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Bird dogs in/around Tulsa?
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<blockquote data-quote="romeo212000" data-source="post: 1464926" data-attributes="member: 3535"><p>I own and breed a string of German Shorthairs. I also do some field trialing as well. Matter of fact my Pepper female placed just yesterday. I am taking somewhat of a brief break from a lot of trialing while I get a couple of young ones ready to go again. </p><p></p><p>I specialize mostly in breeding black and white german shorthairs but do have liver and white dogs in every litter. However, my dogs are bred specifically to hunt upland birds. You could train them to sit in a duck blind and take lines and that sort of thing, but that is not really the lines and qualities that I breed for. In my experience the pups will however make good pets as long as they get plenty of attention and exercise. I was not planning on breeding again till next spring but I have had some interest so if I got a couple of deposits I might consider breeding early.You can check my website out <a href="http://www.ridgerunkennels.com" target="_blank">www.ridgerunkennels.com</a>. </p><p></p><p>A word of advice though. If you are really wanting to get out and hunt wild birds such as in north west Oklahoma, especially quail, a springer will not cover nearly enough ground. Despite what people say there are still a decent amount of birds in Oklahoma, but you have to be willing to hook it up to find em'. If your going to mostly be doing preserve hunting you might be okay with a springer. If someone wants a duck/flushing dog that's no problem. But if you want a true quail dog you need something that has tons of drive. Not a runaway or hyper dog. Just one that is bred and built to go hunt for the birds so you don't have to as much. That is what mine are bred for. Check out my site and feel free to pm me or call me with any questions. My contact info is on the website.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="romeo212000, post: 1464926, member: 3535"] I own and breed a string of German Shorthairs. I also do some field trialing as well. Matter of fact my Pepper female placed just yesterday. I am taking somewhat of a brief break from a lot of trialing while I get a couple of young ones ready to go again. I specialize mostly in breeding black and white german shorthairs but do have liver and white dogs in every litter. However, my dogs are bred specifically to hunt upland birds. You could train them to sit in a duck blind and take lines and that sort of thing, but that is not really the lines and qualities that I breed for. In my experience the pups will however make good pets as long as they get plenty of attention and exercise. I was not planning on breeding again till next spring but I have had some interest so if I got a couple of deposits I might consider breeding early.You can check my website out [url]www.ridgerunkennels.com[/url]. A word of advice though. If you are really wanting to get out and hunt wild birds such as in north west Oklahoma, especially quail, a springer will not cover nearly enough ground. Despite what people say there are still a decent amount of birds in Oklahoma, but you have to be willing to hook it up to find em'. If your going to mostly be doing preserve hunting you might be okay with a springer. If someone wants a duck/flushing dog that's no problem. But if you want a true quail dog you need something that has tons of drive. Not a runaway or hyper dog. Just one that is bred and built to go hunt for the birds so you don't have to as much. That is what mine are bred for. Check out my site and feel free to pm me or call me with any questions. My contact info is on the website. [/QUOTE]
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