THE WORLD OF

WORKING GUNDOGS

"One of the pleasures of shooting is the company of a well trained gundog.  The choice of the breed of gundog is a matter of both personal taste and the type of shooting one is engaged in.  Different terrain and differing quarry dictate the choice of gundog.  Some will prefer the busy spaniel quartering the scrubland for pheasants or rabbits, others the questing of setters or pointers on the moorland, whilst others enjoy the retrieving breeds when wildfowling or at the driven game shoot." Bill Beckett Irish writer and broadcaster


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Golden Retriever

Much of the history of the golden retriever lies in Scotland, although there are claims that a similar dog was found in Russia more than a century ago.  It was Colonel; the Honourable W. Le Poer-Trench who championed this idea of a yellow Russian retriever and claimed it was the forerunner of the yellow dog he owned in 1883.  The colonel’s claims were unfounded, though, and his yellow dog was traced to a troupe of circus dogs from Russia.

In 1952, the Earl of Ilchester, a sporting historian, researched the origins of the golden retriever, later publishing an article in Country Life.   There he revealed that the 1st Lord Tweedsmouth pioneered the breed with dogs known locally as the “Tweedsmouth water spaniel” being the first link in a breeding chain that included the Newfoundland, thus giving rise to a yellow or golden retriever that is the ancestor to today’s golden retrievers.                                                                                                                                     

Interestingly enough, the Newfoundland appears in many of the bloodlines of the various retriever breeds.  One can assume that the Newfoundland’s capability in water was a main factor in breeding North American dogs with European breeds.

Comfortable on land and water, the golden retriever has an excellent nose and is much favoured by female handlers.  Whilst described as ‘golden’ in colour, the colour variants can range from cream to red fox.