• Brittany Puppies Getting Huge!!!

    Here is a photo of the fab four. They are getting big. The pups will turn 4 weeks in a couple of days. They are walking around and acting like dogs and get a lot of attention and handling at the house. Please email nickmuckerman@hotmail.com or call Nick at 314-954-5424 for more information. There has been a lot of interest and there are currently three pups available. Pups are $500 and a $100 deposit holds your spot. Scroll down for more information on the lines and qualities of the parents.


  • BRITTANY PUPPIES ARE HERE!!!

    Kenya dropped her litter on her expected due date, Friday, February 1. Everything went well and she and the pups are doing well. She dropped four beautiful male pups. We are very excited. Pups will be ready to go home around the 21st of March. They are not all spoken for, so if you are interested in talking Brittanys, please call Nick at 314-954-5424, or email at nickmuckerman@hotmail.com.


  • The MLK Day Chukar Slaying

    We had a nice chukar hunt the other day. Chris ran his English Pointer, Max, who did phenomenal. Kenya was out of commission with a belly full of puppies so I had an opportunity to run her little sister, Stella, on her first chukar hunt.
    We got into a covey of about 70 birds pretty early on and spent the day chasing them around, point after point, knocking them down. The dogs were a little frustrated with our shooting at first, but we ended up with 14 chukars between us when we headed back to the truck.


  • Brittany Litter Almost Here!!!

    It is official: Kenya is pregnant! We are very excited to officially announce an upcoming litter of American Brittanys. These pups should be top-notch hunting or field trial prospects. Please take a minute and read the post below this one regarding details of this cross.

    Kenya has taken the shape of a tube and has shown other signs of pregnancy. On Friday we did an ultrasound to confirm. We were able to see a few little puppies wiggling around. I pulled out a chukar wing and put it against Kenya’s side and they all pointed to it…..just kidding. But, we are very excited and are currently taking deposits.

    Puppies should be on the ground the first weekend of February and ready to go mid to late March. This is perfect timing as these pups will be ready for full-on training mid-summer and ready to find some birds come September. If you would like to talk Brittanys, contact Nick at 314-954-5424.


  • Brittany Litter Announcement

    Kenya
    The Clown
    It is with excitement that we announce a possible upcoming litter of AKC American Brittanys. After an extensive search of stud dogs, I chose a sire from the legendary trainer and field trialer, Dave Walker. His go-to hunting dog stud, The Clown, was bred to my three-year-old Brittany, Kenya Karamojo Bell JH, on the first and third of December. We tried this same cross nine months ago, but were unable to get a lock. This time, we are very hopeful.

    I bred for hunting/companion dogs primarily, but they definitely have the blood to be field trial contenders. Kenya has proved herself in the hunting field, and in AKC hunt tests. She went four for four passes on her JH title in March 2011 and was the only one of twelve dogs to so that weekend. The judges were impressed with her ability to work the field and find birds. She is not a big-running-find-her-in-the-next-county dog, but she covers ground quickly and thoroughly. I also bred for trainability, because as a dog trainer, this is very important to me. She was fully broke, steady-to-shot at eight months. Over 100 wild birds were shot over her during her rookie season. She is an extremely efficient dog and can hunt hard all day, day after day, and has hearty feet. She is a bird finding machine with an intense point. She has a friendly disposition and is everybody’s friend. Kenya comes out of the famous NSTRA dog, Nolan’s Last Bullet and also NFC DC AFC Tequila’s Joker.

    The sire, The Clown, has many of the traits Kenya has. He is a friendly dog and a hunting machine. I knew I couldn’t go wrong with Dave Walker’s top hunting stud. The Clown is a son of FC AFC Chubasco II. His pedigree is full of AKC Field Champions and Dual Champions including NFC Beans Blaze.

    Both of the dogs are certified OFA GOOD for hip dysplasia.

    Deposits are being taken for puppies to be born the first of February and ready to go toward the end of March. It takes a lot of time and effort to produce a dam and find a sire that will truly better the breed. It is important to me that they go to good homes where they will be taken care of and appreciated. If you would like to talk Brittanys, contact Nick at 314-954-5424. We will let you know any news on Kenya’s hopeful pregnancy.


