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Calm dogs

Iglow

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Does anybody have a calm natured retriever of any breed? By calm I mean from puppy stage on. I absolutely despise nutty hyper dogs of any breed be it duck dogs, bird dogs, squirrel dogs or pets. I won't keep one like that and have had 2 failures in the last view years trying to get a serviceable duck dog.
 
I have a puppy from Sporting Life Kennels down in Oxford MS. Marty breeds his dogs to be calm. Cowboy has been the best puppy we have ever had. No accidents in the house and I brought him home at 8 weeks. Does he get excited when I come home or when I let him out of his kennel in the morning yes but it is only for a few minutes then he is on his bed with a chew toy.



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I have a miniature black lab/golden retriever that is fairly calm. Sure, she gets the zoomies now and then, but most of the time she lays on the couch and watches TV. But she is not a hunting dog, she's gun shy and don't like loud noises. And she's 9 now, but she's been that way all her life.
 
Ive got guys I duck hunt with that bring their dogs. More times than not their hyper dogs screw up working birds. Or they send them out to get a stone dead duck 3 minutes after shooting time when more birds are trying to come in. Then go out there with them trying to manage the dog for the next 10 minutes. That is very aggravating to me.
 
"Hyper" dogs are not the problem, it's lack of training/control is the problem. I see a lot of people that are happy that the dog picks up a duck, and that's the bar for them. I have "hyper" dogs, but you won't see it when we hunt. A lot of training goes into channeling the dogs drive, too much to type out here. One quick thing I do at hunting time is we do obedience drills on the way to the blind. This sets the dog up to show you are in control.
 
I've got a chocolate lab and the only hyper she has is a food bowl and when you pull a gun out of the safe. Other than that she is just as chill or focused as you could ask for in a situation
 
"Hyper" dogs are not the problem, it's lack of training/control is the problem. I see a lot of people that are happy that the dog picks up a duck, and that's the bar for them. I have "hyper" dogs, but you won't see it when we hunt. A lot of training goes into channeling the dogs drive, too much to type out here. One quick thing I do at hunting time is we do obedience drills on the way to the blind. This sets the dog up to show you are in control.
Yep! Came to say just this. A bored dog they isn't working is a restless dog.
 
Does anybody have a calm natured retriever of any breed? By calm I mean from puppy stage on. I absolutely despise nutty hyper dogs of any breed be it duck dogs, bird dogs, squirrel dogs or pets. I won't keep one like that and have had 2 failures in the last view years trying to get a serviceable duck dog.

My Boykin was picked from his litter because he was the quietest one of the group. I'm sure any working dog will have outliers, whether they're way too wound up or sluggish as pudding. But this dog is by far the greatest pup I've ever had. I know people will say Boykins are wild, but this one is absolutely not.

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I also hunted with his sire the year before we got him. That dog sat on the mat quietly and peacefully the entire morning we hunted. That's what made me want to get one from their litter the following spring. I'll never not have a Boykin because of this line.

Beware. Boykin people are weird. If Orvis could put their brand on any animal, it would be a Boykin. I'm working on breaking that mold. And the dude I got Bosco from is the same way. He warned me then about the weird little subculture of Boykin people
 
My dog has a lot of drive. I take him on a short walk the morning of to get some of that piss and vinegar out of him. He is steady as long as he can see the birds work and fall from his box fine.
 

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