How to remove Cockleburs from your hunting dogs coat

Cockleburs have evolved a unique way of surviving and spreading their seed. They don’t have flowers that bees or other incest can pollinate, what they do have are little seed pods covered in hundreds of hooked spines. These hooked spines catch any and everything that passes by, clinging to fur while being transported to a new location, allowing the Cocklebur to spread it’s seed far and wide. That’s a pretty neat trick, but not their only one. Each seed pod contains two seeds, one seed that will quickly germinate the following spring, while the other typically doesn’t germinate until the following year, increasing the chances that you’ll have to continue to deal with this nuisance no matter where you hunt.

An interesting fact about the Cocklebur is that it served as the inspiration behind Velcro. Velcro was invented by a Swiss engineer named George de Mestral in 1941 after returning from a hunting trip in the Field with both his dogs covered in Cockleburs. While pulling these little burs from the dogs’ fur, he inspected the Cocklebur’s hooked spines and realized their potential. He worked with skilled craftsmen to create a fabric with thousands of tiny hooks and another fabric with tiny loops so that when they came in contact, they grabbed and held each other.

If I let them, my dogs will eventually pull these burs out themselves, at least the ones they can reach. However, these burs can be extremely toxic to mammals if consumed, even in small quantities, and the spines can injure the mouth and/or stomach if swallowed. You and your dog would be much better served by placing the dog on your truck's tailgate after a day in the Field so you can inspect and remove any foreign objects, whether cockleburs, sticktights or other types of seeds. Even though these little burs are covered with hooked spines, you need to take precautions when removing them because they can still inflict pain. They make detangling products you can buy online or in pet stores, but I like to use cooking oil spray, like Vegetable Oil or Canola Oil. Just spray the tangled hairs with oil which helps the cockleburs to slide right out. You might have some troublesome areas where several burs have grouped together and embedded deep in the fur, just focus on getting one out at a time. For super tough areas, you might consider trimming with scissors or shears.
Related Aritlces
And the Birds Whistled Bob-white
Quail hunting in the South has always been as common as sunburn. Due to the fertile soil, flat and rolling coastal plains that are cut by long rivers and dotted with lakes and ponds, made for a perfect farming. Mild winters with hot, humid summers meant crops grew for longer times of the year than just about any other part of the country. Cotton, rice, peanuts, tobacco, peaches, sugar cane, watermelons, and indigo, the blue dye that comes from the plant, were staples. It didn't matter if the farming occurred on plantations several thousand acres big or on 50-acre tenant farms, one thing was for sure. Quail were abundant.
The Great Debate: Pointing or Flushing Dogs for Quail
My wife said I winced when we pulled up to the only game in town. It was an old motel of a vintage that reminded me of the Golden Era of travel by car. Over the years families probably over-nighted here while on their way to any one of a number of the nearby wild quail Valhallas. No visible capital improvements had been done for a long time, at least I couldn't see any renovation. The 30-some-odd rooms looked sad while the adjoining restaurant and tavern was booming.
SportDOG: Gear the way youd design it
My dentist, Doc Biehn, was a waterfowler and I always got to check it out when I got my teeth cleaned as a kid. I remember one visit when he handed me a new, Marlin Super Goose he extracted from his closet. I'd never seen anything like the 10 gauge, bolt action shotgun that took a 3.5 inch shell and came with a two-shell clip and full-choked 34-inch barrel. That beast weighed a whopping 10.5 pounds, making it a virtual shoulder-cannon for waterfowlers. I could barely lift the heavy artillery let alone work the bolt without significant muzzle rock. My amazement turned to confusion, and in the end I couldn't see how that firearm would replace my side-by-side or pump in the blind. The Super Goose must have been designed by someone who didn't hunt geese.























