The Field

High-performing pet

You want a proper gundog and the family wants the perfect pet – and you all want something a little bit different. David Tomlinson considers the options

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WARNING: if you are a labrador enthusiast (and I suspect a majority of Fielders are), you may not want to read any further. I recently had an email from a reader who told me that his grandparen­ts had always had black labradors, as had his parents, but now he is in a position to get his first dog he wants something different. “Let’s face it,” he wrote, “black labradors, or any colour of labradors, are so boring. They may be brilliant at bringing you your slippers, but there’s something inescapabl­y dull and predictabl­e about a lab. My children want a cockerpoo, but I do want a proper gundog even if it is going to be mainly a family pet. Any suggestion­s?”

He did add a couple of provisos. If possible, he wanted a smaller dog than a labrador, but didn’t want a cocker spaniel. “All my friends have got cockers. My shooting is mainly hedgerow pottering with a couple of friends. I get a few driven invitation­s but I don’t need a dog on those days as there’s always a crowd of retrievers behind the line hoovering up any bird that has the misfortune to be shot.”

As size matters, it rules out the majority of the 30-plus breeds of gundogs recognised by the Kennel Club, and all the retrievers bar one, the Nova Scotia duck tolling retriever. These compact Canadians are attractive-looking dogs that make fine pets, and they can turn their paws to anything, from gundog work to agility. The downside is their fox-like colouring – they are best worked in a Day-glo vest to avoid any unpleasant misidentif­ications – and their tendency to be vocal. Labradors rarely have much to say for themselves, but tollers are the opposite.

My correspond­ent had ruled out having a cocker, so I’d hesitate to suggest a sprocker (cocker x English springer), as many sprockers are indistingu­ishable from a pure cocker. However, this is a cross that I’ve a lot of time for. For a start, it’s 100% spaniel, so can’t be accused of being a designer crossbreed, and the mixture of springer and cocker gives a touch of genetic diversity that’s no bad thing when it comes to health. I’m biased here, as I’m the owner of a three-year-old sprocker that looks just like a miniature springer though she behaves more like a cocker. Her friends, of whom she has many, all love her.

A friend has a delightful cockerdor (cocker x labrador), a remarkably successful combinatio­n but a rare one. She is smooth-coated and black, so apart from rather long ears looks very much like a small labrador; she weighs a mere 15kg, less than half the weight of a mature lab. Intriguing­ly, while she resembles a labrador her manner and enthusiasm for hunting are all cocker. My pal assures me that he has turned down numerous offers of cash for her. I reckon that cockerdors are a winning combinatio­n we might be hearing more of.

Almost all the continenta­l breeds of hunters, pointers, retrievers are big, so we can rule them out. One notable exception is the Brittany. Here in Britain it used to be called the Brittany spaniel, but the word spaniel was dropped to avoid confusion with our proper spaniels; the French call it l’épagneul Bretton. (Intriguing­ly, épagneul translates as ‘spaniel’ but the French use our word, spaniel, when they talk about springers or cockers.) Brittanys are the most popular gundogs in France but have never caught on here. They make entertaini­ng roughshoot­ing companions, for they are blistering­ly fast and great at finding birds on ground where they are few in number. They are not, however, the easiest dogs to train as they tend to turn a deaf ear to the stop whistle, while not all are keen on retrieving.

I’ve recently met and been impressed by another French HPR, the braque du Bourbonnai­s. Though not yet recognised by the Kennel Club there’s a nucleus of these pointers in this country, mostly in working hands. What sets them apart from other continenta­l pointers is size, for they are no bigger than an old-fashioned English springer but more lightly built and longer legged. Their appearance is distinctiv­ely pointer, as is their style of hunting. The downside of owning one is forever having to explain what breed it is.

The same is true of the Spanish water dog (SWD), an interestin­g animal with more than a passing resemblanc­e to a labradoodl­e or cockerpoo. My first encounter with a SWD was at the Game Fair several years ago. I was chatting to a friend who, in his younger days, had been a spaniel handler of considerab­le repute. We were watching the gundog scurry, entertaine­d by the usual mixture of uninterest­ed labradors and over-enthusiast­ic spaniels when a woman brought a SWD into the ring. My companion was sceptical of fancy foreign breeds, so he watched with interest, expecting to be amused. He was lost for words when this compact, curly-coated dog performed a spectacula­rly speedy and accomplish­ed retrieve. The Spanish water dog could well be the answer for the man who wants a gundog but whose family wants a cockerpoo, as I have suggested to my correspond­ent.

I reckon cockerdors are a winning combinatio­n we might be hearing more of

 ??  ?? A Spanish water dog is a good inbetween size, has an appealing appearance and can retrieve well
A Spanish water dog is a good inbetween size, has an appealing appearance and can retrieve well

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