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Happy New Year 2026!

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We hope that you all had a Merry Christmas and many blessings for the New Year! As many of you know, life with dogs is never dull. Keeping a breed going takes the work of many and there’s always something to do: whether it is training a young dog or keeping the adult dogs healthy and entertained. As of now, we’re still saying that we’re taking a break from litters, but all of these puppies on the ground with our breeder friends makes us miss our littles.

Yet soon enough we’ll have something to keep us occupied with bringing home a new male puppy at the end of the month. Our VC Obi is the stud and the female is a Firebirds/Aux Lake cross. For those of you who don’t know, Gary Engebretson of Firebirds in Wisconsin and Larry Woodward of Aux Lake in Kansas are both well-tested NAVHDA breeders. We’re hoping to compliment what we already have going in our breeding program with that blood.

I tend to get lost in hunting updates and haven’t been good about posting “pupdates”, so here we go with my effort to catch up! I only pull from my texts and email, there is no way for me to keep up with everyone’s socials at this time. When I have time to check Instagram and the Griffon Facebook groups, I do appreciate everyone sharing the photos of their pups, I guess I need to just do a better job of downloading and managing them as I see them (but I don’t).

Pupdates

Back in May of 2025 (keep in mind that we had three litters go home in 2025, so I am way behind) BJ from Tennessee took his male pup Blair from the 2024 “U” Litter between Obi and Sally to the Missouri Southern Chapter of NAVHDA for his Natural Ability Test at one year, two months old. Here is what BJ had to say about the experience:

Wanted to let you know Blair passed the NA test with a prize 2! A feat made more remarkable by the fact I only got him over birds three times last year and his handler has no idea what he’s doing.

His only subtractions were in search and desire. In talking with the judges after, they said it was a close call but he wasn’t going out and searching where the birds “should be”. They said it seemed like a lack of experience in the field and was confirmed when I told them about his limited exposure. 

Thanks for the advice on the tracking portion. I did as instructed and it really panned out. The dog tracking before Blair caught its pheasant and ran all over the field with the bird. Since that field was ruined we had to go to an unprepared field the judges hadn’t planned to use. The bird shot away from the judges like a rocket. It went about five yards and hooked a 90 degree left turn. I was panicking. When I approached the judges they were also panicking. They said we’d give it a shot but that they might need to retest that portion because everything was stacked against Blair. 

Blair put his little nose to the ground and followed right along for the first 15 yards. I was thrilled. Then he stopped. Then he turned 90 degrees in the wrong direction and made a 20 yard loop. My heart sank. But he circled back behind us, made contact with the scent, and trailed the pheasant all the way to a point. I almost teared up. It was that beautiful. 

The judge said afterward that the dog completely bailed them out on that track. He said Blair was notably calm and focused and patient during that exercise. 

My first NAVHDA event – much less test – was a great success. My fellow handlers were delightful and the judges were gracious with their time and the way they handled the event. I hope you’re as pleased as I am with the result. Thanks for your work with the breed. Blair truly did that on his natural abilities. 

BJ and Blair in the field by Debbi McCaul
Blair working scent by Debbi McCaul

Blair ended up with a NAVHDA Natural Ability Prize II with 103 points. A great job for a new dog and handler to the sport! Sorry BJ that it took me so long to get you a shout out!

Our next puppy NAVHDA test news was from Tate in Indiana with Willow. She’s from the early 2025 “V” Litter between Duke and Briar. At seven months and in her first heat cycle, she scored 110 points for a Prize I Natural Ability at the White Creek NAVHDA Chapter in Indiana back in August. Awesome work Tate and Willow!

Willow at seven months old in August with her NAVHDA NA I

In other news from the “V” Litter from early 2025, Bazooka is maturing nicely with Eva down in Arkansas.

Bazooka on the hunt at 11 months old
Bazooka on the duck retrieve

Next we have Millie (2025 X Litter Obi x Sally) who is with Dara and Pericle in Upstate New York. She’s been looking super cute in the snow.

