Many
have referred to this as the English pointer when; in fact its correct title is
the pointer. The term English was added with the emergence of the European
pointing dogs to distinguish one from another but to the purist it was and still
is the original pointer, used extensively by people like the 18th
century author and diarist, Colonel Peter Hawker.
This is an elegant dog of graceful lines and an
excellent nose. Unlike the European breeds of pointers, this is not a natural
retriever although they can be successfully taught to retrieve. To use a
pointer on a grouse moor is truly an experience. To watch them range until a
mere dot in the distance, to locate and hold a bird on point and then to flush
on command is a sight to savour. The stance immortalised in paintings and
engravings is that of the classic gundog that is certainly familiar to all
involved with shooting sports
The
origins of the pointer are a little sketchy but it seems likely that the pointer
is a descendant of dogs referred to as “partridge dogs” by Brumetho Latini, an
Italian exiled in France around 1260. The links to the partridge dog are
tenuous but we can be certain that the links to the Spanish pointers that were
introduced into Norfolk in the South East of England in the early 1700s are more
reliable and that these are the forerunners of the pointer of today.