[Mick, i can't figure out how to quote our post.
Yes I did shoot a perfectly healthy dog because I was unable to train it.
Only wish I'd done it 3 months before, but Richard, my partner asked me to give it a second chance.
For which he later apologized.
Mick, I have had 11 dogs, 10 of which have been trained to do the things I want my dogs to do.
Not chase wildlife above the size of mice, come when called and not when it suits them, but EVERYTIME, walk at heel, lay down at a whistle and stay untill released. Stay on the truckbed like they were glued fast.
I have been able to whistle every one of those dogs out of the truck from as far as a whistle can be heard, then send them back, knowing that once they jump into the truck, the " Never leave the truck untill called" effect hits them.
I have won bets with hunters who thought they could call my dogs out of the truck.
I don't teach my dogs a lot of stupid shit, like make like a dead Vietcong, only what they need to be able do to in order to follow me at work, in an environment where hunters and game wardens see red at the sight of an unleashed dog.
My dogs have never been on a leash, and I get along fine with the various hunters and gamewardens in the forests were we work.
All I ever get from them is compliments for well trained dogs.
So, obviously, giving up on Jack and putting a bullet in his brain is an indication of me not being able to train dogs, and not in the least an indication of the dog being untrainable.
I love that, especially since it comes from a guy whose last dog would eat his lunch and whose present dog runs wild all over the neighbourhood chasing cats.
If you think your post hit a sore spot, you are very much right.
Do you think I enjoyed having to kill Jack?