At six months that is too much, bunny shooting with its high volume of shots is more than a deer hunt which is bang/reward. I know hunting dogs, particualarly deer dogs that aren't exposed to shots until well over a year old, when they are up and hunting.
EBs is right, apart for the collie influence which as Kawhia states is known for gunshyness, it is absolutely the result of how it was introduced.99.9% handler error is a big call - my collie staff and his litter are all fine yet this blokes collie foxy litter is not. (spoke to owners of both dog litters). I'm looking at tips to correct, as above Classical Conditioning seems a fair answer.
Unrelated but that's pretty lean tucker for a pup, being the farmer you are, you should know pups are raised on the fattiest old ram you can find.They get fed bloody well, on venison and fresh rabbit weekly if not daily, they get as much sleep as they want, they're exercised regularly but not strenuously and always have another dog for company when we're not around. Their intro to firearms has been slow and started with a .22 sub and more recently the .223 and the odd .270 shot
I admit EBs was rather scathing but she has a point, please don't get defensive because she is pretty accurate in her generalization of NZ hunters. We aren't born dog trainers. If we were, you wouldn't be asking here, right?So an answer to your question "why do people have to push there puppies"?
I have no bloody idea because I don't..
There's no pressure for either to be out there working yet at all, I asked for advice not sweeping generalisations man, come on.
PM Ruff, he is your only hope
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