The answer is simple...Brittany Spaniels are the best! The Point very well and i am pleased..we have had many hunting dogs and the Brittany was the best..they are a good size, varity of colors, great companion, obidient, they are a five star dog and should be very pleasing!
First and foremost it's a matter of training and routine. Great or even good bird hunting dogs are made, not born that way. Here are two breeds that can adapt to this kind of training,
http://dogtime.com/labrador-retriever.html
http://dogtime.com/chesapeake-bay-retriever.html
you want something like a pitbull or a ridgeback.something that doesnt stuff around and gets the job done.
Any large dog can be a hunting dog, they just need to be trained properly.
labs are bred to hunt waterfowl
A blood hound is the best hunting dog because it has a great nose & it also runs fast.
Basset Hounds they were breed for ground hunting
hunting dog, especially hunting ducks.
the lab is the best duck hunting dog breed because i had a freind that trained his dog (pistle) to hunt and she can bring back like 3 ducks at a time and one time i was with them and we shot 5 ducks at a time and she brang two back at a time and the rest while we where droping birds she just kept going bringing two back at a time
coon dog
beagle for gun hunting. Labrador for bow hunting.
the hunting dog has short, brown/tan and black fur for camouflage in with the backgrounds :)though that for the cape hunting dog or (same breed) the African wild dog
it depends on the type of dog, if it is a aggressive dog then yes probably will eat ducks but if the dog is not aggressive dog then the dog probably wont eat ducks (:
hunting dogs
labs
It is a word for a kind of dog. It comes from the Germanic, and in Germanic languages it is the general term for a dog. In English, though, it refers to those breeds of dog used for hunting and tracking.
Ray P. Holland has written: 'Nip and Tuck' -- subject(s): Dogs, Folklore, Pointer (Dog breed) 'Seven grand gun dogs' -- subject(s): Hunting dogs, Dogs, Folklore 'Ducks! Ducks! Ducks!' -- subject(s): Wildlife conservation, Waterfowl management, Ducks