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-   -   Where can i buy birds for dog training? (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/sporting-dogs/1876-where-can-i-buy-birds-dog-training.html)

Buck Boy 01-15-2002 07:50 PM

Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
hey guys
i've heard of people buying pigeons or quail to help train their dog. Have any of you done this and do you know where i could purchase some? Thanks

Buck Boy

ShortHair 01-15-2002 08:38 PM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
I know a good place in Waynesboro where you can buy quail. Waynesboro GA that is.:)Just kidding, I threw that in because there is a place in Waynesboro GA that raises quail and I was born in Waynesboro PA(dad was in the Army) and thought you be familar with it.

I have seen live quail for sale in Herters catalog, they have a website too. I use pigeons myself. I used to buy the pigeons from the local feed and seed. I bought a pigeon trap from Herters and catch my own now. Pigeons work just as good as quail if you clip the wings or bind the wings.


Mr. 16 gauge 01-16-2002 12:02 PM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
Buckboy;
Give your local pest control business a call if you don't have anywhere you can trap pigeons. Some cities (stupidly) have ordinances against live trapping ANYTHING...even pigeons! I bought mine from the local pest control guy; $1/bird is a lot cheaper than any quail I could find (although I like eating the quail more than I do the pigeons;)). Also, check and see if you can find a pigeon fancier around your area...sometimes you can get them to part with their culls. These birds are great, because they are homers, and you can use them again and again. I have seven that keep coming back after our backyard training sessions. They don't require much space, and all they need is a little cracked corn, some clean water, and grit. I prefer pigeons to pheasants or quail for a number of reasons: they are cheap & plentiful, they usually stay where they are planted, there is generally no season on them, and they usually take off and climb right away, helping to decrease the desire for the dog to chase (quail, I've found, like to fly low to the ground and not very far....the dog suddenly goes deaf when you blow the whistle to get her to stop!) Good luck.

Buck Boy 01-16-2002 01:42 PM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
thanks guys, i'll keep you posted on if i get any or not. You did trick me Shorthair lol.

I have one more question though. When you use these birds do you just put them in a field ( in a cage or anything ) and let the dog find them? Do you ever shoot the bird when it tries to fly away?

Buck Boy

HOSS 01-17-2002 08:28 AM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
Like shorthair said clip there wings so they can't fly and dizzy them up by putting there head under there wing and swinging your arms in a circular motion while holding the bird with it's head tucked then you can place it in the grass or weeds and it should stay put then you can work you dog thru the field and up to where the bird or birds are and do your training up to the flush and yes by all means as the dog comes along on it's training take a bird or two and don't clip there wings and blast a few. plus the clipped wing birds feathers will grow back out

ShortHair 01-18-2002 12:07 PM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
I like what HOSS said to do. Here is something I do in addition during the early stages of training. This trick will help them steady to wing.
I get my wife or daughter to help with this part. I take a footlong piece of garden hose and drill a small hole through it. Run a piece of string through the hole. Here's the difficult part, tie the string to the pigeons feet. This will weight the bird down just enough that it can fly but not more than 50-70 yards.
You get your helper set up with the bird in the bushes. You turn out pup on the leash with the pinch collar on. Let pup find the bird and point it. You give the WHOA command. The helper shows the bird to the pup and trys to excite the pup with the bird. Do not let pup break point. Then the assistant releases the bird and the bird flies but not to far.


Buck Boy 01-18-2002 01:37 PM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
thanks for the great adive everyone........but yet i have another problem.

He wont lock on point. He goes to the bird, will point for a second then goes and grabs it. And today he wouldn't obey my commands.....eventually he started listening some more again but i dont know what got into him. Did i mention to you that he's 4 years old? Is this way too old? because he sniffs out the bird fine but just grabs them and doesn't lock on point like i said before.Also the pigeon i am using right now is one i shot because i haven't gotten any live ones yet.

P.S Whats a pinch collar? And when we hunt quail or dove will he follow their scent just as a pigeons scent or will i have to train him with those birds? Thanks again

Buck Boy

ShortHair 01-19-2002 08:34 PM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
His age would not be an unfixable problem if you had not let him catch a live bird. Now the dog knows he can catch the bird.
Thats why I use the trick with the hose on the bird. The dog figures out he can't get the live bird.
If you are willing to dedicate 15-30 minutes a day everyday you maybe can train this one. But I would find another dog myself.

