Jennifer L. S. Pearsall guest authors a great group of  articles on the art of Grouse Hunting with our favorite sporting dog breeds.

The ruffed grouse is to the forest what pheasants are to the grasslands. But unlike the flashier, bigger plains bird, you can’t bully a grouse around. The “we-got-’em-surrounded” mentality that often works with pheasants—big crowds pushing a section of real estate to pinch birds and force them to flight—won’t get you anywhere in the grouse woods. No, this is one bird that requires finesse.


As I explained in the first installment of “Grouse—The Stealth Approach,” my group of friends and I didn’t have much opportunity to get together. We also didn’t have a lot of time to get our dogs off the trucks and really hunting, so between the “We-gottem-surrounded!” approach we had and the refusal of any one of us—even me, guilty as charged—to rotate our dogs throughout the day, there were far too many of hunters and canines working any given piece of that wonderful grouse real estate at any one time. I concluded “Part I” by providing some hard-learned advice on hunting by yourself or with just one partner. The beauty to that method is that a hunter doesn’t even need a dog. But I don’t know a died-in-the-wool grouse hunter who would set forth without one, so that’s what we’re going to talk about now.

Man’s Best Friend

Grouse hunting is the domain of pointing dogs. Setters, pointers, short-hairs, and Brittanies rule the roost here, though having one of those and a flushing dog like a Lab or a cocker or springer along certainly makes a nice day out, too. Most hunters know the key to successful upland hunting with dogs is good dog training, but, in reality, most amateur handlers rarely know what that fully encompasses. My West Virginia grouse-hunting friends were good examples of this.

Ours were hunts that seemed to resemble track events. The group’s collective approach was to push as much countryside as it could as fast as it could. I don’t know whether these guys had been taught that way or if, over their years pursuing grouse, had come to believe it was necessary, but we blistered the countryside. Even in years I was in relatively good shape, I often huffed and puffed to keep up with the group of brawny men.

Aside from their driving belief that it was miles covered that put birds in the bag, I now know the bigger reason we marched so hard was because none of our dogs—not even mine, at the time—were finished dogs. For a pointing dog to be truly finished, or fully trained, he needs to hold point until the handler orders otherwise. That means for five seconds or five minutes or five hours—whatever it takes. A finished pointing dog does not crowd the bird, does not creep on his point, and never flushes the bird. Further, he should remain staunch when the bird flushes and the gun is fired, or, as is commonly known, is “steady to wing and shot.”

Part of this philosophy is a safety issue. If the dog is steady to wing and shot, you not only know where he is, but he will not be leaping into the pellet string if you fire at a low-flying bird.

Another factor is that those that aren’t steady to the wing or flush, usually give chase to the bird once it begins to fly off—and that can negate circling around and relocating that grouse again for a second-shot chance. Grouse don’t usually fly far after flushing. If you move quietly along the flight path, you can often relocate a once-flushed bird some 30 to, say, 100 yards from where he first rose. But if your pointing dog won’t remain steady to the flush, he’s probably full of other bad habits like creeping and crowding, and probably flushing more birds than you can imagine.

So what you have with a pointing dog that isn’t finished is a dog you can’t trust out of your sight. Back on those West Virginia hunts, we rushed to get to our dogs so we could flush the birds before the dogs took matters into their own paws. It didn’t mean our dogs didn’t point, it didn’t mean that they couldn’t find birds, it was just an issue of them not being completely steady.

Of course, this meant that we kept our dogs at pretty close range. Lots of amateur handlers never let their pointing dogs range out of sight for exactly the reason I just discussed: they can’t trust their dogs. But are you really finding more birds with a dog you keep under your thumb? Maybe one or two, but really, if you’re going to hunt with a close-working pointing dog on a bird that holds as well as the ruffed grouse, you’d probably kick up just as many without him. The “point” of a pointing dog is to find birds you the hunter are not finding. And for that to happen, you need to let him range. The more ground he’s covering, the more birds he’s finding. It doesn’t mean you don’t want him to close it down a bit in really thick cover, but repeat after me: It is okay to let my pointing dog range out of my sight. Not convinced? Stay tuned for the final installment in this series!

