Chuck Williams - Building a Student Gun Dog Team, One Retrieve at a Time
Description
#52 A small Georgia school just rebooted what “sports” can mean for teenagers—and it starts with a whistle, a lead, and a steady dog at heel. We sit down with Principal Michael Langston and Coach Chuck Williams of Gordon Lee High School to unpack how a simple idea—bringing retrievers into an ag classroom—grew into a structured gun dog team where students learn handling, safety, and the kind of composure that carries through life. Along the way, you’ll hear from the students themselves: why a football player shows up at 7:15 a.m. to practice heel and place, how a calm handler can steady a high-drive lab, and what it feels like to pass those first hunt tests.
We walk through the building blocks: safety-first protocols, parent participation, and a smart pivot from distant trials to a home-ground series that pulls in grandparents, friends, and local supporters. Coach Williams shares the partnerships that made competition possible, from pro trainers who lent dogs to clubs that welcomed junior handlers. The goal isn’t just ribbons; it’s widening the gate for non-hunters, teaching conservation through hands-on work, and revealing career paths in dog training, guiding, and animal care that most teens never see.
If you care about youth programs, working dogs, or the future of hunting and conservation, this story is a blueprint. Clear expectations, consistent reps, and community buy-in turn curiosity into commitment—and commitment into a tradition students can carry beyond graduation. Hear how Gordon Lee is inspiring other schools to follow, why reduced entry fees and junior divisions could supercharge growth, and what it takes to start a team with just a couple of steady dogs and a willing sponsor. Follow, share with a friend who loves dogs, and leave a review to help more schools find this playbook.
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