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| spaniel training
Ian Openshaw by Martin Deely, Montverde,
Florida
( published in Spaniels In The Field - summer 2000 )
Watching a young spaniel work I remarked to the handler how much
I liked its style and hunting ability, "Aye!" he answered

"It'll win its first stake and will he a Field Trial Champion
by the end of the season". Hearing that from most handlers, you
could be forgiven for thinking this was just an idle brag. However,
when that handler is British hunting dog trainer Ian Openshaw, you
know he not only means what he says but it will happen. As a Journalist,
commentator, hunting dog trainer and trials competitor for over 25
years I have been lucky in being able to watch and work with the best
in their field and I have no doubt that the best I have seen training
and hunting spaniels is Ian Openshaw. He has an eye for a good dog,
a natural intuitive approach and talent, understands dogs and their
work and most of all works hard at what he does. Often considered
outspoken, he has the courage of his convictions and regularly backs
his words with deeds. So much so that he is now rewriting the records.
He is one of those trainers who can read a dog like an open book,
he knows what they are thinking and going to do long before they even
consider it and has the ability to build a partnership with a dog
that fills you with admiration. He makes everything look easy. I can
remember one Championship where game was difficult to find and dogs
were struggling to make contact, when in came Openshaw and Rytex Racine.
Almost immediately Racine was finding game and producing it for the
gun and doing it so well she went on to win that Championship.
In Britain the English Springer Spaniel is a popular hunting companion
and spaniel trialing is highly competitive. With any sports there
have been the greats, and the heroes and there is no doubt that the
name Openshaw in spaniel trialing is now up there among them with
the best there has ever been. As always we can debate who was the
greatest as we do with any sport, how often have sports fans debated,
could Joe Louis have beaten Mohammed Ali or Ali beaten Tyson. We will
never know but results and ability speak for themselves.

This year at the 2000 Kennel Club British Spaniel Championship, Ian
Openshaw trained and handled cockers to first and second place in
the Cocker Championship (the Championships are the equivalent of the
Nationals in the US), and English Springers to first, second and fourth
place in the Any Variety Spaniel except Cockers Championship. Only
one person has completed the double before, winning both the Cocker
and Any Variety Championship and that was back in 1927/28 when James
Thomson won both, with Mr C.A. Phillips `Rivington' dogs. There is
no doubt today, the number of dogs and arguably the overall quality
of dogs running, is much higher. This success in the Any Variety Championship
Stake was Ian's fifth Any Variety Championship win, which equals the
record of another great British trainer, Lawton Evans.
"AT THE 2000 KENNEL CLUB BRITISH SPANIEL CHAMPIONSHIP, IAN OPENSHAW
TRAINED AND HANDLED COCKERS TO FIRST AND SECOND PLACE, AND ENGLISH
SPRINGER SPANIELS TO FIRST, SECOND AND FOURTH PLACE....."
Ian Openshaw is a `son' of British country sports and was introduced
to shooting at an early age by his father Jim, himself a very keen
shooting man. Born near Wigan in Lancashire in 1960, at the age of
seven he shot his first two pheasants with a single barrelled fourteen
gauge shotgun flushed out of a field of turnips on a visit with his
father to the Highlands of Scotland. By the age of nine he was a very
competent shot and is now a first class shot of all forms of game.
At a trial last year, that this time Ian had organized, they were
short of a gun. Ian said he would stand in and shoot. Not prepared
for this eventuality he did not have a gun, so was loaned a very old
20 gauge with a stock about one inch and a half too short. With cartridges
he `borrowed' from his father, he went on to shoot over half the days
bag, only missing one bird. One of the judges remarked with a very
knowing smile "You missed one I'm going to make a note in my
book, it's never happened before!" Much of Ian's training involves
shooting over his own dogs and he rarely misses a bird or rabbit.
His philosophy is that to keep a dog going well and full of drive,
they need not only the finds and flushes but also the game to retrieve.
He provides them with plenty of game to retrieve.
Ian got his first dog at eleven years of age. His father had bred
a litter of English Springer Spaniels and Ian asked for a little black
and white bitch for himself. From that time on, his bedside table
was never with-out the `Bible' of British dog trainers Peter Moxon's
"Gundogs: Training and Field Trials" which his father gave
him. At thirteen Ian ran this young dog `Jess' in the North Western
Counties Field Trial Associations Novice stake and took second place.
This was the beginning of the trial `bug' which bit very deep into
his life. Ian's ability to get to the trials however depended upon
his father `ferrying' him around but Jim was a policeman and had difficulty
getting the appropriate days off.
So Jess was sold and the beginnings of Openshaw the businessman were
founded. But that did not stop him training and he soon had a second
dog "Mallowdale Smut", again bred by his father. With Smut,
Ian this time won a Novice and followed it very quickly with an Open
Qualifier. Unfortunately Smut was then struck with Parvo Virus a relatively
new disease in Britain at that time and although he survived it, he
never really had the drive he had prior to the illness, however he
still won a further two non-qualifiers and took second in eleven Open
Stakes. Ian was only 16 years old.
