Lone Duck Outfitters brings high performance apparel and supplies to the Gun Dog Community. Our videos are designed to coach you along as you build a well trained hunting companion! Enjoy the videos, share with your hunting buddies, and subscribe for more great tips and tricks!
Nothing to do with this video but…. My dog will retrieve quail, but not ducks. Is there a way to fix this? Or did I just spend a ton of money on a house pet?
Holy hot cakes! That's a happy dog, precision guided. Normally, in general, I don't like dogs being moved from person to person, but my own experience with these specific field labs has shown me that they are fine with this sort of transition. They want to do one thing! Retrieve. Y'all did a fine job with training.
Popping 🤔 Really doesn't describe the issue that well... In the UK call we that problem "ASKING QUESTIONS" surely this describes the fault much more clearly... Please tell me why you call it popping?
Hi Bob. New subscriber here. It's been over 30 years since I raised and trained my labs. Back then, I read all the books...Free, Wolters, Milner, etc. and probably used some techniques from all the books with my dogs. Like everything else, I know the science and methods have changed since that time. I am looking to get another pup in the near future and train him as if he will be my hunting partner, even though I'll probably never hunt waterfowl like I did back in the day. In Richard Wolters book, he was adamant about taking the pup from its mother on the 49th day and cited scientific literature to back up his claim. What is your opinion on the best time to separate a pup from his mother? Is this one of the things that may have changed from the time I had my last dogs? Thanks.
Loved this video! Currently training my Boykin and trying to get his chewing on spitting under control he didn’t do well with a paint roller and this video really makes me wanna try again but with this method before the pint roller
Best high drive dog exercise rig ever- freedom to gooo under excellent steering and dog control- the rider steers the dogs- no commands needed- the dogs ADD stability to the scooter- you don't crash with this design- on or off road- even on urban sidewalks and single track dirt trails- urban mushing perfected- also good for agro, deaf and blind dogs- d o g p o w e r e d s c o o t e r
You kinda lined her up for failure from the camera angle. On the first send spine was left, head was left, second send you didn't line up the spine but only the head... third send spine was off but head was right, she went right, forth send spine was good head was a little better. Might be camera angle but that was my view if I was your training partner 🤔 Thanks for posting !
Awesome video Bob. Rambler is progressing nicely. His T pattern drill was an incredible training video for every trainer. love the concept of the BIG T! Keep it up Bob!
What should I do if my lab has zero interest in holding anything. You can put a dowel in her mouth, a gloved hand. A bone. Literally anything and she won’t bite down enough to hold it. She’ll just let it rest on her tongue with zero control. Everything else she does is perfect. Someone abandoned her at a trainer and I was able to get her for free. They said she went through obedience and basic force fetch training before the owners quit paying and left her there.
Do you have a steady drill you like? For a young dog that knows, but not a puppy. Just something as a drill to keep a known task sharp. 16 month old HR. Ready to move to Finished
This video is so helpful to me as an amateur!! Thank you for showing us how to work through it when our dogs make mistakes. Dog training is not all peaches and cream!
The video that made you want to pull your hair out is one of my favorite LD videos. Everyone shows people when it goes well, show me keeping a cool head and helping the dog get it right any day. I agree 100% on the power of video in your training. It shows me nuances I miss during the training session and admittedly it shows when I did a poor job as a trainer/handler. So many times I have started to get frustrated in a training session only to reveal it was me that was giving meh performance. BIIIIIISSSSSSSMUUUUUUUUUTH BEBE!
A local here from Baldwinsville - I always thought there was just the English and the American, so I learned something new today. I had an English yellow lab from a show breeder in Joshua TX. Lost her at 14 years but she was a beast. Bigger than most male labs, would work all day long and great with other dogs and people. I love labs!