kennel_keeper
Posted : 9/23/2006 7:20:29 PM
I really think this is going to be a continuing issue in the dog world. The work our dogs were bred to do is increasingly not really relevent anymore and so many people wind up with problems with their dogs for lack of having work for them to do. Most of the organized working dog trials are fairly artifical, including coonhound nite trials. Because of the rules of the trials, hounds are trained to do a pretty different set of tasks than on a freeform hunt. I've read that the same is true in beagling as well.
I just don't see how anyone without any real experience, can make a statement like this. All you know is what you have been told or what you have read. There's no real experience to back up your statement, as with some of the other posters.
In beagling field trials, the rules are built around what the breed is designed to do. They are put down in a "pack" to find scent, jump game (rabbit), and run it to the gun. It's that simple. The dog that does it the most efficently, wins it's class. Then, you have the hunters that don't trial, but do rabbit hunt. The rules are the same. Find scent, jump game, run it to the gun.
They are NOT trained to do a different set of tasks (not in beagling anyway). Whether hunting or trialing, the only difference is the dogs are being judged in a trial and the game is not killed, but the dog must be able to perform it's duties.
While some may not see the relevence in hunting (whatever the prey may be), there are many, many others that still hunt to put food on the table. Many species are hunted with dogs all over the world. Also, wild boar is STILL being hunting in the old USA today! Along with cougar, bear, deer, etc, etc. Many of these species ARE hunted with dogs as well.
In regards to hunters not caring for their dogs properly, while there might be some that still treat them as property, there are many more that provide as much care for their kennel (some may contain 25 dogs) as many of the posters here with 2 or 3 dogs. Alot has been changing in the hunting dog world in the last few years. The level of care, housing, and nutrition is in the forefront of many of the top breeders and trainers in the field. This is trickling down to the basic hunter and trialer, as the breeders are promoting their hounds and their pups, and their stature has earned the respect of others.
Now, to prove what can happen to a "dumbed-down" breed, look at the Irish Setters. Beautiful dogs (hunting dogs originally), that went awry because some wanted to make them "pets" without the drive to work. SO SAD!
I can't imagine not hearing beagle-music ever again because some breeders and "pet" owners wanted to take their drive away.
As another poster stated, theres quite a difference in "animal rights" and animal welfare. None of the people (hunters or trialers) I know would mistreat their dogs. They all have respect for them and are allowing them their "functionlust"