  • Working with English Setters

    Here is a client from Southern Idaho with two of his setters, Ja’ger and Cookie, and some huns. Trevor loves his setters and has four of them. I had the privledge of working with three of them this past summer. Cookie (left) came to me at five years old and had never been exposed to hunting situations. Trevor picked her up a few months before I got her and wanted to see what we could do with her. She left as a very nice bird dog. Ja’ger was younger and had been worked with a little and had a hunting season behind him. The training really steadied him up and exposed him to a lot of birds. This picture was taken shortly after the training. We love hearing from happy clients.


  • Dave Walker Seminar

    We just got back from the Dave Walker seminar in Richfield, UT put on by Jon Lee of gundogbreeders.com. What an awesome weekend. Dave Walker is a 50+ year veteran professional dog trainer and field trialer and was elected to the AKC Brittany club Hall of Fame. Dave knows bird dogs like no other. He just celebrated his 80th birthday last week, but seeing him work dogs all day long in the field for two day you know he works most 40 and 50 year olds into the ground.

    The seminar started on Friday with a delicious breakfast, and Dave talking for a few minutes about his training methods and thoughts about dogs, then we went straight to the field. Where Dave worked one on one with dogs and their owners, starting with the very basics and moving up through steady to wing, steady to shot and fall. He worked with us on backing and honoring as well as force fetch.

    We were all amazed with Dave’s ability to get the most out of a dog. He could take a dog that had been running up birds for two seasons and in five minutes have that dog standing like a statue while he flushed the bird for him. It was inspiring. While I’m a long ways from there, it makes me know what is possible from these dogs.


  • The Debate

    Another Chukar hunt when the chukars didn't win.
    Happy to see us?

    Ever since I extended my love and pursuit of good hunting dogs from bird dogs to include hounds, I have been torn at times which to hunt. In Idaho we have five months of bird season and I do a lot of bird hunting. I also run bears with my hounds in the spring and summer when there is no conflict. But the other day I had a big decision to make: Should I try for cougars or chukars?

    It was the end of chukar season, but I had been dying to get out again for lions. I decided I’d try lions in the morning and then Chris and I had plans to hit the chukar hills before dark. After waking at 3:00 am to drive some canyons for lions, my friend Mike and I cut tracks of a cougar right before daylight. The track was two nights old, but we each put a dog in the race. My walker dog, Okie and my friend’s Spike dog took the track well over a mile and by some lucky chance of freak mountain acoustics we heard them jump and tree the lion way up the canyon. When we made it to the tree we were greeted by an old, yellow toothed female lion that was not happy to see us. We took some pictures and let her free to run another day.

    On the way home I texted Chris to let him know it would be too late for me to join him. By the time I got home it was after 4:00. I got a call from Chris. He told me he had found a covey and I should get up there. Decisions, decisions… I put the hounds in their kennel, grabbed my Brittany, Kenya (who knew we were going hunting…they always do) and shotgun and jumped in the car. I met Chris on the mountain with enough time for 30-45 minutes of hunting in the prime area. The sun went down before we could get into the covey again, but it is always a good time in the hills with a friend and some fine hunting dogs.


  • An end and a begining

    This weekend was the last weekend of the Idaho upland game season, but it was also the first time my son Samuel could hunt. He just finished Hunter Ed (we’ve never seen him study anything so hard in his life; I wish his school work could motivate him like that did), turned 10 and was able to hunt. He bought his first hunting license with birthday money from Grandpa and was keyed up to go.

    Previous to this he had only shot his .410, but felt he was old enough to handle the 20. We hunted quail along the river the first day, chukars in the rocks the second and back to quail for the third day. Late season hunting is always a little tough, the game is wiser and little more scarce. Quail were on level ground, but were tough to dig out of the thick cover. Chukars were out in the open, but the walking was more difficult. The best part of the weekend was when Sam walked right into the middle of a flock of 20+ chukars. They flushed all around him. The look on his face was priceless. He forgot to shoot until I yelled “Chukars!” then he launched a round in their general direction. He bragged how the 20 gauge kicked less that his .22 and how close he was to that one chukar. We had a grand weekend together. I was sad to see the season ending, but excited to have a new hunting buddy.

    Sam's birthday cake(s) the morning of his first hunt.