- Home
- Hounds▾
- Hounds
-
- Scenthounds
- Scenthounds
- Alpine Dachsbracke
- American Black and Tan Coonhound
- American Foxhound
- American Leopard Hound
- Anglo-Francais de Petite Venerie
- Ariegeois
- Artois Hound
- Austrian Black and Tan Hound
- Basset Artésien Normand
- Basset Bleu de Gascogne
- Basset Fauve de Bretagne
- Basset Hound
- Bavarian Mountain Hound
- Beagle
- Beagle Harrier
- Billy
- Blackmouth Cur
- Bloodhound
- Bluetick Coonhound
- Bosnian Coarse Haired Hound
- .
- Briquet Griffon Vendéen
- Chien Français Blanc et Noir
- Chien Français Blanc et Orange
- Chien Français Tricolore
- Dachshund
- Deutsche Bracke
- Drever
- Dunker
- English Coonhound
- English Foxhound
- Finnish Hound
- Gascogne Saintongeois
- Grand Anglo-Français Blanc et Noir
- Grand Anglo-Français Blanc et Orange
- Grand Anglo-Français Tricolore
- Grand Basset Griffon Vendéen
- Grand Bleu de Gascogne
- Grand Griffon Vendéen
- Griffon Bleu de Gascogne
- Griffon Fauve de Bretagne
- .
- Griffon Nivernais
- Haldenstøver
- Hamiltonstövare
- Hanoverian Hound
- Harrier
- Hellenic Hound
- Hygen Hound
- Istrian Coarse-Haired Hound
- Istrian Short-Haired Hound
- Italian Hound
- Montenegrin Mountain Hound
- Mountain Cur
- Otterhound
- Petit Basset Griffon Vendéen
- Petit Bleu de Gascogne
- Plott
- Poitevin
- Polish Hound
- Polish Hunting Dog
- Porcelaine
- .
- Posavaz Hound
- Redbone Coonhound
- Rhodesian Ridgeback
- Schillerstövare
- Serbian Hound
- Serbian Tricolor Hound
- Slovakian Hound
- Småland Hound
- Small Swiss Hound
- Spanish Hound
- Stephens' Cur
- Styrian Coarse-Haired Hound
- Swiss Hound
- Transylvanian Hound
- Treeing Cur
- Treeing Walker Coonhound
- Tyrolean Hound
- Welsh Hound
- Westphalian Dachsbracke
- Scenthounds
- K9 Classroom▾
- Policies▾
Hunting Dogs
Article: Dog Types » Hunting Dogs
A hunting dog refers to any dog who assists humans in hunting. There are several types of hunting dogs developed for various tasks. The major categories of hunting dogs include hounds, terriers, dachshunds, cur type dogs, and gun dogs. Among these categories further divisions can be made based upon the dogs’ skill sets.
Main Category | Subcategory | Example | Summary |
---|---|---|---|
Hounds | Hounds are further divided into sighthounds and scent hounds depending upon the primary sense used to locate quarry. Many fur bearing animals such as jackrabbits, raccoons, coyotes, and large predators are hunted with hounds. | ||
Sighthounds | Sighthounds are well adapted for visual acuity and speed. Their method is known as "coursing" - prey is often sighted from a distance, stalked, pursued and neatly killed. Sighthounds work quickly and quietly, and are by nature independent. | ||
Scenthounds | Scent hounds are hounds that primarily hunt by scent. Scenthounds are used to trail and sometimes kill game. They hunt in packs leading the hunters on a chase which may end in the quarry being chased into a tree or killed. Some of these breeds have deep, booming barks and use them when following a scent trail. | ||
Lurchers | A Lurcher is a sighthound crossed with a working dog breed−usually a pastoral dog or Terrier bred selectively for working. | ||
Gun Dogs | Gun dogs are used primarily by small game hunters using shotguns. Gun dogs are classified as retrievers, flushing spaniels, and pointing breeds. | ||
Retrievers | Once classified as a water spaniel, a retriever's primary role is to find and return shot game to the hunter. Retrievers can spend long hours in a duck blind and visually spot and remember the location of downed birds. At command, they retrieve the birds. They may be able to follow hand, verbal, and whistle commands to the downed bird. They typically have large, gentle muzzles. | ||
Setters | Setters have a long history as upland gun dogs. They appear to have a native ability to locate and point at upland game birds. They flush the birds at the hunter's command. | ||
Spaniels | Spaniels have been used as hunting dogs for hundreds of years. Flushing Spaniels are used to locate and flush game for a hunter. | ||
Pointers | Pointers are dogs trained to locate and point at small game allowing the hunter to approach and flush the game. Pointing breeds have greater range than Spaniels. | ||
Water Dogs | Water dogs are a subclass of retrievers. | ||
Feists | Feists are small dogs that hunt small game, especially squirrels, in a similar manner to large hounds hunting raccoons and large game. Feists may hunt in packs, and "bark up" on trees to alert the hunter. The feist was developed in the southern United States, reputedly from small Native American dogs and British fell terriers. | ||
