Bird Dog & Retriever News

August / September 2004 issue Page 12

 August/September 2004 Now in our thirteenth year. www.Bdarn.com
 cal games with a dog. The dog will probably make overtures, wanting assurance that the world's right again. But whether he does or doesn't, you let him take a scamper to relax him. Then call him to you. When he comes make a big fuss over him. When he knows he's back in your good graces, go about your business.
Praise, the third "P-word" in a practical dog trainer's lexicon, is just as important as persistency and punishment. Lavish praise is never out of order; and I mean really making a fuss over a dog when he does good. Just as commands are giving in no-nonsense tones, when the job's done right, you sweet-talk him. He doesn't have to understand the words. Your attitude and tone will convey your sentiments. If you've skimped on this, you'll be surprised how responsive dogs are to sweet talk. After a dog is fully trained, a quiet word or two of praise or a congratulatory pat or stroking will suffice as a reward. But while he's being trained, ladling out the praise will be both reward and incentive.
Considering the exposure, it comes as no great surprise that the son I sired, Michael Kevin Duffey, should be deeply into gun dogs, their training and breeding. But it is with some consternation that I note he's embarking on a "dog writing" venture, if not a career.
Probably questioning whether the public will put up with another generation of "Duffey On Dogs" observation and opinions, "the kid" cleverly disassociated himself from "the old man's" ranting and ravings in his maiden column in The NAVHDA Newsletter.
According to Mike, the one book he recalls from among the many on my library shelf is a thick, hardbound volume entitled: What I Know About Dogs by David Michael Duffey, in embossed gold
 lettering. Presented to me by a practical joking friend, the late Grady Marler, when a curious reader, seeking expert enlightenment, open the book he scans nothing but blank pages.
To further ensure that no one can accuse him of learning anything he knows about dogs (which is considerable, in his opinion) from the old man, Mike has this to say:
" For those of you lucky enough not to know me, I grew ups the son-of-a (not what you think) little known and obscure outdoor writer named David M. Duffey. His passion was (and still is) hunting dogs. He's always been a believer in knowing what he writes about through firsthand experience and as far back as I can remember we always owned at least eight and sometimes as many as 20 hunting dogs of various breeds.
"Since he traveled a lot and my sisters preferred dishwater to dog _____ (expletive deleted), I grew up and learned much of what I know about dogs at the back end of a
 shovel. If I had a penny per pound ........."
Fathers being more charitable about their sons, even smart-ass ones, than the other way around, Mike has more credentials than he confessed to, including considerable and success as a professional trainer. How far he goes in the writing game is still speculative and, fortunately, modesty is not a requirement for being a successful scrivener.
For he has independently concocted eight basic rules for successful dog training which he's unblushingly entitled "Mike Duffey's Golden Rules of Dog Training." They make sense and tie in with the guidelines already suggested in this article. So I'm repeating them here.
1. THE FIRST SIX MONTHS ARE THE MOST IMPORTANT TIME IN A DOG'S LIFE. (Don't waste it. If you want your dog to develop his full potential, this is the time to introduce and expose him to birds, fields, water, retrieving and all kinds of other things that will be an important part of his adult life.)
2. THE SECOND SIX MONTHS ARE THE NEXT MOST IMPORTANT. (Most good dogs should be capable of putting in a productive hunt sometime between six months and one year of age. Certainly they won't be finished performers. But they should be able to give you an enjoyable day in the field, finding, pointing and retrieving at least a few birds. By the time most dogs are two to three years of age they should be in their prime. People who make excuses for a four or five year old dog that is not everything it should be, are just kidding themselves).
3. KEEP "PUPPY/PLAY" TRAINING FUN FOR BOTH DOG AND TRAINER. (If you don't really

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Copyrights Bird Dog & Retriever News May 2004
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