I liked the training in the book "Charles Morgan on retrievers". Of course; each type of dog is going to have different characteristics than others - and each have their own personalities.
I trained field trial dogs BEFORE shock collars.
They used to say you trained a chesapeake with a 2x4; a lab with your fist; and golden with a kleenex.
But- when it came to retrievers - it seemed that 'force training' them is nessesary.
Retrievers naturally retrieve; and we had to make that not only a fun thing; but a requirement. So we forced them to fetch; hold and drop.
I have also trained rottweilers and collies; and now- I have 4 german wirehaired pointers.
With bird dogs; the best thing you can do is have birds availible. The more birds the dog works with the better the chances are- it will be a good dog.
With ALL breeds the most important thing you can teach them is to let go. Sounds silly perhaps; but if your dog grabs the neighbors parrot; or a child; you have to be able to make the dog let go. Not an option; not for fun; but a requirement.
I use the word 'drop'; as my dogs are hunters; and I want them to let go of birds etc when they bring them in. But a better word might be 'NO'.
If they have a toy or object in their mouth; you can say your command and if they refuse to let go; you blow fast& hard into the dogs nostrils; and they should let go.
read the books on training; but take extra time to work on the dog immediately releasing. ANY dog can bite someone; or something; and not having a command word to let go is beyond foolish.
Name the dog something you don't mind screaming out loud. I had a very light skinned black friend that named his doberman the 'N' word.
The dog got loose; and my friend did not make it far.... before he realized the folly of the name.
He did recover however. And changed the dogs name.
But a good call name is important.
I can't believe a guide dog trainer named a black lab 'freckles'.
That is funny on so many levels.
Shock collars should ONLY be used to inforce commands the dog totally understands.
When my breeding 6itch has pups; I start training them from day one; to my touch; and voice. By the time they are 5 weeks old I can call them and they will come running. I also get young birds; newly feathered quail are a good choice; and let the puppies follow the trails they leave; and get some early bird action. If you use an older tough bird; it can peck the puppy - or slap it with a wing -and you can end up with a dog that either won't hunt; but most likely.. will never retrieve a live bird.
congrats on the new pup!