brian, feet getting cold (like the beers you'll be fetching)?:lol:
Mike
2ESRGR8
08-28-2009, 07:12 AM
did you hear something? must be those annoying mosquitos.
Flash01
08-28-2009, 05:04 PM
Since you're in the game of reading things into my posts Crosswind, I'll read into yours from here and the one you referenced. I think you don't like online forums because you see them as a threat to your business (I'd argue otherwise, but I think this is how you feel about them). I also don't think you like people questioning breeding practices, yours or anyone else's, because you see that as a threat to your business as well. So, in an effort to stem that, you start pounding on the keyboard as someone put it in regards to me, and do your best to tear the person(s) and the questions they ask down.
Really guy? This is how you want to represent yourself and your business?
/giggle
You obviously dont know "Crosswind". Those that do will giggle too.
Scott Berg
08-28-2009, 07:55 PM
/giggle
You obviously dont know "Crosswind". Those that do will giggle too.
Flash,
I have only spoke to Scott once on the phone and he probably does not need me to stick up for him. However, when a novice finds their opinion differs substantially from someone with Crosswinds experience and track record I would suggest they take a step back and not assume he is the one that does not understand. Scott is not worried about the effect on his business. He proves his dogs and his ability as a trainer over and over. His dogs and training ability is on display constantly. The value of his opinion is supported by the hundreds of placements he has achieved. There is little worry about getting dogs in for training or selling pups when you have Scott’s track record.
On the whoa debate, I can tell you I have observed, trained with or discussed training with about two-thirds of the pros who run American Filed sanctioned trials and I have probably seen 25-30 AKC pro. I do not recall a single one of them who does not teach the whoa command. I Don’t think it’s Scott and the top professionals I referenced who do not understand? It is the most basic of foundation training.
Scott could be more politically correct and subtle with his comments but he elects to shoot straight up. Personally, I have no problem with people who say what they have on their mind. I always know where those folks are coming from. Had WCH asked the question in a form something like “do breeders sacrifice bird finding and bird handling ability for the sake of style, I would guess Scott would have responded differently.
WCH’s original post is as follows. “Just how many people out there really care about whether their dog's tail sticks straight up into the sky like the empire state building when it's on point?
Trial dog people with long tailed dogs are obsessed with it. But my question is for the hunters in the crowd, or rather, those of us who don't compete with our dogs. How many of you really care if your dog's tail stands on end as opposed to sitting at 7 o'clock or turned into a cork screw when on point?
If you do care, why? Would you take a dog with a telephone pole tail that needs significant work to make it an effective gun dog over one that has a level or low tail but is easy to work with and knows its game?
I know my opinion and I'm sure several of the rest of you do as well so I'll stop there. But I'm curious what the general consensus in the crowd is on this.”
I can tell you from hundreds of conversations with hunters (not trailers) that many hunters absolutely demand style. I had a conversation 30 minutes ago with a would be buyer.
Scott may have also taken exception to the “trial people are obsessed with it” comment. That comment clearly illustrates a lack of experience and understanding. Trial people are obsessed with every element of the dog. They are fanatical about dogs. That segment of bird dog owners is by far the most particular of any group and Scott knows this very well. It was not a ridiculous question because I am sure WCH is not the only hunter who does not how much time, effort, and money trailers are willing to invest to get a dog with all of the tools. Scott could have given a softer response and might had that original message not clearly indicated WCH’s disgust in this segment of dog owners and also indicated they did not understand which end of the dog counts.
Anyone can take an expert position on a forum but Scott has earned that status. I don’t agree with him on occasion but if I had a fraction of his experience I would not be telling him it was he who does not understand.
SRB
k9wernet
08-28-2009, 09:04 PM
FWIW, I'd pay extra for a dog with a long straight tail that corkscrews when he points...
KW
GNS Shorthairs
08-28-2009, 09:12 PM
Well stated Mr. Berg.
Unregistered4
08-28-2009, 09:53 PM
Hmmm. When someone puts up a wager and then starts adding in dos and don'ts they're usually getting a little worried.
Not worried one bit...
I'm just saying, he has to play by the same rules as me. Especially, since I'm posting numbers from "last season". If I were going head to head with him, this year, dog against dog, it would be "game on". And, it would be totally different. I'd be pounding coverts into the ground, getting Deputy on as many grouse as possible, find every family unit of grouse I could and keep following them up until each and every one of them was dead, run my best covers over and over again (and his) until not a feather could be found, etc.
But, that's not what I want to happen. That's just not sporting for the bird...or ethical, in my opinion. And, that's "why" I decided to use last years numbers.
And, if you go back and "read" my challenge...I said, "the reason I picked Scott is because he hunts like me." So, in essence the ground rules were already set when I said "he hunts like me".
But, I'll tell you what...if he feels the need to "not comply with the rules" for Kate to out do the Deputy's numbers from last year...he can if he wishes.
You guys are probably right...I mean heck, that was Deputy's first season in the grouse woods and this will be Kate's second complete season in the woods, with months of professional handling/training, a trip out west, being trialed in the off-season, etc.
Yep, why should I expect him and her to play by my/the same rules. It's plan to see...both dog are equal in their opportunities...
