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    Home»Hunting»Dogs & Hunting»Gun Dog Column – Fall Changeups
    Dogs & Hunting

    Gun Dog Column – Fall Changeups

    Scott HaugenBy Scott HaugenFebruary 21, 2025Updated:February 21, 20255 Mins Read
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    Bird hunting season is in full swing, offering endless opportunities to chase chukar, pheasants, ducks, geese, and more. But while planning your hunts, think about what they can do for your dog. A change of scenery and variety in hunting experiences not only keeps your dog engaged but also sharpens their skills and enhances their overall performance. Whether it’s introducing them to new terrain, different game, or challenging conditions, mixing things up can lead to exciting adventures for both you and your dog. This fall, make it a priority to create memorable hunting experiences that benefit your dog’s mind and body. And when weighing various hunting options, think first about what it will do for your dog, not you.

    Because dogs get bored doing the same thing repeatedly, it’s good to introduce them to change. Be it food, training times, training places, and hunts, I always try to vary our schedule. Of course, my dogs would be content sitting in our duck blind every day, or working the same mountains for sooty and ruffed grouse. But I try to take them on different hunts whenever I can, as it’s not only exciting for them, but a thrill for me.

    The author and his female pudelpointers, Echo, on her first wood duck hunt. She retrieved three limits of ducks for a trio of hunters, in a range of conditions she’d never before experienced…and loved it!

    A few seasons ago I took my female pudelpointer, Echo, on her first wood duck hunt. I grew up hunting woodies near my home but never had a dog as kid. I figured it’d be a fun change of pace for Echo. Due to the tight confines of our setup, I wanted to only take one of my dogs for ease of control. A couple buddies invited me to hunt a small creek with them. We were in place well before daylight with a dozen woody decoys spaced out in a small creek before us.

    Fifteen minutes before shooting light the woodies started bombing into the decoys. By the time shooting time came, Echo and I were wound up. Ducks continued pouring in and in less than 20 minutes it was over, we had our three limits of wood ducks. It was the most fast-paced action Echo had ever had. Once the shooting started she was never in the blind, rather picking up ducks as fast as possible.

    Echo was grabbing birds off the ground, amid a thick oak grove, off the water, and from beneath dense brush that lined the creek’s shore. Crippled birds that swam into the shoreline brush gave Echo fits, but her tenacity and diligence paid off. She slept heavily the rest of the day, for the 21 retrieves in such a short time, in some very challenging habitat, wore her out. But she did so well that we repeated the hunt a few weeks later.

    In 2019 my wife and I moved back to Alaska where I enjoyed some great hunts for the Vancouver variety of Canada Geese, and so did my dogs Echo, and my male pudelpointer, Kona. Hunting here took place on a vast tide flat and it was easy for both dogs to see miles in all directions. The calls of geese bounced off the surrounding snow-capped mountains, resonating throughout the valley. When bald eagles flew through, or when a tide shift occurred, hundreds of geese would take wing, their calls getting the dogs more and more excited.

    Flocks of these geese would pass overhead, and often I could connect on doubles, which was good for both dogs. Due to the vastness of the land we hunted, it was a great joy seeing and hearing geese moving most of the day, for me and my dogs.

    I also hunted ruffed grouse in the river bottom at our home in Hyder, Alaska. My dogs had never hunted river bottom grouse, only pursued them in the Cascades, back in Oregon. In the river bottom, they loved working stands of cottonwoods and semi-open spruce forests, and they did very well.

    A change of hunting action is healthy for your dog, breaking the rut of always doing the same thing in the same place. Here, the author’s dog, Kona, retrieves a Western gray squirrel he first treed.

    These are just some of the recent hunts that offered different experiences for my dogs, and me. We’ve also been to Saskatchewan where we learned all about high-volume snow goose hunting. We’ve hunted quail in the high desert, doves in farm fields, band-tailed pigeons in the mountains even Wester gray squirrels in the big Douglas fir forests of the Pacific Northwest. One of Echo and Kona’s favorite hunts in the fall is for turkeys, where they point and flush them.

    I firmly believe change is a good thing, and such is the case when it comes to hunting with dogs. Gun dogs are bright, always up for a challenge, and thrive on everything new. It’s good for their mind and body.

    This fall, consider taking your dog on a new hunting adventure. The experience will be enjoyable for both of you, and your dog will become a better hunter because of it.

    Note: To watch Scott Haugen’s series of puppy training videos, visit scotthaugen.com. Follow Scott on Instagram & Facebook.

    Read Scott’s other Gun Dog Training columns

    Per our affiliate disclosure, we may earn revenue from the products available on this page. To learn more about how we test gear, click here.

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    Scott Haugen
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    Scott Haugen is one of North America’s most accomplished outdoor writers. With 17 book titles, more than 3,500 articles, and over 12,000 photos having been published in hunting and fishing magazines around the world, Haugen has been writing full time for over 20 years. The former host of over 450 TV shows, his programs appeared on many major networks, including Netflix, Amazon Prime, ESPN, Outdoor Channel, and more, in over 50 countries. A former high school science teacher with a masters degree and specializing in biology, Haugen spends more than 250 days afield hunting, fishing and photographing wildlife. Scott Haugen Host: The Hunt www.scotthaugen.com Columnist: Wildfowl, American Waterfowler, Hunt Alaska, Alaska Sporting Journal, American Shooting Journal, NW Sportsman, CA Sportsman, Salmon-Trout-Steelheader

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