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Puppies on the way!

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Before you reach out about puppies, just know that I have a long list awaiting this news. My email is bluestemkennels@gmail.com if you want to inquire. It may be 2025 before I have any puppies available, as whoever does not get a pup this year rolls over into next year in the order that their deposit was received. Normally, I can get to emails within 24 hours, but I am trying to get the basic pieces nailed down to the 2024 AWPGA National Specialty dog shows, meetings and field events so it is taking me a few days to respond to kennel emails right now. I appreciate your patience.

If you are on my list and have not yet heard from me yet, you will be hearing from me in the next week. The list did shift up several spots, so you’ll be pleasantly surprised. I was also awaiting these ultrasound results to find out if both females are pregnant before I started saying, “Well there may be a chance…” and having it be unreasonable.

As confirmed by York Veterinary Services in York, South Carolina, both litters of Bluestem Peaches En Regalia NA I, UPT II, UT III “Ruth” x Cedar and Spruce’s Apollo NA III “Duke”, as well as Bluestem Sally Forth SH, NA II x Wyo Plainsman Kenobi NA I, UPT III, UT I (2023 and 2024 NAVHDA Invitational Qualifier) are going to be whelped towards the end of February and the beginning of March. Ruth appears to be farther along. We are keeping a male from the Ruth and Duke cross. The vet is saying that Ruth’s litter will be smaller than Sally’s and probably come a week or so sooner.

We are excited for puppies, but this is always a nervous time. I’ve had friends who have dealt with last minute spontaneous abortions. Females in the breed have died in emergency c-sections and the puppies have had to be bottle fed and raised by hand. Every time someone breeds a litter they are risking the life of their female. Not everything you see in an ultrasound comes out as a puppy that will live a full healthy life. So be happy and hopeful with me, but realize that this is a nervous and stressful time too.

Ruth’s ultrasound at York Vet
Sally’s ultrasound at York Vet

AKC Junior Hunter

On January 20th and 21st, Bluestem’s Carolina Briar Thicket “Briar” (Obi x Ruth) and I went to do some fun runs towards the AKC Junior Hunter title at the double-double AKC Hunting Tests hosted by the Sandhills Pointing Breeds Club in Jackson Springs, North Carolina. Jackson Springs is just a wide spot in the road with a couple of buildings, but it is just a ten minute drive to the Pinehurst golf resort community which is really nice.

It was absolutely freezing that weekend with high winds on Saturday, so there were more entries who scratched than usual. It was also funny to see the menagerie of attire as most folks down here don’t have cold weather hunting gear and just threw on their ski clothes with a hunting vest on top. Our first run was with a nice Bracco Italiano bred by one of my friends who also breeds Griffs, so it was fun to have that connection and we both passed (even though I biffed it in the backfield, I had some bad boots on that were too heavy for the terrain).

Scorecard and ribbon for our first JH run

The second run was with a huge male Weimaraner who had bullied his last bracemate so badly that she scratched at the starting line and didn’t come back the rest of the weekend. I got mad at the dog and gave him a “heeyaah” as he came over to mess with her for like the third time. I ended up scaring my own dog in the backfield but she recovered. We got into the bird field and there was this giant berm on the edge of it, right next to the woods where all of the previous runs’ birds were hiding. She was locked on point up there, so I climbed the berm to kick it up. There was nothing there, I think she was doing a long nose point into the woods. I wiped out again, managing to roll down the berm on my side. It is a good thing that I have a little extra cushion on my body because it was like a rugby hit, my legs just totally went out from under me and I went on my side and rolled down the hill. We did not pass that run.

I made the mistake of not getting a hotel room in Pinehurst and I’m not doing that again. So there I was all banged up after two falls (the second one being pretty hard) and half frozen driving two hours home, then getting up early the next day to drive two hours back. I knew that I had to be there on time because even though we were down the list a little ways on braces, lots of folks scratched due to it being 15 degrees out. Sure enough we ended up as second brace with all of the folks who scratched. My bracemate was pulling up to park as the first brace was coming back in from the bird field (which I was so happy for, otherwise we would have been stuck with the giant dorky Weim again). Instead it was a nice little GSP whose owner had lived out in Sioux City, Iowa for a time. It was an uneventful run for Briar and I, for only being with me for four months she really listens well. I didn’t even start whistle training her (with a Fox40 whistle, she’s used to my mouth whistle) until the week of the test. Even though the GSP took the bird field from the breakaway instead of going into the backfield like he should have, we both passed. I appreciated the judge’s feedback that I was over handling in the bird field and giving too many commands around the birds instead of letting Briar do her own thing. It came in handy in the last run and it made it fun instead of nerve-wracking.

The ribbon from our second run and scorecard.

