Best breed for big game hunting companion.

I hate to start a new thread as there is one similar,m going on right now, but I dont have a Weight limit and the dog can be as big as it needs to be.

Back story. I live and hunt in serious grizzly country. We have a rule that we dont hunt alone, (yes its that bad). Even when hunting in pairs, we dont separate with the exception of putting a stalk on something. I have stuck to that rule until this year, my long-time hunting partner is guiding, and there were weekends I had no one to hunt with.

So I took the larger of our 2 family dogs with me a few weeks ago. Buck is a 95lb mountain Cur. I walked into a creek bottom being very cautious of course, when all of the sudden Buck went absolutely ballistic barking behind me. I look back and there is a 500lb (yes, I know bear size is often exaggerated, this is not) grizzly boar standing at 20 yards looking at me and looking back to Buck who is literally 5 feet from that bears face giving him the business. An intense stand off lasted for about 10 seconds where that bear was deciding what he wanted to do and he finally turned and ran, and Buck followed behind him, chasing him up the mountain until he was about 100 yards away, then Buck turned around and re joined me at my side.

That dog was fearless. Ive never taken him hunting and to be honest he did exactly what I hoped he would do. He stays close to my side, not on a leash, when we get into dense brush, he goes a little ahead of me and bird dogs around ( which is how he found that bear that I walked right past). When I sit down to glass I tie him next to me to sage brush or a tree and he just lays down.

The only problem I have with him is I cant tie him up and walk away from him or he will bark. Sometimes he gets too far ahead and doesnt listen immediately when I call him. So we have some training to do, maybe an E Collar.

So this got me thinking that going forward I would like to get another dog after Buck or sooner that will suite my needs as a hunting companion. I dont need the dog to spot game, blood trail, point or any of that. I need it to be fearless, easily trained to sit, stay, not bark at game, stay by my side and most importantly not back down from enormous grizzly bears.

Maybe with my experience with Buck I know the answer already, but to be honest up until that weekend, me and Buck havent had the best relationship, I am not sure if its the breed, but him in his sister have been pains in the asses. They have way too much energy, very needy, run away when we are at home every chance they get, destroy crates, destroyed a chain link kennel. All this has gone on regardless of how much attention and time is spent with them, they just can't chill.

Buck is 6 so he still has plenty life left in him and we are going to start training the bad habits out.

Im thinking having a well trained dog will enable me to hunt at times I would otherwise have to stay home. I wont be getting another dog for a few years, but am curious what breeds to focus around when that time comes.

Thanks.
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German Shepherd imported from the Czech Republic has been in grizzly country with us for the last five years, can alert to any bear way before it can be seen, just enough distraction if things ever went bad. he is fearless and will take his death immediately to protect his owners. I carry a Mossberg Maverick top folder as a backup, with 3-inch magnum crush slugs and 3-inch 0 buck, enough firepower to drop any encountered threat.All these have been in grizzly country at one time or another, all 100% trained to perfection.
 

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Heelers can do it all. Small game, birds, coyotes, cattle, farming, mowing, guard duty, agility, blood trailing. You name it, a heeler can do it. And they make good family dogs and companions....

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Unfortunately it seems like EVRYONE here in Wyomin has told my wife the Heelers are nippy and try to herd you and your kids, I don't believe this to be true, but she's not into them for this reason.

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Thanks for the replies guys. I have an E Collar on the way and plan on spending 15 minutes every day when I get home from work with Buck, starting withe the basics. He is 6 so I hope you CAN teach an old dog new tricks.

I absolutely kicked his ass this weekend. By far the most miles and climbing he's ever done in his life.

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Here's a list of dogs I'd consider. Blue heeler. They are bad azzes in a small package. Might be my first choice. Don't get one form town hippie. Get on from rancher that works. Train it etc. Anatolian Shepherd. Friend has one. Most beautiful dog ive seen. HUGE! Scares hell out of me. Very gentle but huge and huge bark when unsure. Looks just like a wolf with ears down. They are guard/herd dogs. Great Pyrenese. Great dogs. Quietly I'd throw a chesapeake bay retriever in there. They are much like a lab. Easy to train what you want it to do. A little more stoic than a lab. Less needy. Tougher than a lab. Great outdoor dog with think curly coat. Can be bad azzes if need to. Hunting dog with good prey drive.
 
Both my wife and I will be needing a bear alert dog companion in the next year or two. This thread is pretty helpful.

