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Can a Weimaraner hunt?

Behind the silver show-dog looks is a serious, high-drive hunter that was never meant to sit on a couch. The catch is a thin skin: Weimaraners are sensitive, slow to grow up, and turn resentful or anxious under a heavy hand.

Birdy by natureBig engineGentle gun introLate bloomer

What the breed brings

  • High stamina and genuine hunting drive
  • Close bonding — wants to work with you
  • Natural pointing, tracking, and retrieving instinct

What it asks of you

  • Gentle, consistent training — no harsh correction
  • Patience through a long, slow maturity
  • Company and a job; it can’t be left idle

Comes easy

  • Retrieve & chase instinct
  • Picks up cues fast
  • Stamina & work ethic

Real work

  • Steadiness — slow to mature
  • Clean delivery (watch chewing)
  • Installing an off-switch

Watch for

  • Sound-sensitive — the slowest, most careful gun intro
  • Adolescent backslides are normal

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.

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