Author’s Bio

Jennifer L.S. Pearsall is an outdoor writer, photographer, and editor, who has been a professional in the hunting and shooting industries for nearly 20 years. She began her career by selling guns in a retail establishment in Northern Virginia in the early 1990s, before being recruited by the NRA to join its editorial staff. She has long been a dedicated sporting clays competitor, and  has also dabbled in IPSC and metallic blackpowder cartridge competitions. Ms. Pearsall is a practiced and dedicated hunter, with her fair share of big-game trophies decorating her home, but her deepest passions are bird dogs and upland bird and waterfowl hunting.

Since her tenure with the NRA, Ms. Pearsall’s freelance writings and editing work have appeared in dozens of outdoors print and online publications, including Gun Dog, Wildfowl, Whitetail Journal, Petersen’s Hunting, Waterfowl & Retriever, and various publications of the National Rifle Association and Safari Club International, among others. She has also written under the pen name C. Fergus Covey as a gun test and evaluation expert for Gun Tests magazine. Currently she is authoring the blog www.HuntingTheTruth.com.

Ms. Pearsall currently resides in San Antonio, Texas, with her two dogs, an aging Lab named Noah, and a squirrel-obsessed English pointer called Highway.

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The Flagman Stick-em Up bumper is a new product for an old training issue of how to teach lines and blinds.  The Stick-em Up is a bumper with streamers that you stick in the ground which makes it highly visible to the dog.  You will start at 10 yards and then continuously move out until you are 50 to 75 yards away while building confidence in the dog.  Dog training is a step by step process and the dog builds images of what is expected.  The blind and lining drills are no different.

Bella is a four year old yellow lab that is a great upland dog, but she was over pressured when she was learning lining and blinds.  The program that she went through emphasized avoiding pressure and moving away from pressure to the point that the pressure put on her was too much and she shut down during this procedure when she was younger.  Now that we have the Flagman Stick-em Ups, she is learning lining at a rapid pace with great confidence.  We will continue to use these until we can transition her to the Flagman Success Flags and regular piles.  It won’t be until after this transition that we will re-introduce overs.  As a trainer, I am expecting this procedure to take a little more than a month training every other day.  We will have to help her unlearn stress and then re-learn confidently.

I started this with Bella a little over two weeks ago and the video below will give you some understanding of what the Stick-em Up is all about.  And to order the Flagman Stick-em up and other Flagman Mark-N-Bird Products, please visit http://www.marleydogsupplies.com/brands/Flagman-Bumpers.html

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Ryder and Stan at the World Championships

Ryder and Stan at the World Championships

Marley Sporting Dog Supplies spent the weekend of October 23 – 25, 2009 at the Bird Dog Challenge World Championships and did not do as well as we wanted. It came down to a lack of preparation with the dogs and their endurance level. I needed to do more work on their endurance and get their heads right for the game. Just because the dogs did well the last time they ran does not mean they will be able to do it again after a full 6 month layoff.

So, what could I as a trainer have done different? Well, the first thing that I would do different would be to train a little harder on their cardio-vascular system and then work to build their endurance by doing 15 minute hunts without birds in the field. That would help them work hard enough to get their endurance level up. Once their endurance level has been built up, I will then work to increase their speed by planting 10 birds in the field to see how fast they can find all ten.

Finally, basic training cannot be forgotten because of the need to have complete control and work the dog in order to put them in the best position to win. The issues from the weekend include Ryder not hunting like he should and Bella just running out of gas. Neither problem leads to a good outcome. Vince Lombardi is quoted as saying, “Perfect Practice makes Perfect Execution.” We needed the perfect execution this weekend to advance.

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