Monday, June 14, 2010

Give a dog a rabbit, he eats for one meal ...

That dog don't hunt.

It helps to say that with a southern accent.

Did you ever want to teach your hunting-breed dog to, well, hunt?

There's a place in Carlisle, Pa., that will do just that. Here's the story from Robbie Brown with the New York Times.
We were at the Fun Field Trial here, a hunting training program held in the spring for dogs that have never hunted but whose breeds were created to do so. Part doggie boot camp, part nature-versus-nurture science experiment and part outdoorsman’s Westminster Dog Show, the trial was founded last year by two local basset hound clubs to test the hunting instincts of ordinary house dogs.
It's for bassets, beagles, dachshunds and petit basset griffon vendeens, dogs bred centuries ago to help hunters get fast prey.

Some say domesticated pooches have lost the ability to hunt.

Alexandra Horowitz, a Barnard College dog behavior expert, said dogs may not go to their natural ways if they are allowed to hunt.
“People think if we put dogs in the right environment, they’ll just go back to their wild ways,” she said. “It really just depends on the breed and the individual dog.”

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I saw that story in the NYT last week and sent it to all my basset friends. So cute.