Our third run was with the hunt test chair and his English Setter. We had an interesting scenario come up in the backfield where I was standing in a spot and all of a sudden both of the dogs are circling and pointing at me. This is at the end of a weekend where probably a hundred birds had been planted at that point. I look down at my feet and there are two quail running away from me. I see that both dogs are on point, so I decided to make it a find for them and kicked up the quail to fly and fired my starter pistol. Not a minute later, the other handler finds where the bird bag with birds in it had fallen off of the ATV not two feet from where I had kicked up the quail. It was just a funny scenario that I had never experienced before. Both dogs and handlers got a pass on that run.

Last ribbon on the day and score card.
The parting shot: Briar and I with our ribbons on the weekend.

We’ll be back at it in a couple of weeks to try to finish out our last run for the title.

Hunting season is over for Charles and Caleb. They did not find any woodcock this year in South Carolina. Our old training dummy dog and South Carolina rescue pointer Dolly is having a grand life in Nebraska with our buddy Aaron and Chewy the Griff.

Chewy, Dolly and Aaron

Ruth and Sally’s mom Fire (now Bella) had a grand time this year out in Arizona chasing quail too.

Two GSPs to each side of Fire (Bella) in the middle
Fire (Bella) with the Mearns Quail in Arizona

I better wrap it up here and get to dog farm chores, but we’re about a month away from pups on the ground so you’ll hear from me then if not before (maybe Briar will get the JH title soon). The AWPGA National Specialty 2024 is slowly coming together for November 7-12 in North Carolina, here is our tentative schedule of events: https://www.awpga.com/2024-natl-specialty-schedule.html . You don’t have to be a member to participate in the specialty, you just can’t attend the annual meeting if you are not a member. I’ll get the sign up page posted once we have it all put together later this year. It takes a lot of people to run a breed and I hope that all of the Griffon breeders out there with litters planned or on the ground this spring have good whelping and healthy puppies.

Busy Spring News

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I apologize for my absence from the blog and social media in general. Organizing the trophies for the Eastern Regional Specialty Dog Show in York, Pennsylvania has taken up so much time. Not only did I have to figure out all of the placements for three shows, but then I had to figure out the budget for each placement and order a prize. I think that I’m getting closer to the end of the process. The trophies are all hunting dog items, so where I’ve written for hunting dog catalogs and have just been a bird dog junk junkie for 15 years it was actually fun to shop for the items. I was able to give business to all of the major players: Cabela’s, Orvis, Filson, Gun Dog Supply, Lion Country Supply and Ugly Dog Hunting. Those are all unpaid shout outs and they all had something unique to contribute to the cause.

If you are in the area and are interested in attending the field day, shows and hunt tests, there is still a bit of time to get signed up. You can hang out at the show and hunt tests without registering, you have to register for the field day if you want to attend. Here is the official link for everything on the AWPGA website: https://www.awpga.com/2023-eastern-regional-specialty.html?fbclid=IwAR033mOiXX-XiL6OPJn4xiZJYNeRTyoUns6W4kUXN9M4nAWs1FmKcxpPkVM

So here is the basic schedule: Thursday is the Field Day at York Pointer and Setter Club, Friday is ALL DAY of dog shows: Sweeps, Supported Entry and Regional Specialty. For those of you new to dog shows, what will happen is that the classes of the first show run, then we go through best of breed for that show. Then we go to the second show where the same thing happens, you go through the classes, the best of each class is awarded, then it goes to best of breed. We do it a third time for the Regional Specialty. It will be a very exciting day to see many old friends, but also stressful and chaotic with so much going on. I have never helped with that many shows all in one day, they are usually spread out over multiple days. This whole schedule is intense, since we are doing double/double AKC hunt tests Saturday and Sunday.

Due to the intensity of the schedule for the performance events and the fact that it is St. Patrick’s Day that Friday night, there is no banquet scheduled. Those of us who are running dogs Saturday morning in the hunt tests have to be at the field ready to go by 7:30 AM, so we’ll need to start moving in the morning around 5:30 AM. We’ll probably get some dinner groups together at the show for Friday night just by word-of-mouth and those of us who have to be up early the following day will be done by 9 PM.

I am running our young dogs Duke and Sally in AKC Senior Hunter at the York Pointer and Setter Club. Since it is a double/double, I’ll be doing four runs a day (two runs a day with two dogs) for a total of eight runs. There will be lunch available to purchase at the hunt tests both Saturday and Sunday. Once again, there are no formal dinner plans and we’ll just bunch up and figure things out during the day.

In the event that you are looking for me at the shows or the hunt tests, here are some pictures of me. I am usually behind the camera instead of in front of it. I have a blaze orange knee length dress that I am planning on wearing to the shows, so I should be easy to spot.

