#deutsch drahthaar
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#puppy#wisconsin#outdoor life#deutsch drahthaar#german wirehaired pointer#bird dog#upland#hunting#bird hunting
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Progress shots of the Max memorial portrait. I started with an underpainting and avoided using any black paint to keep the colors warm and rich.
#work in progress#pet portrait#deutsch drahthaar#german wirehaired pointer#dog#acrylic paint#artists of#artists of tumblr
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Patron Saint of Hunters. Waidmannsheil! (Good hunting)
The Vision of St Hubert by Richard Lorenz
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Jagdhunde reissen 15 Schafe
Als sie am friedlichen Samstagmorgen des 3. Dezember 2022 mit ihren Hunden einen Spaziergang über die Wiesen Richtung Wald in Kirchwald/Rheinland-Pfalz machten, ahnten Petra und Günther T. (Namen geändert) noch nicht, welches Unheil der milde Wintertag bringen sollte. Als ihnen auf einem Weg zwei Jagdhunde der Rasse Deutsch Drahthaar zunächst entgegenstürmten und dann in eine Wiese liefen, die…
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YES! Zarya managed to walk all the way home with a pop can in her mouth without crushing it. (For context: she used to flatten the cans if she thinks someone is going to take her treasured trash away from her. And my Golden Retriever and Deutsch Drahthaar friends say being hard-mouthed is a learned behaviour, sooooo .... much rather have her carry stuff home than to have her destroy them.)
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Unsere Vorstehhunde als Vollgebrauchshunde
von Joachim Orbach Bekanntlich stellen unsere Vorstehhunde – wie u.a. der Deutsch Drahthaar – den größten Anteil der im Jagdbetrieb geführten Jagdhunderassen und das hat mit Sicherheit auch was mit der Entwicklung des Jagdgebrauchshundwesens und der vielseitigsten Verwendung dieser Hunde zu tun. Sie werden bekanntlich daher auch als Vollgebrauchshunde bezeichnet. Abb.: Deutsch Drahthaar;…
#Hegewald#Jagdblog#Jagdgebrauchshundwesen#Jagdhund#Jagdhunde#Joachim Orbach#Vollgebrauchshunde#Vorstehhunde
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Minnesota upland bird hunting with Deutsch Drahthaar dogs. Beautiful Ruffed Grouse habitat.
This is in northern Minnesota. Deutsch Drahthaar easily finding Ruff Grouse. Colt and Briscoe are the names of the dogs. source
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(со страницы "Ridge Runner Deutsch Drahthaar Art " Active T-Shirt for Sale by TammyHunterArt)
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Heute möchten wir mit Euch über das Leben der Jagdhunde sprechen, denn auch sie können als Opfer der Jagd betrachtet werden! 😰
Jagdhunde wurden gezüchtet und trainiert, um spezifische Aufgaben zu erfüllen, wie das Aufspüren von (auch angeschossenen) Wildtieren, das Verfolgen von Fährten und das Apportieren von getöteten Tieren.
Verschiedene Rassen wurden für unterschiedliche Jagdzwecke entwickelt, wie z. B. Retriever, die das Wild apportieren, oder die besonders beliebten Vorstehhunde, die das Wild anzeigen und den Jäger darauf aufmerksam machen. Beispiele sind hier Deutsch Drahthaar, Deutsch Kurzhaar, Kleiner Münsterländer oder Weimaraner.
Aber warum sind Ausbildung und Einsatz der Hunde bedenklich?
PETA erklärt es folgendermaßen: "Die Ausbildung der Hunde beginnt im Welpenalter und dauert ca. zwei Jahre. Abgeschlossen wird sie mit der „Brauchbarkeits-“ oder „Jagdeignungsprüfung“.
In der Ausbildung werden sogenannte Jagdhunde oft durch Schmerzzufügung zum Gehorsam gezwungen. Auch heute noch gehören Elektroreizgeräte, Stachelhalsbänder, Tritte auf die Pfoten, Kniffe in die Ohren und teils auch Schläge zu den Mitteln, die viele Jäger:innen in der Hundeausbildung leider noch immer verwenden.
