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Pointing Dog Blog

The world of pointing dogs in words and images, moving and still.

So far, So good

Craig Koshyk


I've just popped back into town this afternoon to pick up two more friends from France at the airport. They will be here for about a week chasing birds with us here in Manitoba. So far the season has been very good. Birds numbers and the weather have both been fair. The dog work has been excellent. Jean Francois, my friend who breeds Braque de l’Ariège has two young dogs with him and is very happy with the progress they are making. I am running three dogs right now, Souris my 7 year old Weim bitch, Uma, our 4 year old Epagneul de Pont Audemer bitch and Quell, a 5 year old Longhaired Weim owned by my friend Sal Castenda (Sal is pretty busy right now with two young daughters at home in the States. He won’t have much time this season to hunt with Quell. And since I lost my Felix last fall and really wanted another dog in the truck, I drafted Quell into service as a favour to his owner, and to myself!)

It hasn’t been all highlights though, Souris tangled with some barbed wire and received 20 stitches for her efforts. Brava, my friend’s Braque de l’Ariège bitch tangled with a porcupine and received a dozen quills in the lips. My friend Mick got a wader stuck in the marsh and ended up going for a very cold dip!
Tonight my friends Christophe and Marlene arrive with their Weim named Winnie. We will be back in the field tomorrow for more adventures and photos. In the mean time, keep checking the hunting gallery for updates, I will add some new photos as soon as I can.

Hunting Season 07

Craig Koshyk


The hunting season in Manitoba opened a few weeks ago and I have done my best to get out as often as possible. Work has been crazy though, so I’ve only had the dogs out about a dozen times since the beginning of the month.
Today however marks the real opener for me! My friends Richard and Mick arrive tonight from England and together, we head out to bird camp on the shore of Lake Manitoba tonight. We will be out there chasing birds in the uplands and wetlands for a week. I’ll have no internet hookup, and the cell phone is iffy at best....hmmm sounds like a treat! But I will update the blog on my return over the weekend when I come back to town to fetch a buddy from France who is coming over with two young Braques de L’Ariège.

In the meantime, I’ve posted a gallery of a few photos I have taken so far of the early season. Click on the photo above to have a look. Waidmannsheil!!

Website Make-over

Craig Koshyk


I’m a Mac guy. Way back in the late 80’s I cut my teeth on an Apple llc powered by a fairly athletic hamster running in a wheel. Nowadays, I use a bunch of Power-Mac something or others with more bells and whistles than a Manila Jeep.

So when I decided to give my website a much-needed make-over, I figured the first place to look was in something the experts call an “applications folder”. Well sure enough, on my newest Mac, loaded to the gills with all the newest software, was a program called iWeb. It offered the same point, click and drag simplicity of most Mac programs in a package to build a website. So after about three hundred hours of pointing, clicking, dragging, cursing, drinking, nail biting and urging two* very tired hamsters to keep going, the new site is up!

www.craigkoshykphoto.ca

* (I’m running a “dual core” processor in my current Mac).

Hibernation's end

Craig Koshyk

This has been the view from my studio window for the last 4 months. Snow and minus 40.

But today, the scene began to change. You see, there has been some sort of golden orb hovering in the sky lately. It seems to be radiating heat. Its the strangest thing I've ever seen. The old timers claim to know what it is. They call it "the sun". Apparently it will make all the snow melt soon. If it does, I am going to write that Al Gore fellow to thank him for all the hot air he's been sending our way.

As for our dogs, they've been hibernating since the last day of the hunting season just before Xmas. We lost Felix last fall to blastomycosis. I cried like a school girl for weeks and still whel up when I think about the old guy. Our remaining two are now starting to stir as the temperatures rise above minus hell-freezes-over.

Spring training should start in about a month. We will be back from Europe then. My wife and I leave for Prague in two weeks where we've made a date with some Cesky Fousek folks for a photo session and beer drinking seminar. We then head to Slovakia to meet some Rough Haired Slovakian Pointer people and photograph their rough haired dogs. Next, Budapest for a Vizsla photo session. Then we hop a plane for Paris.