Terriers | Terriers are used to hunt mammals. Terriers locate the den or set of the target animal and then bolt, capture, or kill the animal. A working terrier may go underground to kill or drive out game. Hunters who use terriers are referred to as terriermen. | ||
Curs | Curs hunt similarly to terriers, though usually larger game. Curs are used to hunt boars, raccoon, cougars, and other large mammals. | ||
Dachshund | Dachshund was bred to scent, chase, and flush out badgers, foxes and other burrow-dwelling animals, while the miniature dachshund was developed to hunt smaller prey such as rabbits. In the American West they have also been used to hunt prairie dogs. In Europe dachshunds are widely used for hunting deer and smaller game such as rabbits and hares. They are also excellent scent dogs and they are often used to track down wounded animals after car accident for example. Dachshund is also the only certifiable breed of dog to hunt both above and below ground. |
Further Details About Some Types
Flushing spaniels combine hunting, flushing, and retrieving skills. English Springer Spaniels are popular gundogs for a variety of cover but are closely followed in popularity by English Cocker Spaniels.[citation needed] Both breeds are adept at finding and flushing then retrieving game from thick cover. Clumbers, Sussex, and Field Spaniels are also popular for their slower, methodical hunting pattern. The American Water Spaniel and the Boykin Spaniel are noted for their water work.
When trained, Beagles are particularly adept at chasing through thick briars and brush after rabbits. However, spaniels are also excellent rabbit hunting dogs. Spaniel field trials in the UK use both game birds as well as rabbits.[1] Many hound breeds are excellent at treeing raccoons.
Sighthounds are different from scenthounds in their methods and adaptations. The long lean head of the sighthound gives it a greater degree of binocular vision. Their speed, agility and visual acuity are particularly adapted for coursing game in open meadows or steppes. They are independent in nature, and are worked singly or in a “brace” of two or three dogs. Sighthounds are generally quiet and placid dogs compared to other hunting breeds.
Retrievers are good swimmers so are used for retrieving game shot down over water. Retrievers skin secretes an oily substance that sheds water.[citation needed] Retrievers are good at retrieving birds on land or in water.
Hounds have sensitive noses that are used to locate small animals like rabbits and squirrels. Hound breeds include the bluetick, red tick, walker, redbone,and mountain cur.
Flushers are frequently used for pheasant hunting and can be trained to work within gun range. Other flushers, like the cocker, the Boykin and several types of spaniels pursue game until it goes for cover.
Where there is heavy foliage, it would be desirable to select an Pointer (dog breed), hunting for birds, since they are very calm in the wake of the birds in the trees.[2]
References
- Spaniel Journal
- English Pointer dog breed for hunting
See also
- Hunting dogs constellation Canes Venatici
- Deeley, Martin. “Working Gundogs: An Introduction to Training and Handling. (1990,reprinted 2002) The Crowood Press. ISBN 1-85223-764-3.
- Fergus, Charles. Gun Dog Breeds, A Guide to Spaniels, Retrievers, and Pointing Dogs, The Lyons Press, 2002. ISBN 1-58574-618-5
- Roettger, Anthony Z. and Schleider, Benjamin H. III. (2004) Urban Gun Dogs: Training flushing dogs for home and field. The Writer’s Collective. ISBN 1-59411-050-6
This article is licensed (except where noted) under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article Hunting dog
Tags
Afghanistan Africa America Ancient Egypt Ancient Greece Assistance Dogs Austria Bark Behavior Belgium Biology Bosnia Breed Type Canary Islands Catahoula Companion Dog Coonhound Croatia Cur Dog Sport Dog Types Egypt England English-French Evolution Finland Foxhound France Germany Greece Guard Dogs Hairless Health History Hounds Hungary Iberia Imperial China Ireland Israel Italy Lap Dog Malta Montenegro North Africa Norway Nutrition Palestine Pariah Persia Peru Poland Portugal Primitive Rabies Ridgeback Roman Russia Scenthound Scotland Serbia Sicily Sighthound Slovakia Spain Spitz Sweden Switzerland Taiwan Thailand The Domestic Dog Training Transylvania Wales Working Dogs
Copyright © 2021 Hound Dogs dRule
Powered by WordPress