Bill Burkett
Active member
Has anyone else seen the sea-duck video posted on "Field Notes" by the Chenil de la RiviereBlanche in Quebec?
It generated a storm of controversy on that site from duck hunters concerned about the featured dog's safety.
Evidently the kennel posted th video as a promotion of the courage and toughness of its dogs,and I have to admit I've never seen a braver yellow Lab. They were sea-duck shooting on a lee shore (which seems stupid in the first place, all the decoys were tangled in a mess at the base of the boulders they hid behind) with big waves crashing repeatedly over the rocky shoreline. When a flight came through they blasted away and sent the dog, sans any kind of vest, into that maelstrom. He went repeatedly, with no hesitation, rounded up each heavy-bodied diver and headed back--I actually believed he tried to time the heavy wave action to body-surf up onto the slanting, streaming rocks upon which the surf was breaking. He seemed in control of his environment,even gettingdunked repeatedly--never turned loose his prey. But he seemed to be tiring and the last bit of the video was harrowing to a man who has spent most of his life with Labs. He got a grip on the rocks--a wave sucked him back and under. He came up swimmng hard and tried again. Same result.Finally a larger way swept him completely away and under--I could feel myself leaning toward the computer screen and know if had been there I would have been down there on those rocks trying to grab him and pull him to safety. His head was under water a LOT until he found a lower spot on the rocks and crawled out--duck still firmly in his jaws. As he trotted back to the gunners, they didn't seem to consider his heroics--one may have mentioned good dog but that was it.
I am curious about the reactions of my fellow duck hunters here to such an extreme video. Those who viewed it were all over the board--from where can I buy one of those dogs to those guys should be horsewhipped. My reaction was slightly different: I wanted to to Quebec and find that one dog and take him away from them--and if the taking broke a few of their heads,so be it--and bring him home with me and look after him and make much of him. Like the Marines on Guadalcanal, he served his time in hell. Of course I am old and crippled up and could never accomplish such a mission--but I wanted to.
What do you guys think? The kennel has this on Facebook too, I believe. Entitlted "the toughest duck dog."
It generated a storm of controversy on that site from duck hunters concerned about the featured dog's safety.
Evidently the kennel posted th video as a promotion of the courage and toughness of its dogs,and I have to admit I've never seen a braver yellow Lab. They were sea-duck shooting on a lee shore (which seems stupid in the first place, all the decoys were tangled in a mess at the base of the boulders they hid behind) with big waves crashing repeatedly over the rocky shoreline. When a flight came through they blasted away and sent the dog, sans any kind of vest, into that maelstrom. He went repeatedly, with no hesitation, rounded up each heavy-bodied diver and headed back--I actually believed he tried to time the heavy wave action to body-surf up onto the slanting, streaming rocks upon which the surf was breaking. He seemed in control of his environment,even gettingdunked repeatedly--never turned loose his prey. But he seemed to be tiring and the last bit of the video was harrowing to a man who has spent most of his life with Labs. He got a grip on the rocks--a wave sucked him back and under. He came up swimmng hard and tried again. Same result.Finally a larger way swept him completely away and under--I could feel myself leaning toward the computer screen and know if had been there I would have been down there on those rocks trying to grab him and pull him to safety. His head was under water a LOT until he found a lower spot on the rocks and crawled out--duck still firmly in his jaws. As he trotted back to the gunners, they didn't seem to consider his heroics--one may have mentioned good dog but that was it.
I am curious about the reactions of my fellow duck hunters here to such an extreme video. Those who viewed it were all over the board--from where can I buy one of those dogs to those guys should be horsewhipped. My reaction was slightly different: I wanted to to Quebec and find that one dog and take him away from them--and if the taking broke a few of their heads,so be it--and bring him home with me and look after him and make much of him. Like the Marines on Guadalcanal, he served his time in hell. Of course I am old and crippled up and could never accomplish such a mission--but I wanted to.
What do you guys think? The kennel has this on Facebook too, I believe. Entitlted "the toughest duck dog."