She's always been fond of the heelers. She had one years ago before we met that was perfect for watching the kids. It would be ready to tear anyone apart that it didn't know unless she gave it a verbal command that the person was ok.

Then we had a border Collie heeler mix a few years ago that we picked up from a crack house when she was probably 6mo old. Whatever happened to that dog as a pup turned it into the meanest and fastest thing I've ever seen. I would not be surprised if she could have taken down a grizzly. She was a bit problematic with other dogs but incredible for alert and protection against all threats after getting some training. She unfortunately died too young a few years ago likely from a heart issue. If I could clone her for the future I would.

One of my huge pet peeves is shedding. I just can't stand it. So what about an Airedale mixed with one of the others in this thread? Airedale/heeler or Airedale/catahoula?
 
I've been following this thread out of pure curiosity. I have to say I haven't seen one argument that would lead me to getting any of these breeds over a Boxer. However, I'm pretty biased as we've had Boxers in my family going back at least 3 generations. I've never taken a dog out west with me, but I do have enough experience with them to know whether they'd meet the requirements put forth in this thread as well of better than any breed suggested. They make better companions than any breed suggested hands down to the point that you're likely to put yourself in between it and the bear.
I would put the healer 2nd.
I'm surprised no one has argued for a Mal or Dutch, they've become really popular since they became tacticool during the GWOT. Seems they'd work well for the right handler.
 
I've been following this thread out of pure curiosity. I have to say I haven't seen one argument that would lead me to getting any of these breeds over a Boxer. However, I'm pretty biased as we've had Boxers in my family going back at least 3 generations. I've never taken a dog out west with me, but I do have enough experience with them to know whether they'd meet the requirements put forth in this thread as well of better than any breed suggested. They make better companions than any breed suggested hands down to the point that you're likely to put yourself in between it and the bear.
I would put the healer 2nd.
I'm surprised no one has argued for a Mal or Dutch, they've become really popular since they became tacticool during the GWOT. Seems they'd work well for the right handler.
Malinois are absolutely NOT family dogs; most are out of control, incessant barkers, and difficult to train, despite their drive and intelligence. Our department got rid of the two we had, only Czech German imports now, rock steady train easy and no bad kennel habits like incessant barking, jumping, chewing, and wall bouncing, while Malinois are more athletic, that trait does not necessitate we have them. On another note the imported strains,working of shepherds are not recommended for novice dog owners as they are quite dangerous if not trained, early and properly.
 
I don't have grizzlies near me but both male draahts in these pictures have run black bears off or treed them while out bird hunting. I also took the one out with me bear hunting over bait one year. I didn't have a blind or stand setup, we just sat on the ground 100 yards from the bait. He just laid down next to me until I shot one, then I walked him over to the shot location and he trailed it for me. The lab peeking over my shoulder just came out with my wife to help drag it out to the truck. I do quite a bit of jump shooting waterfowl with them so they heal off lead well in the woods when needed and will stay laid down quietly when told to so I can leave them behind (though not to shot like the vgj trained draahts or other better trained dogs).IMG_4044.JPG
 

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I've been following this thread out of pure curiosity. I have to say I haven't seen one argument that would lead me to getting any of these breeds over a Boxer. However, I'm pretty biased as we've had Boxers in my family going back at least 3 generations. I've never taken a dog out west with me, but I do have enough experience with them to know whether they'd meet the requirements put forth in this thread as well of better than any breed suggested. They make better companions than any breed suggested hands down to the point that you're likely to put yourself in between it and the bear.
I would put the healer 2nd.
I'm surprised no one has argued for a Mal or Dutch, they've become really popular since they became tacticool during the GWOT. Seems they'd work well for the right handler.

It's because the people that own a Mal don't recommend anyone to get a Mal lol. I would dissuade anybody from getting a Mal, and tell them how much work they take and that it's not a good idea. Not because Mal's aren't awesome, and mine is fantastic, but because if you haven't done the research and already convinced yourself that you are up to it then you shouldn't get one.

Mal's are unique and take a lot of work, EVERY. SINGLE. DAY. With mine, if we take a day off of doing some kind of exercise and work he will start becoming real destructive and annoying, my daughters stuffed animals have taken the brunt of that.

The level of intelligence of these dogs is insane, but the requirement to make sure they are busy with a job is what should keep most people from getting one.
 
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