Although Ian tried his hand at other jobs it was the countryside
and dogs that held the `magic' and all his spare time was spent training,
hunting and working with gamekeepers. By the age of 19 he had trained
and sold a few Labrador retrievers for shooting men but it was spaniels
he lived for. Around this time his skill with his beloved spaniels
was beginning to be noticed especially by well-known spaniel trainer
John McQueen, who, upon his retirement recommended Ian to Richard
Fair-fax Naylor the owner of Rytex Kennels as his replacement. Ian
moved to the Rytex Kennels as dog trainer and gamekeeper on the 4th
January 1980. How does he remember the exact date? Well he got married
to Wendy his boyhood sweet-heart just the day before. No time for
honeymoon, there was work and a new life to begin.
Now the spaniel world really had a partnership to watch for. Equally
as outspoken as Ian, Wendy was the perfect match and could work as
hard as Ian could any day of the week. In those words lies the secret
of their success hard work. Ian often says, "The harder we work
the luckier we become". Luck does not even enter the equation.
As a keeper he turned an average shooting day from a forty-bird day
into a three hundred-bird day, his ability at dog training matched
by his ability to rear and produce birds for the gun.

When he arrived at Rytex, there was only one dog that Ian considered
a good competition dog, Rytex Ria. So immediately he started looking
around for a good dog from lines he liked. His search led him to Raffle
of Rytex which went back to the Rytex lines. Raffle and Ria were now
the basis of the new Rytex spaniel lines. The mating between these
two produced FTCh Rytex Ruby, FTCh Rytex Rocky of Bellever and FTCh
Rytex Racer of Craigfellin. Ria was then mated to Inlers Gruff from
Ireland and produced FTCh Rytex Rod. Ian has never been slow to follow
his intuition and beliefs and at seven months old Rod was mated to
his half sister Ruby. Many would think this a risky mating, a dog
so young and so close a relationship. Ian told me at the time "I
could not find anything else I wanted to use on Ruby and he looked
so good, even at that age". The result was British Any Variety
Championship winner FTCh Rytex Racine, a bitch stamped in the Rod
mould with style and natural game finding that was a delight.
Sadly, the owner of the Rytex kennels, Richard Naylor passed away
at a very young age missing by only a few months what he always wanted
to see, Ian becoming a member of the England Team and running his
dog in the International Gundog Event at the Country Landowners Association
Game Fair, the biggest in Britain. One of the few regrets in Ian's
life was that Naylor was not there to watch Ian handle his dogs for
England, he told me "The governor (an affectionate name for his
boss) would have been proud and delighted, I think he was watching
over me that day". Following the sudden death of Richard Naylor,
Ian continued running the estate shoot as a commercial proposition
for two years, before he and Wendy decided to go it alone and set
up their own kennels in Peplow, Shropshire.
Ian and Wendy bought a property, now Rytex Kennels that you could
say was "In need of some re-modernization", how-ever it
did have ten acres of land. With the usual Openshaw attitude Ian and
Wendy knew exactly what they wanted and had no doubts they were going
to succeed. Hard work saw them building kennels, and extending and
modernizing all the living accommodation. A visit to Rytex Kennels
has your head spinning. The house is never without guests, people
talking dogs, training dogs, watching dogs, buying dogs and admiring
dogs. The telephone is constantly ringing and if ever there was a
hive of spaniel industry Rytex Kennels epitomizes just this. Ian jumps
up from his kitchen table after a phone call to America or Japan or
wherever a dog is required "Do you want to see this little bitch
work?" he asks. "Which little bitch?" I ask. He appears
not to hear my question and continues. "She'll win her first
stake this one". I follow him over to the Rabbit pen. Everything
is so relaxed, the moment he has a dog in front of him. Relaxed in
an air of concentration, this is the master at his best. He talks
to you but his concentration never leaves the dog, he sees rabbits
creeping into a corner under a woodpile and works the dog towards
them. The style and pace of the little bitch has me mesmerized.
Never changing pace she drives under the cover, two rabbits emerge
and she stops inside the cover her nose just peeking out, sitting
the moment the rabbits were evicted. Ian appears to have done nothing,
no whistle, no words, and no urgency, it all happens like clockwork.
"I like her Ian" I smile at the pleasure of watching this
little bitch. "Aye she should be alright, she'll win her first
trial" Again he makes the statement matter of fact.
Watching him you can be forgiven for thinking that he is not really
handling the dog, but you would be completely wrong. His concentration
is total, his reactions immediate and at trials his nerves are jangling,
such is his desire not just to do well but to be first. Many who have
met him ask when he relaxes and that brings me to some wonderful memories
of times spent with him. To go shooting rabbits with Ian is an experience
never to be forgotten. Usually you are asked to drive, which believe
me is by far the best for your own nerves. Ian gets into the car looks
ahead and says "That way" nod-ding his head forward. Within
seconds he is asleep in the passenger seat. Not sure where you are?
You ask quietly which direction to take, he opens his eyes has a quick
look around and gives another instruction before once more falling
asleep. I have shared hotel rooms with Ian and even with a wedding
disco on full blast directly below us, the television showing a very
noisy war film and all the lights in the room beaming brightly, the
second he closes his eyes he is asleep.