Eine große Gefahr geht für die Hunde von den Wildtieren aus, auf die sie von den Jäger:innen gehetzt werden. Wenn ein Hund Füchse oder Dachse aus ihrem Bau treiben soll, kommt es oft zu blutigen Kämpfen um Leben und Tod. Nicht selten werden die Hunde von den unter Todesangst stehenden Wildtieren gebissen. Die meisten Hunde werden jedoch von Schwarzwild verletzt."
Fazit: Die Jagd kennt viele Opfer und ist zudem noch kontraproduktiv, wie wir bereits aufzeigen konnten. Wann wird die Politik endlich aktiv und verbietet diesen Wahnsinn, insbesondere die unsinnige und grausame Hobbyjagd? 😠
Quellen: ➡ LINK 1 ➡ LINK 2 ➡ LINK 3 ➡ LINK 4 ➡ LINK 5
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Fear The Beard Deutsch Drahthaar Hunting Dog Svg Cutting Printable Files
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Buchtipp Nr. 2
Krambambuli
die Geschichte eines Hundes von Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach
beim Lesen und Film musste ich heulen, trotzdem zählt das Buch zu meinen Favoriten der Hunde-Literatur. Beim Film sah ich die Version von 1940, die Hunderasse wird als Deutsch Drahthaar angegeben. Produziert wurde der Streifen von der Wien-Film GmbH. Im heutigen Sinne würde man ihn als österreichischen Spielfilm bezeichnen. Österreich war allerdings ein Teil von Deutschland, als der Film gedreht wurde.
Link zum video
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#deutsch drahthaar#versatile hunting dog#hunting dog#hunting dog training#pointing dogs#german wirehaired pointer
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For Christmas 2023, I painted our beloved family dog Max for my dad. Max passed away suddenly in August and we still miss him :') The birds at the top are all game that my dad and Max hunted together. From left to right: bobwhite quail, ruffed grouse, pheasant, woodcock, chukar
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Context: Responding to a comment about adding tags in a previous reblog. Note: Adding inline content warnings for people who don't like reading about hunting, farming, pastoralism etc.
Yeah, I don't really like Coppinger too much after knowing about Mudis and Swedish Vallhunds are used in herding. He has some really bizarre theories about why dogs are not wolves because of his observation about Border Collies. (He also has some strange ideas because of his observation of beagles and rabbits or the British retrievers developed by the landed gentry. The latter is even more funny because he had access to old books about training retrievers advising sportsmen. And they don't line up with what he asserts.) CW: livestock husbandry, industrial agriculture Vallhunds, Mudis and other similar herding dogs are used more like mobile parameter fencing to keep livestock from wandering off the pasture into the forests instead of gathering up livestock or droving them to the markets. The industrialization of livestock agriculture is why Kelpies and Border Collies became preferred on the continent after WW2. That's why no one really uses Swedish Vallhund for their original purpose. All Coppinger had to do was ask a few elderly people about why they stopped keeping certain types of dogs. It's usually economic and being forced to compete against other farmers under capitalism. Reading a bit of Marx and other economic theorists (eg. Ricardo and Veblen) would have helped Coppinger a bit in explaining the specialized tasks he was witnessing. The Enclosure Acts alone would have done him a favour with lending his hypothesis some credibility. And if the dogs [Swedish Vallhunds] could be used in regions where they still do the old methods of keeping livestock, there are already local dogs with anatomy better suited for the climate and terrain. CW: recreational hunting
Or my own familiarity with the versatile gundogs (or HPRs for short) from Germany and France. Like, yeah, dude, Deutsch Drahthaars are supposed to be soft-mouthed enough to deliver birds to hand yet hard-mouthed enough to kill foxes and stop boars from running. Or what Russians write about hunting laikas. A lot of how Russians and other ethnicities use them run counter to Coppinger's proposals. CW: commercial or industrial hunting, subsistence pastrolism Like the dog is supposed to be sensitive enough leave squirrel pelts alone (pg. 54 - 81) [archived] to preserve the value of the fur. Retrieve waterfowls, yet be able to kill burrowing animals. As well as being able to herd reindeer [archived] without completing the kill sequence. CW: settler-colonialism, homesteading But again, English Shepherds and Scotch Collies [archived] are supposed to be multipurpose farm dogs as well capable of doing the above as well. He didn't even have to leave his backyard to find Old Shep. CW: Anglocentrism, disregard for Indigenous knowledge Even Coppinger's take on livestock guardian dogs not having a predatory drive is weird considering they