Explosive!! English Cocker Spaniels Training on Pheasants with Tom Ness
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- Опубліковано 25 жов 2024
- KENNY IS A LUNATIC!!!!! Watch at this amazingly powerful English Cocker Spaniel charges through this North Dakota tree row searching for pheasants. Handled by professional trainer Tom Ness, you can really see this dog is having the time of his life. This video is 4.5 minutes of uncut high horsepower dog training. Tom has over 35 years of experience training dogs, and knows what it takes to produce hunting dogs of the highest caliber. Imagine taking this guy out next time you go pheasant hunting.
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Pheasant Hunting | Dog Training | Hunting Dog Training | Upland Game Hunting | North Dakota Hunting | Pheasant Hunting with Dogs | Pheasant Hunting North Dakota | How to train English Cocker Spaniels | North Dakota
That is what you call 'poetry in motion.' Kenny is a pheasant hunting machine! Great video w/exceptional dog work. A real pleasure to watch..😉
WOW!!!! I am stunned, amazed, impressed.
Nothing better than seeing a dog do exactly what it was bred to do. Happy dog, happy human.
Amazing! And to think my Juniper girl just jumps up to sniff what's on the counter when she could be doing this. But I still love her.
I envy you and your beautiful lunatic, he managed to find n bring that second game, that was the best seeing him coming back with it
I may have cheered and clapped a bit when he came through the tree with the bird! Good boy, Kenny!
That little pocket rocket covers ground good yet still stays in gun range. I'm a pointer man myself but I enjoy watching flushing spaniels work.
Great video and great dog! Proper working cocker masterfully trained!
Thanks Tom! Good to see you still at it with those dogs. One of these days Bob and I’ll get over to Bismarck and say hello!
Love the lunatic!
Good boy, Kenny!
He's a lunatic! He's BOSS
Excellent Quartering and response to hand signals - In addition - great retrieve - my hat off to you!
Thumbs up! I have a Ness bred ESS and she is a natural!
I had a dog who was half cocker spaniel , and the other half hound. Great for flushing and tracking but I never used him for hunting
Great video Tom. Please keep them coming!
Great video, thanks for sharing. My cocker is at the early stages of her training. My first cocker, I’ve had springers for over 20 years.
Where did you get the game bag/jacket
Thanks
hi, is it possible that you had more videos on your channel in the past? I was watching a good cocker related youtube channel and it seem to be disappeared from the internet
Fabuleux, bravo
once had a german sheperd retrieving thrushes...!!!
I've got one of Kenny's pups. Kenny x Sasha. Nice dog.
I've had Duke(Kenny's son) out a few times hunting pheasants, and he's amazing! Often he gets up more birds than my Labrador, and she's amazing too.
I hope you dont mind me saying but your Alsatian went forward after the shot causing competition to the retrieve. This made the spaniel run in and consequently go wrong!!
We rescued a 18 month old working cocker four months ago . We know nothing of her background but she acts in this way and chases any bird and cat she can. Up until yesterday she never caught a bird but yesterday she did . Got it and ripped it apart . Not as good as this one
Like popaggie below I'm a pointer guy but am seriously looking at the ECS. Can they maintain that pace? And does the hunter always have to be at port arms when hunting spooky birds like ruffed grouse? I ask because I'm not familiar with hunting grouse with a flusher. I'm just ready for a change from a sixty pound dog that I can't ever see and that points too far away for us to make it to us point before the bird vacates the premises. Nice work. You should be proud of him.
Delayed answer here... I have an ECS and we hunt grouse here in northern Michigan as well as preserve pheasant. As to having your gun at the ready; yes, especially in thick grouse cover. There is generally no warning of a flush; however, a well trained cocker will work close enough to provide a shot. While the hunter must be alert, I have learned to watch him closely for signs that he has picked up scent thus providing a bit of warning. Regarding pace, I would say that it varies by cover. My cocker hunts grouse cover very differently than open areas as shown in the video. He will quarter, but slows to go over, under and through the thick stuff. Likewise, in high grass for pheasants his pace is limited by his size. And he has never failed to find and retrieve a grouse, including those down and running. Finally, they very entertaining and great companions :-)
I first watched this Video a year ago and thought maybe one day my 8 month old bitch might get to be half as good..., a year later and my 18month old bitch makes me so proud..
Thank you for your inspiration...
interesting, contrasting styles with how we'd run the spaniel here in the UK, pattern much looser the hunting style here would be different too. the first flush would be viewed poorly here with the dog almost pegging and then running in; the second is sharper and much nicer. Lots of pace though, cant fault his drive. Whats his breeding, does he carry much UK blood, if any?
why are the pheasant legs tide ??????????
They are on a hobble. Keeps them from running. It's for training purposes.
tide?
The second bird that was shot appears to have orange string tied around both feet in order to prevent in from running which is what they will do naturally to evade a predator. Planted birds to be shot. The dog is amazing alright but as fellow outdoors man I think this video is more fuel for antis.
gameshooter75. Thank you for your comment, the orange ribbon is a hobble, this marks the pen raised training bird, and also prevents them from running away and mixing with the wild population. It also prevents us from accidentally taking a wild bird during training, we believe this is more responsible. If your quarrel is that we are using pen raised birds to train..... well, It is very unlikely to see a dog of this caliber that was trained during the few short months of the hunting season on wild birds, or trained without birds at all. This is how all the pro upland dog trainers do it.
I have no issue with a pen raised bird being used at all. The matter of fact is that the birds legs are tied ensuring that it can not act in a natural way. Pheasants will either run or sit tight when hunted. You do it your way . Others do it the right way.
@@gameshooter75 this is training for competition not hunting. What they are doing is pretty standard.
I just went out to see my dog train with Tom. He personally took a pen raised pheasant with out a hobble and showed us his personal dog. His dog found it, flushed it, and then Tom shot it. It ran for 15 feet before his cocker caught it. These dogs know how to hunt.