flushing spaniel
Can a English Springer Spaniel hunt?
The blue-collar flushing dog a lot of hunters cut their teeth on — eager, biddable, and glad to trade a weekday on the couch for a weekend in the cover. Just know the field line and the bench line have been separate dogs for 70-plus years, so who the parents are matters more than the papers.
What the breed brings
- Natural quartering, close and within gun range
- Eager to please and easy to handle
- A strong flush with a soft-mouthed retrieve
What it asks of you
- Give it real work or it invents its own
- Buy off working field-bred parents — many show lines have the drive bred out
Comes easy
- Retrieve & chase instinct
- Water work
- Picks up cues fast
- Stamina & work ethic
Real work
- Installing an off-switch
Watch for
- Working vs show lines vary — read the dog
Tendencies, not destiny: breed explains only a small share of an individual dog’s behavior — the dog in front of you always overrules the label. Read our sources below, then read your dog.
Sources
- American Kennel Club — Friendly, eager to please, quick to learn, willing to obey — tractability essential for field control; flushes/springs game and retrieves for water work within gun range.
- English Springer Spaniel Field Trial Assoc. — Field-bred Springers carry more drive; most bench-bred dogs have had hunting instinct bred out — the lines have been distinct for 70+ years.
Crosses & rescues
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