To bring his dogs to the standards demanded in today's competitions
Ian spares no effort, his life revolves around training and competing
with his dogs. Whatever is required to prepare the dogs Ian goes to
great lengths to provide it. From June onwards he drives three times
a week to the Yorkshire Moors to shoot rabbits for them, a three hour
journey each way which means getting out of bed at three a.m. to be
there at first light. He then returns home after training them for
a second time in the late afternoon early evening, not arriving home
until often after midnight. These are important training sessions
and essential to prepare for competition. So much so that on one such
excursion even the collapsing of a back axle on the dog trailer did
not stop him working them. It collapsed on the way up the hillside
to the rabbiting ground. Ian took his dogs out of the trailer and
told his fellow travellers with a smile "I came to train the
dogs, I'm sure you know how to mend that better than me." And
off he went to train, dogs at heel and gun under his arm.
Dedication and determination to be first is the driving motivation,
second place does not enter his mind, and even after all his achievements
he never considers winding down, laurels are certainly not for resting
on. He has more drive and desire to win than ever before and a work
ethic that can only be admired, he never stops. To date he has made
up to Field Trial Champion status thirty one English Springer Spaniels,
six Cocker Spaniels and eleven Labrador Retrievers. In December 1990
he won the Irish Spaniel Championship with FTCh Rytex Racine then
went on in January 1991 to win the British Any Variety Spaniel Championship
with the same dog. In 1993 he won the Any Variety Spaniel Championship
with FTCh Poppet of Balscote and again in the following year 1994
with FTCh Kenine Tina. In 1997 he won the same Championship with FTCh
Rytex Rime and then this year the final accolade when he won the Cocker
Championship with FTCh Parkbreck Perfection and the Any Variety Championship
with FTCh Rytex Roel.
Although I have barely mentioned Labrador Retrievers, He is as good
a trainer of a lab as he is of a spaniel. Eleven Field Trial Champions
is quite an achievement in any one's book, especially in Britain,
and with one of these dogs, FTCh Swinbrook Twig, in 1987 Ian took
second place in the International Gundog League's Retriever Championship
(equivalent to the US Retriever National).
Ian has shown his ability not only as a trainer and handler but also
as a breeder of quality dogs. The Rytex lines are now recognized Internationally
and Ian's own dog FTCh Kenine Robb of Rytex was not only top sire
of the 2000 Any Variety Championship dogs, with 11 of the 47 qualifiers
being sired by him, Robb has produced a record four Championship winners
and around 30 Field trial Champions.
Ian Openshaw is generous in many ways hut especially so with help,
advice and support to others. He not only has the ability to train
dogs hut also to select dogs for other people and show them how to
train. Two close friends who he helped and supported have both won
the Any Variety Spaniel Championship and another won the Retriever
Championship. If he can help in any way he will, but if you ask for
advice and opinion expect the truth and it being given straight sometime
his words are not for the faint hearted or those hoping just for approval
of what they have done or the dog they own.
Success and a few years have mellowed the Ian Openshaw I first knew.
Although he still has a wicked sense of humor and enjoys 'winding
up' colleagues, he does not come across as outspoken as he once was.
On a trip to America he was once asked at an Open Stake trial whether
he thought he could beat the top competitors there. His answer "It
would be like taking candy from a baby". Unfortunately his sense
of humor did not ride well with some. The cocky young man of old has
now developed into a character who although not humble does not project
the swell headed image he once had. He has more than proved that he
can do what he says he can do, he is in a class of his own. A class
in which he has been more than ably supported by his wife Wendy, herself
a first class trainer especially with her first love, the field bred
English Cocker Spaniel. Ian is the first to recognize the role Wendy
has played in the success of the Rytex spaniels and each time he gives
a thank you speech at the end of each Championship he has won, his
voice fills with emotion as he thanks her for her support. Underneath
that tough exterior there beats the heart of a sensitive man, but
don't tell him I told you!
Over many years I have been fortunate to train with, judge, be judged
by, compete against, ghost write for, make videos with, do business
and especially visit and enjoy the company of a very good friend,
Ian Openshaw. He is to the spaniel world in Britain what Michael Jordan
is to basketball or Tiger Woods to Golf. He is the man you have to
beat and that is no easy feat. Ian and Wendy Openshaw have made the
Rytex name synonymous with quality bred and trained English Springer
Spaniels, the records may be in the process of being rewritten hut
hold on, at the age of 40 there is more to come. I once asked him
when he won his second Championship what he now wanted to achieve.
His answer was that every trial was there to be won and the Championship
was just another trial. My own personal feeling after many years of
friendship is that 'Opie' has more drive and ambition to win `the
next trial' than ever before but I have a suspicion that it could
be a secret dream to win not only the Cocker and Any Variety Spaniel
Championship again but to also win the Retriever Championship, - maybe
all in the same year. Impossible? Don't you believe it when Ian Openshaw
sets his mind to something, nothing is impossible.

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