setter pointer
Can a Pointer hunt?
The purest bird-finding machine in the group — born pointing, tireless, and bold enough that a gun intro is usually a non-event. But it’s bred to run big and to the horizon, so a walking hunter has to teach it to work for the gun, and the retrieve is bolt-on, not built-in.
What the breed brings
- An intense, precocious point
- A huge engine and endurance
- Bold nerves — hard to spook
What it asks of you
- Teach it to work close for a foot hunter
- Condition the retrieve — it isn’t natural
- Serious daily running, not a walk
Comes easy
- Retrieve & chase instinct
- Stamina & work ethic
Real work
- Clean delivery (watch chewing)
- Keeping it in gun range
- Installing an off-switch
- Earning cooperation & focus
Watch for
- No red flags — keep it short & fun
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
- Quail Forever — Big-running with extensive range; strong drive to point, with pups often scent-pointing at 7–8 weeks; natural retrieving is dubious and must be conditioned.
- American Kennel Club — Hard workers with great speed, endurance, and scenting ability — the choice when a hunter wants ground coverage.
Crosses & rescues
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