Millie with a beautiful head shot
Millie in the snow
A side profile of Millie in the snow

Millie’s sister Luna in Mississippi is having lots of adventures with her airman owner Alec, both in and out of the field.

Alec and Luna in the field
Alec and Luna with their best girl on the tarmac

Last but not least, we have Gary with Marcus who is right here on Lake Wylie, South Carolina. He’s also handsome! Gary is out of the 2025 W Litter between Duke and Briar.

Gary with another cute puppy face
Gary taking lake life seriously

Look at all of those cute dogs! I’ll keep telling myself that we’re taking time off from having puppies for now. I will be sure to keep you all posted as to when we start making plans otherwise.

Nebraska Pheasant and Quail 2025

Charles had a good trip out to south central Nebraska for pheasants and quail in December.

Belle and the first day’s limit of pheasant
Belle and Charles’s Day two single rooster
Front to back: Belle, Sally and Obi all on point
Belle with a limit of quail on day 3

East Coast Woodcock

The weekend after Christmas, Charles and Caleb headed out for woodcock here back on the East Coast and each took a limit.

Some Sundance Shorthairs with Caleb, Charles, Belle and some limits of woodcock

We’re all thankful for our successes in the whelping box and the field for 2025 and are looking forward to new adventures in 2026! I’m sure I’ll get inspired to get my camera out and brag on our new puppy, so keep an eye out in another month or so and I’ll be back. Let’s stay warm and push through to spring.

“X” Litter Three Weeks Old

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All puppies have homes at this time, but email bluestemkennels@gmail.com to be on the contact list in the event that someone backs out at the last minute.

We’re in our last few days indoors with the pups and this housekeeper will be so happy for it. There’s just a funk that goes along with keeping animals, no matter how clean you keep it.

The puppies will transition this week from canned puppy food all the way up through kibble. Once they move outside, they are given strictly kibble, the canned puppy food draws too many flies. So the “W” Litter goes out on to the covered back porch Wednesday, then this group will follow (in a separate kennel, there is room for two) a week from today.

Here’s the YouTube video for the week:

And here are the individual photos for the week, males first. And my camera has been acting up in portrait mode, which makes the flash go off a bunch of times right in the puppy’s face. So I opted to get sort of low light crummy photos instead of having them flinch a bunch of times from the flash.

Males:

Xander

Male Xander face
Male Xander body

Xavier

Male Xavier face
Male Xavier back

Xerxes

Male Xerxes face
Male Xerxes back

Females:

Xena

Female Xena face
Female Xena back

Xantia

Female Xantia face
Female Xantia back

Xaria

Female Xaria face
Female Xaria back

Xandra

Female Xandra face
Female Xandra back

Xyla

Female Xyla face
Female Xyla back

I wish that they would all pose nicely at this age, but the honestly don’t at all. There are no really good photos until you get them outside running around. They are kind of awkward before that. I’ll be back on Wednesday with the four week update on the “W” Litter.

“V” Litter Three Weeks Old

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All of the puppies are spoken for, but feel free to reach out to bluestemkennels@gmail.com to inquire about future litters.

After we did our puppy video and individual puppy pictures, the little ones got their first mush meal. I mix canned puppy food with puppy milk replacer and they love it. It is always a mess since I start by spoon feeding them, then blobbing some on their blanket and letting them find the bowl. They should be ready for the puppy saucer going forward, but it is good to have the first taste out of the way so that I know they are ready for it.

First taste of puppy mush

The pups are getting up on their feet, barking, howling and wagging their tails. They are starting to seek and enjoy human attention. This is where I feel comfortable really starting to take them out of the whelping box and playing with them. If we get a warm day soon, we can go outside (but it looks like that is at least a week away).

Here is this week’s YouTube video:

Then here are their individual puppy photos. This is probably going to be the last time that I can get their individual photos by myself on an elevated surface. We’ll either have to be on the ground or I’ll have to have Caleb help me going forward.

