CSnowgren
UKC Forum Member
Registered: Apr 2009
Location: Iowa
Posts: 928 |
Understanding how your dogs body responds to the fuel you provide it, the work you give it, and the rest it needs is the backbone of any conditioning efforts. Along those same lines, knowing what your are conditioning your dog for and how best to proceed with it are just as important. Conditioning a dog for a bench show or just overall better quality of life is vastly different than conditioning a dog for work or hunting for an extended period. Any dog will continue to put one foot in front of the other for a night of hunting if thats what the dog loves to do and is in its heart. The key is watching how hard they do it, how much recovery time they need and how many times they can repeat that scenario as intensely as possible. As an owner, you have minimal control over many things, you have total control of the conditioning of your dog when compared to others. Don't let conditioning be the reason you fail. If you have it in your mind that you can provide your charge pizz poor feed and that it has always worked, good luck to you. Then don't complain when you end up with the same old results with your "hard hunting" self. If you recognize that things run better with good fuel and tuned right, conditioning a working dog is a lot of fun. The results you see with your own eyes and nobody can "cheat" you out of it except yourself. The results are completely dependant upon you, your knowledge, and your application of it. Application is where many fail and is the proverbial line that separates the men from the boys sorta speak. With all of the talk of cheap feed being used and being just fine, I would say that the guy looking for a competitive edge could exploit that area to his benefit.
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Last edited by CSnowgren on 02-10-2013 at 02:54 PM
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