Nowack hit it on the head. Chessies aint labs. You do a quickie intro to the collar, and shock that dog in the boat the next day, and all kind of things will happen, none of them good.
Sutton is over reacting. No surprise there. But hes doing it for what he sees as the best thing for the dog. No harm in that. Much rather have you take advice from someone overracting for the dogs sake, then see you strap a collar on and lite up a dog.
Abusive people are abusive. collars simply give them a way to be abusive AND lazy. Blaming a collar is like people who blame crime on guns.
I spend 2 weeks collar condtioning a dog. Then usually a month in the yard, before a collar correction is ever given in the field. And this is with well bred labs (read quick studies), in a structed training program by someone thats been around several hundred dogs being trained (myself) and trained one or two (ok several more) to pick up a duck. Your talking about a dog that takes much longer to teach anything to, that already has an issue, and gonna put a collar on and see what happens after a quickie intro... its a recipie for disater.
Not preaching, your doing the right thing by asking.
My 2 cents. Write this season and your dog in the boat off. Nothing that will happen this season is worth risking your dogs future, and possibly hurting him. See what happened, and use it as your catalsty for next season. Nothing new should ever happen to a dog on a hunt... everything encountered (cept maybe cripples diving) on a hunt should be old hat to a dog before opening day. Thats training. I own a boat to hunt out, I never use it cept for serious ice that freezes us out of the ricefields. But ever dog I train is taught to sit in a boat, ride in a boat, and hunt out of a boat. When i sell a dog to someone, I specifically ask them how they hunt... and then spend time replicathing that in training. When a new person can buy a dog on friday from me, never being around advanced dogs before, and hunt it on saturday, and its the best dog they've ever seen... its not because Im that great, I simply prepared the dog for what would happen, and prepared the person for what would happen. Working is smart is so much easier than just working hard...
Breaking on the shot can get a dog killed. No matter the method you correct, it's worthy of the boom being lowered. if the dog isnt prepared, shame on you, tie the dog up. If the dog is prepared, yet chooses to be disobediant, then a forceful correction is defiently warrentied. And there isnt get the dog back and let him get the bird. One foot past where hes supposed to be, and no bird. Every dog worth owning will take an asswhopping for a bird... denying the retreive after a correction for breaking sit is the best way to show dog it wont be tolerated.
What steve has witnessed and took exception to, is people with dogs that arent prepared getting their feelings hurt when their wonderdog doesnt live up to their ideal standards. I see it with people all the time. They let dog get away with small stuff all week, then on saturday in a group they want to criucfy the dog for a fault because the crowd is watching. Egos got no place in owning a dog, or being a parent to a kid. Being fair with a kid or dog is exactly the same, you teach them the rules, keep your standards consistant, and correct when nessessary. travis