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Thread: Gun shy

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  1. #1
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    I call BS to the age you start a dog with the gun. The sooner the better.

    There is a 10 week old pup here that is well broken to the gun and comes along for a walk whenever I go (four days a week) Same goes for all the other pups I've bred.
    I will say that of the god knows how many other dogs I've been through that are the six months plus the fail rate has been massive when it comes to gun shyness. And yes, I did the slowly slowly thing.
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  2. #2
    Gold member Pointer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Wirehunt View Post
    I call BS to the age you start a dog with the gun. The sooner the better.

    There is a 10 week old pup here that is well broken to the gun and comes along for a walk whenever I go (four days a week) Same goes for all the other pups I've bred.
    I will say that of the god knows how many other dogs I've been through that are the six months plus the fail rate has been massive when it comes to gun shyness. And yes, I did the slowly slowly thing.
    That maybe true, but with your experience you would be able to see something Jord may not have. By reading the dogs reaction to loud noises, you would back off a step before you created a problem.

    Jord I'll leave it at this before it turns into a shitfight, but my only advice would be this. As with all dog problems you start at the issue and work backwards. (not the human approach and go straight to the source). You need to address the issue of the dog being aversive to the sight of the gun before you even think of any conditioning to sound, not the other way around, as if you do all the conditioning to sound then whip the gun out, you will be back to square one. Start bringing the gun out at feeding etc, hell even stick one in his kennel and run. Then increase this to walks with the gun, or any gun shaped object. Then when he comfortable with that, only then go on to sound conditioning. Don't put a timeline on this too by the way, this could be a 3-6 month project if you are lucky. All the best.
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  3. #3
    Member jord's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pointer View Post
    That maybe true, but with your experience you would be able to see something Jord may not have. By reading the dogs reaction to loud noises, you would back off a step before you created a problem.

    Jord I'll leave it at this before it turns into a shitfight, but my only advice would be this. As with all dog problems you start at the issue and work backwards. (not the human approach and go straight to the source). You need to address the issue of the dog being aversive to the sight of the gun before you even think of any conditioning to sound, not the other way around, as if you do all the conditioning to sound then whip the gun out, you will be back to square one. Start bringing the gun out at feeding etc, hell even stick one in his kennel and run. Then increase this to walks with the gun, or any gun shaped object. Then when he comfortable with that, only then go on to sound conditioning. Don't put a timeline on this too by the way, this could be a 3-6 month project if you are lucky. All the best.
    Cheers pointer. I've trained dogs before just not hunting/gun dogs so is a learning curve. Appreciate advice and I definitely am in no rush - just dipping into the pool of information on here. Cheers.


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  4. #4
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    interesting comments on this post. my foxy I got at 12 weeks I was shooting the 22 the day I got him and the shotgun not long after. hes never been gun shy infact he starts barking looking for what im aiming at when I shoot something. i also ran him short distances at 16 weeks and hes fine. awesome tips on here i will be defnitly taking them in for future dogs. hope ya mates dog comes right soon
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  5. #5
    Member jord's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by possumer View Post
    interesting comments on this post. my foxy I got at 12 weeks I was shooting the 22 the day I got him and the shotgun not long after. hes never been gun shy infact he starts barking looking for what im aiming at when I shoot something. i also ran him short distances at 16 weeks and hes fine. awesome tips on here i will be defnitly taking them in for future dogs. hope ya mates dog comes right soon
    Good on ya mate. Cheers


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  6. #6
    A Good Keen Girl Dougie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by possumer View Post
    interesting comments on this post. my foxy I got at 12 weeks I was shooting the 22 the day I got him and the shotgun not long after. hes never been gun shy infact he starts barking looking for what im aiming at when I shoot something. i also ran him short distances at 16 weeks and hes fine. awesome tips on here i will be defnitly taking them in for future dogs. hope ya mates dog comes right soon
    This is a really great point, Possumer different horses for different courses. I think I may have said something earlier about self-rewarded behaviours. Like the sheep dog - he loves chases sheep, so his job is self rewarding. My dog however, he would love to eat sheep. I am sure with training I could get him to round them up without touching them, but the actual act of doing the job would not be the reward for him. Probably a tug toy afterwards would be the reward.

    For your pooch, the hunt is the reward. With CC and association, also changing the dogs emotional response to the activity, we can as handlers manipulate our dogs to enjoy the hunt. And I think that is kind of where jord's mate's dog is at. And probably a lot of hunting dogs out there too - being out with Dad and pleasing him is the reward, not necessarily the hunt.

    What I am looking for in my next dog is a bit of both
    She loves the free fresh wind in her hair; Life without care. She's broke but it's oke; that's why the lady is a tramp.

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  7. #7
    Member EeeBees's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dougie View Post
    This is a really great point, Possumer different horses for different courses. I think I may have said something earlier about self-rewarded behaviours. Like the sheep dog - he loves chases sheep, so his job is self rewarding. My dog however, he would love to eat sheep. I am sure with training I could get him to round them up without touching them, but the actual act of doing the job would not be the reward for him. Probably a tug toy afterwards would be the reward.

    For your pooch, the hunt is the reward. With CC and association, also changing the dogs emotional response to the activity, we can as handlers manipulate our dogs to enjoy the hunt. And I think that is kind of where jord's mate's dog is at. And probably a lot of hunting dogs out there too - being out with Dad and pleasing him is the reward, not necessarily the hunt.
    Dougie, for the gundog, the retrieve of the bird, hare, rabbit is the major reward and of course for the handler it is a big one too. Gundogs enjoy the hunt, hence ones under little control tend to self hunt which is simply an euphorism for lack of control and connection....their middle toe is saying expletives, but the dog with good connection, good basic controls, deep and meaningful prey drive is enjoying every minute of it all...but the retrieve is the pinnacle. To me the prey drive is what catches me...for without prey drive, you simply have a fine looking dog. With prey drive, your fine looking dog becomes a beautiful hunting machine...what the originators of the breed had intended for him to be.
    Dougie likes this.
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