If he feels I'm making it to tough on her and him...with these four messily rules...I'll gladly withdraw them.
Brian. (aka - twosetters)
Merimac
08-28-2009, 10:02 PM
Brian,
Go Head to head this year and stop making excuses.
:)
Ben
Unregistered4
08-29-2009, 04:03 AM
Brian,
Go Head to head this year and stop making excuses.
:)
Ben
And, just how would you propose I do that Ben...(go head to head with him)
He hunts three dogs. (possible two, if he retires Grace)
And, I hunt four dogs.
(Not making excuses...just stating facts here)
The only way I could do it...is if I use all four weeks of my vacation time to hunt (which I do already) and call in sick fifty some days this year.
After re-reading that last statement...that sounds good to me...lol
But, seriously...there's no way the Kater and his master could go head to head with the Deputy Dawg and I. And, he knows it...
Now, him and Jack on the otherhand. That would be a whole different story. But, what fun would there be in putting two low tailed dogs against one another?
Brian.
dogwhistle
08-29-2009, 09:41 AM
at the end of nine innings; no runs, no hits, no errors, no men left on base.
Dave Medema
08-29-2009, 12:10 PM
at the end of nine innings; no runs, no hits, no errors, no men left on base.
Who won the game?
Tecumseh
08-30-2009, 02:50 AM
With my Vizslas, my male has a crooked tail probably because it was cut wrong. I still like it when those last few joints that flare up are jacked up as far as they can go. I would love it if he had a straight tail at about 11 oclock where it sets now but I don't love him any less.
My female has a completely straight 9 o'clock tail. I knew it when it was like that before I got her. I wanted the best possible bitch I could find and conformationally she is a national class Vizsla so I was ok with her tail because that is how it is supposed to be and wanted that for her future potential.
In a perfect world I like high tails, even for Vizslas because I think they look more sure and athletic. For long tailed dogs I love high tails, absolutely love them. I must have asked Jonesy a dozen times about the tail. The tail wasn't the reason for buying but I wanted the highest possible chance to have a certain hunting style, clean body, and a straight tail [high preferably]. For me, there is just something about a ripped Pointer or Setter standing tall with a high straight tail. In that sense, I can see why tail sets are so important for the coverdog guys. I like Vizslas for a lot of different reasons but for Pointers I like style.
Unregistered4
08-30-2009, 06:31 AM
Who won the game?
stay in your seat folks...it looks like were going into extra innings.
On a side note...
After the RGS shoot yesterday, Kater Pater looked me straight in the eye and said with her eyes..."You and that Deputy Dawg are toast butt wipe."...then she licked my face.
*butt wipe is a little pet name Kater likes to call me...I don't know where she came up with it or why...but she likes to call me that.
She's a funny dog...
Brian.
2ESRGR8
08-30-2009, 07:25 AM
then she licked my face.
Brian.
After she licked her butt so you could get a "taste" of things to come. :yikes:
Flash01
08-30-2009, 02:47 PM
Flash,
I have only spoke to Scott once on the phone and he probably does not need me to stick up for him. However, when a novice finds their opinion differs substantially from someone with Crosswinds experience and track record I would suggest they take a step back and not assume he is the one that does not understand.
SRB
That was my point, or at least it was supposed to be my point.
midwestfisherman
08-30-2009, 06:30 PM
Well I just have to throw in my .02. See the pics below, there you will find how a dog should look on point!! :chillin::cool::p
If you need further examples, just let me know..... :D
Buddwiser
08-30-2009, 09:12 PM
Good grief.....8 pages on "whoa" and 8 pages on "tails"....tell me people ain't getting ansty. :lol:
midwestfisherman
08-30-2009, 09:51 PM
Good grief.....8 pages on "whoa" and 8 pages on "tails"....tell me people ain't getting ansty. :lol:
:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:
Unregistered4
01-15-2010, 04:49 PM
The challenge is over...and things went just as expected.
http://i465.photobucket.com/albums/rr13/twosetters/ChristmasNewYears2009072.jpg
Next year we go head to head.
Brian.
WestCoastHunter
01-15-2010, 06:26 PM
The challenge is over...and things went just as expected.
http://i465.photobucket.com/albums/rr13/twosetters/ChristmasNewYears2009072.jpg
Next year we go head to head.
Brian.
Whoa! :lol:
GSP Gal
01-15-2010, 09:25 PM
Thanks for the entertainment fellas. :lol:
Nice picture Scott- nuthin' sexier than a man doing dishes.......
Bobby
01-16-2010, 07:04 AM
Pretty easy to pick out the empire state building in this photo.
http://travel.nationalgeographic.com/places/images/photos/photo_lg_newyork_state.jpg
It's a simple question.
If 2 dogs are equal at finding birds. Which on would you want?
But What do I know I prefer Dockers.
It took me a few minutes to get it, that's funny:lol::lol::lol:
oilcan
01-16-2010, 07:44 AM
Looks like some nice dish pan hands going on there.:evil:
2ESRGR8
01-16-2010, 08:28 AM
Looks like some nice dish pan hands going on there.:evil:
Yep I pay my debts.
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