Tuesday 16 February 2016

Eight Months old already!!

Skipper's Mum 'Nell' (sister to Bugler)
Skipper 10 weeks with his dad, Jaunty
The puppy picked at 5 weeks

Skipper is 8 months old today - where have those months gone?
Incredibly he was the pup I tried Not  to like. Since both Jaunty and his mum, Nell, were black & white I had set my heart on choosing a black & white one. The first time I went to look at the pups they were about 3 weeks old and difficult to tell apart but when I went back at 5 weeks, no matter how many times I pushed the little liver & white one away in favour of his black & white brothers, he always came trotting back.  At 7 weeks one of his black & white brothers was still looking for a home and I was sorely tempted to have them both ... very sorely tempted. Nell's dad even offered to give me a special 'deal' - not exactly BOGOF but close enough. However, as I said to him, it's not about the money. I sent a text to him-the-trainer asking his advice on having two pups from the same litter "from a training perspective". His response was very prompt and very concise: "No, No, No, NO"
So that was it then. One pup only. But which one....? I asked Gunner - Liver and white won. Skipper it was then.. We collected him at 9 weeks - he ran straight to me across the lawn -  brought him home and never looked back!
Bosun & Skipper 7 weeks old
He won everyone over in no time at all - including WaifaCat. Housetraining was a doddle - just a few incidents till he got the hang of always doing puppy weewees when told and asking to be let out inbetween. He was clean in his crate from day one! Nell obviously brought him up well.

It's been much the same with everything else too.  He's a happy go lucky sort of chap who wants to do the right thing and learns very quickly. Which is not to say he isn't cheeky with it. But never (yet) naughty!
Pssst can you tell me what we do next?

We started puppy-training from the beginning; teaching him to sit to the whistle and wait for his food & playing hide and seek with the tennis balls - I'm sure he thinks they grow in the grass!  He learned the 'down' command very quickly and that's now his default position when asked to 'stay'.  Recall has never been a problem; he'll do almost anything for a treat! Now that we've started training proper he's just as eager to learn and, so far, there have been no issues - although I think he feels learning to walk beside me is a waste of time when he'll happily run around my feet!
So far so good then!
However, he is now in his "teenage" months so I freely expect everything to go belly-up and I'll end up eating my words about how good he is...... Although you have only to look at his eyes to realise he honestly wants to make you happy with him....... It's going to be fun watching how he develops from here.......



Sunday 7 February 2016

Gunner's Calendar - February 2016

Gunner - 23 March 2008 (Easter Sunday)
With so many photos of Gunner in the snow it took a lot of deliberation to select just one.

Easter was early in 2008 and we had a great deal of snow. Gunner was just over a year old. We had two other spaniels, Lancer and Pilot, but it was Gunner who was always with me. Even at such a young age I think he considered yard duties part of his remit!

This gate marked the entrance to a sheltered courtyard garden when we first moved here. When we rebuilt and extended the outbuildings the garden became the Carriage Yard and the gate was moved to provide access to the poultry premises.  (The same gate later became infamous as the one on which Jaunty became suspended en route to retrieve a duck from the pond!). Gunner loved the chickens and ducks. At a very young age he witnessed the 'marvellous' sight of Lancer retrieving (and bringing to me) a wandering duck from another part of the yard. It was the thing in all the world which gave Lancer the greatest joy!  From that moment on, he was transfixed. Whenever I was doing anything near the poultry, Gunner would 'guard' them and if they were 'in the wrong place' he would conscientiously fetch them and return them to me! They soon learned to scarper or fly off at first sight of him..... not always successfully... he could be fast when the occasion demanded!
On this Easter Sunday morning I had let the poultry out of their Palace and the ducks were making their best efforts to get to the pond. Some of them, as ever, decided the fastest way was to fly but, with the pond being submerged under a heavy layer of snow, they were misjudging their landings with hilarious results. In the midst of laughing at them I turned to see this very serious young face staring solemnly through the gate! He remained motionless until all the ducks had landed. What was he thinking?
You can tell everything you need to know about a dog from the look in his eyes.

