Modern food and maintenance seems to make all the pups fairly even and breeding seems to have eliminated many of the physical problems so that today choice mostly comes down to character. Many hours of observation over the eight weeks of rearing and weaning is the secret but even then it always seems like a risk in the end.
Somebody once said to me that a fishing rod and a pigeons wing helps, somehow it stuck and is now one of the routines that we do in the last week when we take the litter around the paddocks with the spaniels. This year our recent trip to the moors provided a more appropriate grouse wing, they all enjoyed it from the first appearance and it never seems less enjoyable to have a whole litter on point!
Steve arrived on time soon after breakfast and took four of the pups north to their new homes leaving us with just one bitch who was a little surprised to find herself sitting alone on the bales in the kennel wondering where the rest had gone? But all reports have been good - Ken sent a message to say he arrived home in the Isle of Man and was sitting reading 'The Field' with his pup asleep on his lap feeling 'heaven' had arrived.
Steve arrived on time soon after breakfast and took four of the pups north to their new homes leaving us with just one bitch who was a little surprised to find herself sitting alone on the bales in the kennel wondering where the rest had gone? But all reports have been good - Ken sent a message to say he arrived home in the Isle of Man and was sitting reading 'The Field' with his pup asleep on his lap feeling 'heaven' had arrived.
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