With his chocolate Labrador, Easton, by his side, Josh Miller walked into a training field not far from his kennel. Slung over one shoulder was a game holder weighed down not with pheasants or ducks but deer antlers, objects of Easton's intense desire.
Commanding the dog to sit and stay, Miller then strolled ahead of the alert retriever and hid one antler, or "shed,'' in tall grass, out of the animal's sight. More demonstration than training regimen, the exercise that followed nevertheless thrilled Miller, and especially Easton.
"Good boy,'' Miller said as Easton, 11 years old, scoured the countryside on command. With vacuum-like proficiency, he located the antler quickly, grasped it between his teeth and returned it to his master.
Welcome to shed hunting. Or at least the training that precedes competitive shed hunting, the Big Daddy of which is slated for next weekend at Dokken's Oak Ridge Kennels (www.dokkensoakridgekennels.com) near Northfield.
"I'll be running three dogs, and my assistant, Dave Larson, will run two,'' said Miller, who has twice won the open division of the World Shed Hunting Championship, an event now in its fifth year and founded by Tom Dokken, whose kennel bears his name.
Arguably, the sport is the fastest growing among hunting-dog competitions, though entered dogs aren't required to be any particular breed. They needn't even have fancy pedigrees
Or any pedigree.
"But you do want a dog with a strong retrieving instinct,'' Miller said as he petted Easton, the 2011 world champ. "It helps also if the dog is fast, but not so fast that he overruns his nose.''