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Maggie in her new home. |
Ripsnorter
Magalloway Magic Snapshot came home with us the end of February, 2016. In our
neck of the woods, February brings nights with temperatures well below zero,
and even days that barely creep up to zero. Maggie slept in a kennel beside
our bed to wake us when nature called, and, when it did, I would slip on the
heavy flannel lined pants and chamois shirt.
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Hurrying back to the house. |
In
the winter darkness she would scurry off to search for the right spot beneath
the low limbs of a softwood tree. That was her choice every single time. To
keep track of Maggie I slipped a collar on her with a blinking red light. What
looked like a tiny fire truck zigzagged about the yard.
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With her great aunt Chara |
Every
day she explored and learned. Her great aunt Chara kept her in line. Colby,
seven years older at the time, became her playmate. Her willingness to please
made her easy to train. Snow, mud, pools of water, all were great fun. The
woods became a giant playground. Unfortunately, Chara passed away that summer, but
Maggie had already learned much from the old wise one.
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Pointing a planted quail. |
That
August Maggie pointed pen raised quail like a champ, even retrieving ones
shot. Her first hunt tests she received near perfect scores and that first fall
we searched out woodcock.
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Pointing a woodcock. |
I
won’t say Maggie pointed every woodcock she found, birds were bumped and sometimes
patience during a point ran short, but she did better than a passable job.
Frequently she honored Colby’s points. Sometimes she pointed on her own. Her
enthusiasm felt infectious.
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A lunch time break. |
Now
in her second fall, Maggie points woodcock regularly and even an occasional skittish ruffed grouse. Her range is perfect, she frequently checks back to see where I
am. There has never been a dog more anxious to have a hunting bell hung around her neck
than Maggie.
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Ripsnorter Magalloway Magic Snapshot |
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