Friday 5 February 2016

The Understudy comes of age

Jaunty came here as Gunner's Understudy. Frustrated at the lack of progress with Gunner's proposed 'wives', I decided in his fifth summer to go out and buy a puppy. Just like that! Well, no. I did a lot of research and eventually found two litters with the right credentials available - one in Norfolk and the other in Cumbria. Norfolk won simply because my mother lives there and I could combine puppy visits with filial duties!! Very scientific. With the pick of the litter, it took me three visits to choose Jaunty. I subsequently spent more than a few moments wondering if I should instead have chosen his quieter brother!
He was, however, a joy; as soon as we got him home he went into his crate, curled up and fell asleep as if he'd always been here. Not a sound through his first night - or any other. He quickly learned the toilet, and every other, routine. He immediately adopted Gunner as his best mate - a state which continued until the arrival of Bugler 8 months later - and I dreamed of my bestestGundog and his Understudy being an incomparable team for years to come.
One morning around the time he was about 4 months old I lost sight of Jaunty when I was feeding the pigs. One minute he was close by, the next he was nowhere to be seen. I heard frantic barking from a nearby field. The pup had gone exploring and found himself on the wrong side of the fence, unable to get home.
On reflection, I should have ignored him to scare the living daylights out of him. Instead, I went and fetched him!
We both learned a lesson: me, that I should never take my eyes off a young dog and he that he could run off on his own!
For the next two years and more he was the ideal Understudy in all ways but one. He learned his lessons quickly; but everything was a game to him; running round me when returning with dummies, squiggling on his back when I told him to 'stay', jumping up & down crazily whilst walking to 'heel'. Frustratingly, he would hunt keenly, happily and relatively close but when the urge came upon him, his hocks would come under him and he would bolt off into the distance....  deaf to any shout,whistle or call I might make.  I was never really relaxed with him, always waiting for that moment when he would 'go'. He always came back looking thoroughly chuffed with himself. Various remedies were suggested by Him-the-trainer and numerous learned authors. None solved my 'problem'. I despaired. I had a brilliant pupil with a mind of his own. Not the ideal follow-on from my first and BestestGundog. I read everything, tried everything, consulted everyone..... still the Understudy hoolied off. "He just loves to run" said Linda. Well.. that was obvious. I wrote off a possible career as a Bushbeating dog. Jaunty was hard wired to be the dog most gamekeepers hate - the one that jumps out of the wagon and runs straight through the cover for the hell of it! He is so full of life that he just wants to bounce, run and roll around in the long grass....
'Sit still!' Why?
'Stop!' Why?
 'Jump!' How High?

 High on energy with a low boredom threshold.... Agility was an obvious route. We signed up for classes last summer and he took to it like a duck to water - when he wasn't looning about.... even it  was too slow for him at times. Jess, our 'teacher' quickly dubbed him "Rockstar" - which kind of sums up his approach to life. We've just joined another group to train for competitions and the only thing holding him back is his handler!
However, I was determined not to write off his gundog chances. He'd done two or three days with Gunner last season and not disgraced himself. The keeper on our local shoot agreed that I could take Jaunty along through the Season and 'train' him in exchange for no fee and on the understanding that I take him straight home if he ran amuck!!!
We were out just 6 days in total. On the first one, whilst he didn't disgrace himself, he spent a great deal of the day on his lead, standing up on his back legs whenever a bird went over his head. When the drives were over and he was asked to find the birds, he mostly charged around the woods having a good time. I think he just couldn't believe his luck! He was a little more relaxed on the second day and by the third cottoned on to the idea that he should bring me any dead birds he might stumble across; on the fourth he actually went out looking for them and for the last two I found myself relaxing and actually enjoying working with him. His boundless energy found an outlet at last! In between drives he was calm and quiet, waiting patiently for the shooting to stop and his 'fun' to begin. There was nothing he wouldn't crash into, through or under in his search and runners didn't stand a chance!
For the first time in his 3 years he was actually tired at the end of the day!
He received lots of compliments through the season for his looks and manners but when the keeper handed me some money for his work on the last day I felt he'd finally come of age! Gunner would have been proud of his understudy!
And I can look forward to working him next season without the fear and trepidation that I felt at the beginning of this one! He hasn't bolted for the last three months either..... has he really grown up???