CLOSEOUT: Gun Dog by Richard A. WoltersThis book is the first to show the complete training procedures in picture sequences.Copyright 1961, 150 pages, hardcover, b/w photos This book, written by Richard Wolters, is for the hunter who wants to train his own dog. It is based on scientific information on the mental development of the dog. Table of Contents: Part 1 Part 2
Customer ReviewsReview Summary
4.8
5 Reviews
5
80% (4)
4
20% (1)
3
0% (0)
2
0% (0)
1
0% (0)
100% Recommend this product (5 of 5 responses)
By Carl M.
CO
Very useful classic
December 19, 2020
Classic training guide. Very useful. The colloquial 1961 language makes me laugh and offends my spouse, but it is my go to reference for all things bird dog training.
By Pat S.
NE
Review for
August 12, 2016
Its a great book to help yourself or a friend get started training a young bird dog. A fun read with great training illustrations.
By Matt S.
WA
Review for
April 3, 2014
Love the book, and i am having immediate success in my training. Looking forward to future purchases with you guys.
By Michael P.
Review for
November 5, 2013
Excellent books. Used them over 15 years ago to train a chocolate lab. These training methods produced an excellent retreiver(waterfowl) and dual tasked upland hunter. Lost the books and found them at gun dog supply. Training a new lab pup and hope to have the same results.
By Keith
Review for
March 29, 2010
I acquired a beagle/Boston Terrier Mix pup around 8 months old over 2 and half years ago he just turned 3.I am sure he was a Pet store dog with no pedigree in him. I know he has an amazing nose I just need to control it. He is the first dog I have tried to train. I didn't start training him until he turned 3. In one session using Wolters method I had him quartering a field and then in another 10 min session I had him taking a dummy from my hand on Fetch command. From what I have heard from many diffrent people terriers and beagles are stubborn to training and this dog is a very dominant dog. So for me being a very novice trainer and to have a Petstore dog with no working genes in him and to get results like that, I think the book speaks for itself. I know all dogs are diffrent and require diffrent situations but to use Wolters books as a general guide line for training I think any novice can get some kind of results
Wolters: Gun Dog | ||||||||









