Doug wrote:
Geez, Dave, I'm hurt. I know of another living GSP that has won an Open "FDSB pointer/setter" championship and made some pretty good showings in a bunch more.
Doug, read the thread up until that point; we were talking AA dogs.
Over the last decade there have been a number of GSPs participate and place in AFTCA championship events, including your dogs. There have been Brits and Red Setters that have placed as well. All of which have been in Shooting Dog events. I believe that Hunter is the only non-pointer/E. Setter to have won an AA Championship in recent years, maybe decades.
While the Shooting Dog wins are very significant, I think we'd all agree that the traditional AF crowd won’t take GSPs seriously until we have GSPs winning AA Open Championships, and particularly ones on the major circuit.
I'm disappointed in reading all these posts and replies by alot of good GSP folks whose visions of greatness seem to stop at 1 hour NGSPA stakes. Folks, we've got great dogs that can compete in the open American Field trials, IMO the best test of bird dogs going. My dogs are okay, not outstanding as far as field trial dogs go, but we've managed to win open championships and runner up championships just by getting out there and doing it. Managed to win an open "pointer/setter" regional dog of the year points race too - and don't doubt the "pointer/setter" competition out here.
The competition in your part of the country is indeed tough, but there are a lot of factors at play in the midwest and the south. Based on the conversations I've had with a number of very experienced pointer trialers, the best chances the GSP do have is in the west, where tradition isn't as much of a factor. Heck, the Red Setter folks talk about how they feel that they enter a trial with one strike against them sometimes in the South.
I guess my question to you is how will running GSPs in open trials make the GSP a better breed and provide the prospective breeder more info about selecting excellent breeding stock? I'm going to be taking a pup here this year, so over the last few years I've been going to the big trials like Eureka to evaluate dogs. If I'm interested in a certain male, I might ride his brace and possibly the braces of some littermates and if I'm lucky, a few futurity dogs sired by this male.
Your Stitch is a great example; I've heard many good things about him. Maybe he's the right sire for my pup, but since I'll only take a pup out of parents I've watched being trialed, and you don't come to any of the GSP National Championships, what impact will he have on the breed? He may be a better dog than what wins at Eureka or Booneville, but since very few people know about him his impact on the breed is very limited.
Doug, so few people really know about what you are accomplishing. Even fewer know of Hunter's win; and I'm talking about hard-core GSP trialers. I'm enough of a dog geek to actually read most of the AFTCA championship trial reports in the Field; most GSP folks look at me like I'm crazy and many don't even bother with the Field at all. Most page through until they see a photo of a GSP and then they'll read it. We also share a friend in the Hoosier state who through a series of events ended up spending a lot of time in your neck of the woods running GSPs, which has helped me keep up with who is doing what out there.
I hope to have a GSP that I can compete with in championship AFTCA events at some point; my current GSP is more of a true horseback gundog. I'll encourage anyone to participate in AFTCA events, but not at the expense of participating in our breed championships.
The pointer in the US has been built around the idea that one great one in a litter of ok dogs is acceptable; the GSP breed has (until fairly recently) been more about producing excellent litters of hunting dogs with the hopes of getting trial-quality dogs as well.
A few years ago I was lucky to handle a few dogs in a weekend where half-sibling GSPs participated in a NAVHDA UT test, a NSTRA championship, an AKC Master Hunter test, a AKC walking trial and an AKC horseback trial. That to me shows why the GSP is such a great breed for the hunter who also is interested in performance dogs; it is also something you will never see with the pointers or setters.
IMO winning AFTCA events is a great personal accomplishment but I don't yet see how it will lead to us producing better GSPs.
JMO,
Dave