are used in herding horses and other livestock in their respective countries-of-origin. Or LGDs being used in hunting boars and raccoon-dogs. Don't know why he decided to comment on something outside of Anglosphere disagrees with him on. CW: wolf-hunting I do agree with your sentiments about human's natural curiosity towards feeding animals. Indigenous peoples in the Amazons and Central America kept a lot of strange pets which are not scavengers. And early European settlers, eg. Lewis and Clark, wrote about spearing wolves after luring them [archived] with a piece of meat. (Aside: Additionally, the early settlers wrote about how curious wolves were about humans before livestock were imported to the colonies.) In fact, some hunters in the Soviet Union did spear wolves well into 20th century without having access to guns. CW: fox-hunting A mutual on Facebook got curious about someone mentioning Even Laikas catching foxes (pg. 30) [archived], so found some references to how they do it-- they wait until snow is about 40 cm deep then the snow slows down the foxes (Russian) [archived] enough to allow the dog to catch them. Either that or the dog crushes them in the den (Russian) [archived] rest of the year similar to why Fox Terriers and Jagdterriers are preferred to Jack Russells in central and northern Europe. So, that's how I found the references about spearing wolves in the old archives. (Apologies for not having references to post-Soviet surveys of how people lived in the Far East.) Trying to be fair to Coppinger since there is a lot of genetic evidence nowadays that dogs are extinct wolves. He didn't have access to the stuff we know today. (So we should be asking why the modern wolves are not the same as extinct wolves. For instance, why are wolves near human settlements are afraid of people yet wolves in the high Arctic are not? [archived])
But like ... Coppinger had access to a lot of paleontological, anthropological and archeological evidence (eg. the Bonn-Oberkassel dog) during his time. And a lot of Europeans can speak English, yet he didn't engage with anyone outside of the British Isles or the United States for some reason. Also strange he focuses on the fox experiment from USSR but ignored everything else from the Soviet Union. So, I don't know why people in the UK and the U.S. took him so seriously. So, when I criticize him, it's more about the stuff we already knew back in 2001. But yeah, apologies for the long hashtags because I didn't want to distract from the main post.
Mark Derr used a photo [archived] of one of my previous dogs in his article [archived] about the "Happy People: A Year in the Taiga" documentary. Felt like it was important other people deserved [archived] (as well as these folks [archived]) the credits for proposing the active social domestication theory. We probably won't know how dogs were domesticated. Or why we domesticated the wolves instead of some of the other species in Africa which were available to early humans. I do find it fascinating we can correlate genetic diversification of dogs with genetic diversification of humans whenever humans showed up in new lands. Like how the genetic diversification of dogs and Indigenous peoples predate Clovis culture.
I am not a scientist (duh) but I don't see why the dog domestication argument is always between hunter vs scavenger. It always comes down to these two options (I've read a lot of dog books).
Seems more likely to me that it would have come about from deliberate feeding rather than scavenging or hunting food. Like, humans across the world and across cultures all do this really specific thing with animals: feed them. Seems likely to me that feeding the wolf was just the first step in the domestication process.
I agree with Derr that scavenging seems unlikely given that plenty of animals scavenge from humans and haven't become domesticated so far. I also see Wynne's point that the hunting story seems a little too romanticised to be based in reality. But what's the best way to make an animal tolerate you, if not like you? Give it something to eat.
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Chris Isely, a Pheasants Forever & Quail Forever member from Vancouver, Washington traveled to Minnesota last fall with his Deutsch Drahthaar, Kolt, and harvested this beautiful ringneck in Yellow Medicine County.
#deutsch drahthaar#German Wirehaired Pointer#hunting#hunting dog#gun dog#bird dog#pheasant hunting#sporting dog
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A commissioned memorial portrait of their German Wirehaired Pointer named Muza. Polychromos and Luminance colored pencils used on 11″X14″ Strathmore paper.
#german wirehaired pointer#pointer#deutsch drahthaar#vorstehhund#griffon#hunting dog#gun dog#bird dogs#dog#canine#pets#animal#pet portrait#commission#Dog Art#dog drawing#Dog portrait
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