Working Gundog Certificate

 

What is it? How can I get more information?
 
The best place to get more information and help understand it is by visiting the link below which will take you to the Kennel Club (KC) Website. The aim of the Working Gundog Certificate is to provide credible proof that a handler and dog are a competent partnership with the qualities to fulfil the general requirement of work on a shoot.
 

Working Tests Uncovered

 

Working Tests are run from spring to late summer (out of the shooting season) using dummies, and occasionally dead pigeons, or caged game for the dogs to point. No live game is ever shot (blanks may be used). These tests are organised according to the age and standard of the dogs – Puppy (6 -18 months), Novice and Open; and you would start in the Puppy or Novice and then qualify to move up to Open. Occasionally there is a Graduate or Intermediate test to bridge the gap between Novice and Open.

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SHooting of a Different Sort

 

The Club was asked if they knew of an old Italian hunting dog that would be in a film and play the part …of an old Italian hunting dog!!!  Linda kindly volunteered the services of my 10 year old brown roan Italian Spinone – Lucca.  She has looked very grey for many years (like her grandfather Trusco, in Carolyn Fry’s book) and although fairly stubborn like many an old Italian hunting dog, she is very responsive in new situations and quite obedient (!).

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So you want to pick up

Written by Joyce Parkes and published with her permission.

First find your local shoot and contact the gamekeeper or shoot captain to enquire if they need extra help on a shoot day. There may be several shoots in your area and it is worth enquiring widely. Contacts made on training days, breeders or other HPR owners in your area may be able to help or advise but people do guard their own territories jealously (they have probably had to work hard to ensure their place!) so there is nothing quite like the direct approach in the end— keep trying.

It was the last Saturday of the Shooting season and Alfie had become a real star on the local shoot that season, gaining in reputation as the dog to call in when a difficult runner was giving all the other dogs the run around. He would be shown where the bird had fallen and then he would be off deep into the woods or into heavy cover only to return a few minutes later with the bird tenderly held in his mouth.

The day was damp and cold and not much for us to do but stand around most of the day and watch with only a couple of pheasants to pick up. After the last drive of the day as we made our way back to the car. Alfie didn’t seem his self and on getting to the car would not jump in and I had to lift him in.

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The Working Standard
 
The Spinone’s gait is a long, tidy trot, alternating occasionally with something of the rhythm of a gallop (back legs only), so that he is a little swifter than the Italian Bracco, but the required gait when engaged in the act of sniffing is the trot. It is a lively and economical gait which works in diagonals which are nearly always straight, a hundred metres long and sometimes more, well spaced out and determined by the excellent sense of smell which this great pointer always shows provided he does not overdo it in gaits which are contrary to his nature:Clearly for him, as for all other trotters, concentration on the smelling job is of foremost importance and finding a solution to the various problems, which comes almost by instinct in a lightning flash to the gallopers, demands of the Spinone a complex mental process which can easily be read in his lovely facial expression as a “thinker”.

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The Italian Spinone is a very ancient hunting breed, and is part of the Gundog Group.

Within this group there are sub groups made up of Retrievers, Spaniels, Pointers & Setters and HPR (Hunt, Point & Retrieve). The sub groups are designed to group the dogs into the type of work they are mainly bred for.

The Italian Spinone comes under the sub group of HPR (Hunt, Point & Retrieve). As you can see by the name of the sub group the Italian Spinone has been bred to be an all round gundog.

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