We will be in France just in time for the spring field trials in Picardy which is still dotted with the scars of WWI battlefield trenches . They are now filled in of course and planted over with winter wheat. It is actually quite a beautiful area. Undulating fields of green, home to countless pairs of Grey Partridge make up the majority of the landscape. But the landscape is dotted with cemetaries and monuments, testament to the carnage that occured 90 years ago.

I'll photograph all the usual suspects: braques, epagneuls, setters, pointers. This time though I will also seek out the Dodo bird of bird dogs: The Boulet Griffon. Similar to the Korthals Griffon (WPG), the Boulet was in fact used as a founding breed of the Korthals but seems to have gone extinct. Although reports still surface once in a while of a Boulet Griffon been seen or found in some remote corner of the country, the only certified real-deal is a dog named Marco. He can be found at the Museum of natural history in a town called Elbeuf in north western France. It should be a pretty easy photo to take since I am sure he will not move much. He's been standing there, on point, stuffed for about a hundred years.

Winter is reading time for us, although I must admit to devouring books all year round. Lately I've been reading a lot about the history of dogs. One of the very best books on the subject I have read in a good long time is The Truth About Dogs by Stephen Budiansky. I am only half way through but have already decided to purchase a copy and to re-read it on our trip to Europe. The book is one of those rare works that really helps connect the dots when it comes to the history and evolution of the dog. It is very well written, an easy read and full of the kind of insights that are a refreshing change for the typical crap we so often read about dogs. Speaking of evolution, I finally purchased a copy of Darwin's Origin of Species instead of taking it out of the library again and again. I think it will make a nice addition to our own library.
Darwin was a fascinating fellow whose adventures are quite well described in another excellent book I read recently Bill Bryson's A Short History of Almost Everything. Bryson is an excellent writer with the rare gift of being able to make science not only understandable but endlessly fascinating to even the most ardent right-brainer. If I were to draw up a top ten list of books I've read this year, I think Bryson's book would be in spots 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5. It's that good.

Doing it very, very old school.

Craig Koshyk

What to do when the bird season ends? Well, how about helping a local hog farmer keep the pesky jack rabbit population down? In the last couple of weeks, we've been out with rifle and shotgun and have managed to get some meat for rabbit stew. But on this day, we decided to do it old school. Very old school. As in ancient 3000 year old school.

How do you do that you ask? Well step one is to leave the firearms at home. Step two is to enlist the help of a pretty Saluki named Kiki. The rest of the procedure is shown below: (click on any photo to see a bigger version)











The final photos where taken when the dog was almost a half a mile away. To my eye, it seemed as if we would be dining on teryaki jack later on. But it was not to be. It seems that at the last second, Bugs Bunny managed to get away from Kiki.

Oh well, better luck next time!!

Impressioni di settembre

Craig Koshyk





In case you are wondering why I posted what seems to be some sort of latin text in the last post, it is actually a copy of the lyrics of a song entitled "Impressioni di settembre" by the Itlalian progressive rock group P.F.M. It was originally recorded in 1972.

It is an absolutely beatiful piece of music that I rediscovered after many years while I was surfing YouTube. The lyrics, in a nutshell, tell of a fellow waking up in a dew covered field of wheat, wondering just what the heck he is in this world. 25 years ago, when I first heard the song, I did not know what the lyrics meant. Now that I can understand them, when I heard the line "sembra quasi un mare d'erba" (it seems almost like a sea of grass), it reminded me of all the miles I've tramped through the grasslands of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and the Dakotas since then and, to be honest, brought tears to my eyes.

If you click on the title of this post, you will go to the You Tube link of a video of the song performed live by the band on tour in Japan in 2000. An absolutely classic piece of prog-rock with probably the best melotron line....ever.