Breeding Update

As of right now, I have eleven reservations with deposit for my Fall 2023 litter between Obi and Ruth. As my deposits are fully refundable until the pups are three weeks old, these numbers can change rapidly depending on peoples’ life situations. I have frequently had four or five folks defer to the following year in those first three weeks. Obi and Ruth will be having their last litter before Ruth’s retirement in the Spring of 2024, so should there not be enough pups in the Fall of 2023 the reservations can roll over. We’ll also be breeding Sally and Duke in Spring 2024. Feel free to email bluestemkennels@gmail.com to express interest in the litters. I know that I have a few emails sitting in my inbox needing responses, so if one of those is yours from the last few days, I will be getting to them this afternoon (I also had to get my tax information to my accountant this week, so I’m sort of on brain fry mode, sorry).

As far as the specific breeding schedule for the fall, Ruth had her winter heat cycle at the end of January. So that means if my experience from the past is correct, her summer cycle will be at the end of July. Pups would then be born at the end of September and go home around Thanksgiving. That is all guesstimation from past experience and Mother Nature is in control.

Social Media Info

I am not going to be on TikTok. I downloaded the app and started looking at videos one day and the very next day the financial information stored in my phone was compromised. I caught it before my bank did since I was looking for it. So no TikTok for me.

Instagram is a lot of ads. Also, the AI censors hunting photos from hashtags. So if I have dead birds and a gun in my pictures, it gets wiped from the hashtag almost instantly. I am going to use it sparingly. Once I start backing up old hunting photos again this summer, I will get those posted. I will try to be more active on it, but like I say, I am a bit salty about the censorship. The two pups from the “R” Litter are very active on there under the accounts @griffons.griffon and @thelifeandtimesofbeatricebriar. The first one follows Chase Wiley with his family here in the Charlotte suburbs, the second follows Beatrice Briar as a Kentucky ultramarathon trail dog with her veterinarian dog dad.

Even though this blog/website is thirteen years old and my photo galleries are pretty sketchy with their organization (I will fix it this summer), this is my primary tool. I have to use my English degree skills somewhere. I am not good at little tidbits of information spread out through days and weeks. I have to sit down and write you an essay. I also like Facebook since it is full of Boomers and Gen X, those are my people. My page there is old and has a lot of followers, so I’ll just keep riding that until we are all in the nursing home I guess. I do not have anyone else with login access to this blog. I do not have a “last post” written and in storage anywhere. The thought of doing estate planning on this website does not appeal to me and I’m just not there yet. So hopefully the construction dumptrucks of the Carolinas continue to avoid hitting me.

YouTube is what I use to make videos of puppies anymore. I would love to do grooming and training videos someday, but I need to figure out the whole Patreon racket so that I get paid for views. And although I have the hardware to do video content, I also need to invest in Adobe Creative Cloud software, specifically the Premier Pro video editor, to do my art the way that I want it to look. And then I need to train myself on it. So hopefully more YouTube content will be rolling in the next year or so (weekly low budget puppy videos will continue as normal without change for now).

South Carolina Woodcock

Charles and Obi wrapped up the woodcock season at the end of January with one in the bag. I have to be honest, as much as I love the Carolinas, Charles is dying to get back to Nebraska at some point. The hunting here is not what he wants. I’m in love with the Carolinas and am determined to stay here. Although we have a piece of raw land way out in Western Nebraska, we’re talking about having a second home close to our kids in Omaha so that he can go out and hunt, he can work remotely and access the airport if needed. Both of us moving back and forth as needed. We are at least a year away from that possibility with two kids in college right now, but that is in our minds pretty seriously. Send us good intentions for the manifestation of that dream.

Oh, but the woodcock with Obi! Here it is:

Hunting Wirehaired Pointing Griffon South Carolina
The trusty SKB 12 gauge, Obi and the woodcock from the end of January. Photo by Charles.

Fire in Retirement

I loved seeing this picture of Fire (now “Bella”) on the right, enjoying her retirement life moving between Arizona and Minnesota with one of our old pals from Pheasants Forever in Nebraska. Out getting in on some wild quail action in Arizona with her GSP buddy. Thank you Ron for giving her a great retirement home. She is the mother of our current females, Ruth and Sally.

Fire/Bella on right enjoying her retirement with some Arizona quail.

Well the day is getting on and it is time to wrap up the blogging. I have a gobzillion dog hunting items to unbox sitting in my entryway! Spring is really springing here and I hope it makes it out to the frozen wasteland in North Central Nebraska and South Central South Dakota. They are in a top 10 snowiest year on record and folks are pretty miserable about it. Keep our beef cattle ranchers in your prayers as they are having a tough start to calving season.

Good luck to everyone with spring pups and doing training/testing. Talk at you again soon with the update from Pennsylvania.