Flushing dog reception at Tamarack

MILLBROOK — The Spaniels in the Field and the Flushing Retriever Foundation hosted a kick-off reception at Tamarack Preserve on Route 44 Saturday, May 15. Stryker, the two-year-old field breed cocker spaniel belonging to Kuni Smith, the foundation’s founder, was there to greet guests like Andrew Weik, New England Regional wildlife biologist for the Ruffed Grouse Society.

Weik’s mission is to work with landowners to foster young forests that are the home of grouse, woodcocks and other wildlife. Asked why the society has 20,000 members who are passionate about grouse, Weik explained that grouse are native birds, which live in the forest, and are challenging to hunt. The bond between the hunter and his dog is also part of the pleasure. For non-hunters, the aerial display of male woodcocks exactly 15 minutes after sunset and the loud “drumming†of the male grouse are reason enough to encourage the preservation of their habitat. All reports from the field indicate that this fall will be a great season for hunters and their dogs.

Josie Ottman, representing the Bird Dog Foundation, and Mark Rosenblum, president and editor-in chief of Retriever News, also spoke in support of the Spaniels in the Field and Flushing Retriever Foundation.

Rosenblum said he “doesn’t want to see every dog on a leash.† In 2008 he won the Purina Outstanding Retriever of the Year Award.

The nonprofit foundation was created to foster and preserve all of the traditional flushing gun dog breeds, including the most popular breeds like Labradors, the tradition of bird dog breeds, wing shooting education and land conservation.  For more information, go online to sitf.com.

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