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GPS collars help owners keep track of dogs

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Gartner said the collars are also popular with those handling law enforcement, rescue and military canines.

The GPS collars provide more than a dogs’ simple direction and distance.

The screen unit vibrates and emits a sound when the dog stops, like if pointing birds.

Gartner said one function is logging distances and routes traveled. Comparing the distances covered between four and two-legged hunters is always interesting. After quail hunts last week, Gartner checked the trails of both dogs and himself. True to her breed, LuLu, the English pointer, logged the most distance, covering 7.4 miles in one 75 minute trek. Vegas tallied 5.3 miles while Gartner totaled 2.1 miles on the same hunt.

The units also provide trails so Gartner can later look at the workings of his dogs.

The GPS units also allow him to log important locations as a hunt progresses.

Gartner described it as a “digital diary” of his bird hunts as he records points made, birds flushed and shot at his hunting places. Such information comes in handy when he returns on future hunts.

Some GPS collars come with pre-programmed topographical maps so hunters will more easily know how to get to a distant dog, or the easiest way back to a vehicle.

Applications that feature aerial photography of wide areas are also available.

Gartner is a big fan of a state-provided application that downloads the exact location and boundaries of Kansas’ roughly million acres of Walk In Hunting Areas.

“It’s nice to know for sure where you can legally be and where you can’t,” said Gartner, who enjoys hunting public lands. “You don’t always have those friendly white WIHA signs in sight.”

The application is available for downloading to GPS units at www.kdwpt.state.ks.us.

Last week, Gartner and friend Tom Turner hunted vast private lands for quail in Edwards, Stafford and Reno counties.

Gartner could have gotten by with Garmin’s Astro, a basic GPS collar system that does all of the above.

Instead, he fitted LuLu and Vegas with the company’s Alpha, which incorporates an electronic correction collar with the GPS.

The latter technology became available when Garmin purchased Tri-Tronics, a leading training collar company, about 18 months ago.

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