I also quickly came to see something Guy Wallace wrote about ‘a leisurely walk in the country spoiling a good dog’ (to paraphrase) - so many variables out of your control that can set back or undo lots of your focused training.
I do agree with this but I do think there is another way to look at it. With Hendrix, our 4th imported teckel, I made a change in the training plan. Pretty much from day one (he was imported at 5 months) he has had daily exposure to farmland, woodland and everything within it. With him being my fourth, I knew the desire to hunt would need zero encouragement. I focussed 100% on obedience - sit/stay (at increasing distances) and recall. Since 1 year old he has had daily 5 mile (human miles - he probably does double that) walks over the farm. He has had more liberty than the other teckels but I believe, due to this, he has become adequately desensitized to the stimulation that would normally turn them into 'gung-ho' full-on hunting mode.
Deer and hares will probably always be a 'watch out' but he always comes back pretty quickly. He seems to have learnt that he will not catch them and rarely goes more than a couple of fields, maybe 400 metres max - the others would just keep going! With pheasant and partridge, he flushes them, watches them rise then goes back looking for more. He naturally stays within about a 50/60 yard radius of me. He would actually make a cracking rough shooting dog. I never thought that I could have a 'country companion' working teckel but at 2.5 years he is nearly there.
