A pheasant wing I've used for training |
As I didn't know if the bird was full of parasites or not, I took the precaution of freezing it before starting to use it in dog training. To my great relief and joy, Eddie only slightly hesitated the first time I asked him to retrieve the frozen bird, and in most instances he has retrieved the bird without hesitation when we have practiced.
The plan for this summer is to train Eddie to do something that in Norwegian is called "blood tracking" and in Swedish it would translate to "game tracking". Basically what you do is create a trail of blood drops and you also drag a deer foot behind you. This trail is then followed by the dog. The practical purpose of this is to train dogs to find hurt animals, like deer that has been hit by a car or wounded but not killed during a hunt. Game tracking is also a sport however, and that is what I hope Eddie and I will be able to participate in before the year is over. So when Eddie isn't retrieving whole frozen ptarmigans, he gets to locate dried deer legs or drops of blood that I have hidden around the house. I can't wait for the snow to melt so that we can finally begin proper training outdoors!
My previous dog Link and I doing some tracking. |