A pinch collar is similar to a choke chain. It is made of leather and slips like a choke chain. It has nails on the inside facing the dogs neck. The first thing you do is file the nails smooth before pup ever wears it. The spikes will grab pups skin as it tightens and pinch rather than choke the dog and possibly hurt his airway like a choke chain.


HOSS 01-19-2002 08:59 PM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
another thing you can try to steady the point is take a long piece of rope tie a clip to the end and putthe end between the dog and it's collar, take the end on down and make a loop around the dog at the rear of the belly in front of the hind legs. lift the line between the collar and the loop so you have a lift point between the two ends of the dog put a hook up on a tree trunk or somthing to run the rope over so that when you pull the over end it will lift the dog off the ground. have the dog strung up like this and give it the whoa command and slowly pay out rope if the dog moves swing then walk over and pick the dog up by the collar and the rope loop at the rear and return him to his origanal pos. and recommand whoa firmly they start to back away and pay out rope again if the dog moves same thing they hate being lifted like that and they learn in a hurry it won't hurt the dog and they will learn whoa in a hurry i couldn't believe the results with my dogs believe the results when i did it to my female. once they have the whoa down use the same set-up but omit the hook so that when you pull the rope abit it feels like the sensation of when they would get pulled up of the ground. i could take my female whoa her throw a retrieving dummy just past the end of her nose and fire a cap pistolk as i did and she wouldn't break whoa till i told her "dead" or walked over and touched her on the head then she would make the retrieve.
sorry about the long reply but there is no short way to discribe this tech.

kshunter 01-20-2002 01:39 AM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
Gamefarms, poultry raisers, they're about everywhere around here. If nothing else, go to a farmstead and ask the farmer if you can shoot some pigeons for him. But they'd be dead and you may want live. Go to the poulty auctions nearby. There's a bunch around here and they go for around $3 each, which isn't too bad.
Visit My Hunting Page


Lab-Man 01-20-2002 06:34 AM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
Hi there!

To get pigeons for training, the best way is to drive out in the country looking around farms for flying pigeons. Once you find a farm or 2 that have many pigeons flying in the daylight, then go to ask the farmer if you can come back @dusk to capture them inside the barn. Using a large fishing landing net and a flashlight, you will be amazed how easy it is to capture literally 100s of these "roosted" birds. Bring a couple of burlap sacks to keep them in while doing this too.

Good Luck! Remember...permission is key. Return trips are almost guaranteed because farmers do NOT want pigeons messing up their barns!

The "Lab-Man"

HOSS 01-20-2002 08:07 AM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
done that before lab-man a pigeon roost is east enough to make out of a little chicken wire as well some mixed bird seed and water and you can keep em for awhile

Lab-Man 01-20-2002 05:44 PM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
<BLOCKQUOTE id=quote<font size=1 face='Verdana, Arial, Helvetica' id=quote>quote:<hr height=1 noshade id=quote>
done that before lab-man a pigeon roost is east enough to make out of a little chicken wire as well some mixed bird seed and water and you can keep em for awhile
<hr height=1 noshade id=quote></BLOCKQUOTE id=quote></font id=quote><font face='Verdana, Arial, Helvetica' size=2 id=quote>

Hey Hoss!

Let's talk about your &quot;Monster Buck&quot; thing I see. Do you have a B.& C. or P.& Y. class deer to talk about? Do you ICQ? Maybe we can talk there...on ICQ some time??

Those pigeons you can also inter-twine their wings(one over the other) to keep them from flying off also. Then you need not clip the feathers, don't have to wait for them to grow back to allow flight again.

Take Care Bud!

The &quot;Lab-Man&quot;

HOSS 01-21-2002 12:34 AM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
Lab-man you get a monster buck designation on this board after 500 posts i believe it is heck i don't even hunt deer just birds all kinds if it flys it dies.
intertwinning the wings does work but i like the bird to be able to flutter and flap around it excites the dog and if you can tell him whoa while all that's going on you've got it goin on

Dork063 01-22-2002 10:37 AM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
well i have a friend who trained his dog a little while ago and what he did was just shot them out of his yard and he also illegally shot squirrels but most of the squirrels got aay wounded

Bud Light 01-23-2002 09:09 PM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
Not an expert on training dogs but if you want to keep a supply of quail around they are very inexpensive. You can buy chicks and keep in a large box for about 4 weeks. After that just put them in a chickenwire pen. Or get and incubator for about $30 and hatch the eggs yourself. 23 days to hatch then 14-15 weeks till they are ready to set out for the dogs. I turned them all loose last winter but will have about 1000 by the end of March. Just do a search for bobwhite quail and sort through the prices.

