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GPS collars help owners keep track of dogs

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Vegas is on a solid point with her GPS collar that transmits her location, and lets Ted Gartner know she's on point during a recent hunt. (Photo by Michael Pearce/Wichita Eagle/MCT)

(MCT) — EDWARDS COUNTY, Kan. — It can be one of the lowest feelings in bird hunting.

Darkness is falling across a rugged and remote landscape at least five miles from the nearest house and 15 miles from the nearest town.

Coyotes are howling in many directions and a beloved bird dog is nowhere to be seen.

Too often such scenarios don’t have a happy ending.

Ted Gartner faced the above with total calm despite the absence of his wide-ranging English pointer, LuLu.

“She’s 175 yards over that hill,” Gartner said as he looked at a palm-sized device. “She’s coming in.”

Several moments later LuLu trotted into sight where Gartner had predicted.

Thanks to technology produced by a Kansas company, hunters needn’t worry about losing their dog while afield.

It’s been about seven years since Garmin International, of Olathe, Kan., first matched its global positioning system technology with hunting dogs.

GPS units utilize satellites to mark their positions at all times, and record assorted information. The units on the Garmin dog collars also transmit their location to the hunter’s handheld display screen.

They’ve become a valued tool that Gartner, Garmin’s communications director and a fanatical upland bird hunter, helped develop and test.

“The main thing is the peace of mind you get with them. You know where your dogs are all of the time,” Gartner said. “You’re not hollering all the time and your dog’s not wearing one of those annoying beepers. You just get to enjoy the hunt and the dog work.”

Gartner uses GPS collars on LuLu and Vegas, a German shorthair, on birds ranging from Kansas quail, Minnesota ruffed grouse and Montana Hungarian partridge.

He said waterfowlers utilize the collars to track retrievers working tall cattails. Houndsmen rely on them even more.

“Our largest group is certainly the hound guys, guys who are running their dogs on raccoons, bears or big cats,” Gartner said. “They’re often hunting at night, or in really remote mountains and their dogs may be a mile away.”

Under ideal conditions, the collars might register on the hunter’s tracking screen up to five miles away.

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