Nate Hoyt
Member
I second (...or third) the UKC Hunting Retriever Labs. They are much saner on average (see my exception below) than trial Labs in my experience. I guess AKC has a similar program, but I don't have any experience with it, so I won't talk about it. Hunting Retriever is not confined to Labs, but they are the most common breed. On the East Coast, I'd also expect to see quite a few Chessies, plus a few surprises like Boykins, American Water Spaniels, etc, which would be pretty cool see work. From what I can find it appears your closest Hunting Retriever Club is Yankee Waterfowlers Hunting Retriever Club. I put their link and the UKC Hunting Retriever link below.
http://www.ywhrc.com/
http://www.ukcdogs.com/WebSite.nsf/WebPages/HRCHome
I would recommend going to as many hunt tests and training days (training days show off the unpolished pups off more) as you can and see which kennels (and mommas and daddies) turn out hard working, yet calm pups.
That being said, we bred a laid back hunting stock Lab with a calm UKC hunter retriever Lab twice. We got 7 pups in total and there wasn't a single dud in the bunch. Six were reasonably calm dogs by Lab standards. However, my female is as hot as any field trial dog. She is a heck of a dog and she will work herself to death for me, but she is still wired at 11 years old.
Since your brother doesn't sound like a dog guy, it sounds like you are getting deep into mentor territory. Involve your nephew (and his dad if possible) in the entire process. Explain what you are looking for and why you are looking for it. Any kid will get more joy out of the process of picking a pup than if he just received a gift puppy. I was very lucky because both my Dad and his buddy immersed me in hunting dogs. I had a lot of support when I was figuring things out.
Nate
http://www.ywhrc.com/
http://www.ukcdogs.com/WebSite.nsf/WebPages/HRCHome
I would recommend going to as many hunt tests and training days (training days show off the unpolished pups off more) as you can and see which kennels (and mommas and daddies) turn out hard working, yet calm pups.
That being said, we bred a laid back hunting stock Lab with a calm UKC hunter retriever Lab twice. We got 7 pups in total and there wasn't a single dud in the bunch. Six were reasonably calm dogs by Lab standards. However, my female is as hot as any field trial dog. She is a heck of a dog and she will work herself to death for me, but she is still wired at 11 years old.
Since your brother doesn't sound like a dog guy, it sounds like you are getting deep into mentor territory. Involve your nephew (and his dad if possible) in the entire process. Explain what you are looking for and why you are looking for it. Any kid will get more joy out of the process of picking a pup than if he just received a gift puppy. I was very lucky because both my Dad and his buddy immersed me in hunting dogs. I had a lot of support when I was figuring things out.
Nate
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