Female:

Female, Victoria, face
Female, Victoria, back

Males:

Male, Vincent, face
Male, Vincent, back
Male, Valentino, face
Male, Valentino, back (you can see his heart spot, hence the name)
Male, Vaughn, face
Male, Vaughn, back
Male, Vance, face
Hunting Wirehaired Pointing Griffons
Male, Vance, back

I spent lots of time playing with and feeding puppies today, so I need to get on with my evening. I’m glad to share with you all these cute little beings and how they grow and develop. I’ll be back next weekend.

“V” Litter Two Weeks Old

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All of these puppies are spoken for, but if you’d like to inquire about future litters, feel free to email bluestemkennels@gmail.com.

The five puppies of the “V” Litter are off to a strong start and mama Briar is taking great care of them. I’m not having to rotate pups or fuss over any of them. There are four boys and one girl and they are all fat and healthy.

Briar and the five pups of the “V” Litter at two weeks old

I like to just show life as it exists and didn’t want to mess with Briar as she was nursing, so she did have a wood chip in her bangs that covered her eye. They are warm and snug in the house during this cold weather and won’t go outside at all until they are at least four weeks old. That is when they are old enough to regulate their body temperature.

Here is this week’s YouTube video:

Now we have their individual photos and kennel names. These are names that I just give them to identify them in photos, I don’t actually call them by these names.

Female

Female, Victoria, face
Female, Victoria, back

Males:

Male, Vincent, face
Male, Vincent, back
Male, Valentino, face

Male, Valentino, back

Male, Vaughn, face
Male, Vaughn, back
Male, Vance, face
Male, Vance, back

They all look a little funny at this age being so small, but I look forward to sharing with you every week as they grow! Check back next weekend for the next installment.

Welcome “V” Litter, now one week old

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Briar with the “V” Litter as newborns

All pups are spoken for, feel free to email bluestemkennels@gmail.com about future litters.

I felt comfortable enough with my veterinary support team in Bellevue, Nebraska to take Briar back with us to visit our adult children. The Christmas visit had been planned for a long time, but Charles left Duke and Briar together in the dog box in North Dakota in October, we confirmed a pregnancy right after Thanksgiving, so we nearly cancelled. I’ve whelped far more litters in Bellevue and have made sure to breed a line that whelps naturally without complications.

I’d had her set up sleeping next to me on a blanket in the AirBnB, but the night of the 26th she was restless and digging at the carpet under the nightstand. There was a mudroom adjacent to the outside door and it was open to the living room so that I could just set up an ex-pen to keep her from running the house tearing stuff up while she was whelping. I took up residence on the living room couch and heard the first pup arrive around 11:30 PM Central/12:30 PM Eastern (that is why their birthday is on the 27th, since that is when most of them were born, and even the first two were after midnight Eastern).

Even though the sandbox was there, she had dragged a blanket out on to the floor and was whelping on the blanket on the floor. After the second pup was born, I lifted Briar off of the floor and into the plastic sandbox with a different blanket to keep the mess contained. I didn’t have to take any sacs off of the puppies, she did it all herself and had the five pups by 1:30 AM Central/2:30 PM Eastern. Four boys and one girl, all healthy and nice with no stillborns.

We drove straight from Bellevue to home in Clover, South Carolina in one 18 hour shot. The sandbox fit perfectly in the back of my Toyota Sequoia and we kept the heat cranked up. The trip home was uneventful, we just had to make sure that Briar was walked away from the dog polluted gas stations and truck stops for fear of tracking disease in to the nest. We got the kennel set up in the basement the next day.

They are growing like weeds and all seem healthy at one week old yesterday. I have matched the puppies with their owners and the one immediate alternate knows who they are. If you are farther down the list, I’ll be in touch soon and let you know what it looks like for Sally and Obi’s litter later in the spring/summer (or if anyone drops out of this litter).

Here are their one week photos:

V Litter One Week Old

I don’t take individual photos, take videos or assign them names until they are two weeks old. This is because of potential mortality during early life, which is totally normal for breeders. These all appear healthy and strong. I will be back next Saturday to let you all know how they are doing!

For those who have emailed me in the past week, I will be sure to get back with you tomorrow, I’ve been busy matching up owners for these little ones and with the holidays. I hope that it was merry and bright for you all!