Dork063 01-25-2002 10:19 AM

RE: Where can i buy birds for dog training?
 
yo man i figured out a new way to catch birds. I got one this morning on bread. All i did was put a little piece of bread on a tiny hook on my ultralite, and i got a european starling.

Trickomal 11-10-2017 11:47 AM

doves to train dogs
 
if anyone needs doves for training there hunting dogs give me a holler 6057709731 preferable by text

Oldtimr 11-10-2017 12:28 PM

Dork, what you are doing is illegal and I can't believe anyone would think it was a good idea. Even though starlings have no closed season, it is illegal to catch any wildlife with fish hooks. It is a sick thing to do. Your advice stinks and I hope non one is foolish enough to take it!

Oldtimr 11-10-2017 12:33 PM

Buckboy, I see you live in PA. There are a lot of people in PA that raise game birds that you can buy for training your dog. Just contact the PGC and get a list of game birds propagators in your area and you will be set. Do, not but birds from out of state as it is illegal and it you buy birds you will need to keep your receipts to prove they were legally obtained. If you get checked by a WCO and he asks to see the receipts and they are from out of state you will be pinched for unlawful importation of live game. The regulations regarding importation of wildlife:

§ 137.1. Importation, possession, sale and release of certain wildlife.

(a) Unless otherwise provided in this section or the act, it is unlawful for a person to import, possess, sell, offer for sale or release within this Commonwealth the following wild animals or wild birds or the eggs of the birds or a crossbreed or hybrid of the wild animals or wild birds, which are similar in appearance:

(1) In the family Felidae. Species and subspecies, except species which are commonly called house cats which may be possessed but not released into the wild. Lawfully acquired bobcats—Lynx rufus—may be imported or possessed, or both, by licensed propagators specifically for propagation for fur farming purposes. Importation permits and transfer permits as mentioned in subsections (d) and (e) are not required for bobcats imported for propagation for fur farming purposes. Bobcats imported under this exception and their progeny may not be sold or transferred for wildlife pet purposes or released into the wild.

(2) In the family Canidae. Species and subspecies of the coyote, the red and gray fox and a full-blooded wolf or crossbreed thereof not licensed by the Department of Agriculture. Lawfully acquired coyotes and red or gray foxes may be imported or possessed, or both, by licensed propagators specifically for propagation for fur farming purposes. Coyotes and red and gray foxes imported under this exception and their progeny may not be sold or transferred for wildlife pet purposes or released into the wild. This subsection does not permit the sale for release or the release of the mammals into the wild.

(3) In the family Ursidae. All species of the bears.

(4) In the family Procyonidae. All species of raccoons.

(5) In the family Capromyidae. The nutria.

(6) In the family Mustelidae. All species of the skunks.

(7) The order Primates. All families of nonhuman primates.

(8) An animal, bird or egg of a bird listed by the Commonwealth or the United States Department of the Interior as threatened, endangered or injurious.

(9) The Monk Parakeet, Myiopsitts monachus, sometimes referred to as the Quaker Parakeet or Gray-headed Parakeet.

(10) Game or wildlife taken alive from the wild, except the Commission may import wildlife taken from the wild for enhancement of this Commonwealth’s wild fauna.

(11) Game or wild held captive. Game or wildlife held in captivity or captive bred in another state or nation.

The reason is to prevent wildlife diseases from bing introduced into our populations of wildlife.

alleyyooper 11-11-2017 05:20 AM

Lets see, is now near the end of 2017. Last post by dork was near start of 2002.

17 minus 2 equals 15.

Think dork is still around?


:D Al

Oldtimr 11-11-2017 08:53 AM

Looks like you are right Yooper. Two posts and both are nonsense.

alleyyooper 11-11-2017 04:28 PM

Think the name fit too.

:D Al


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