Our springer spent most of yesterday out beating and came home knackered. I bathed and groomed him last night and all was well. Eldest son went out for the night. Spent the whole of the night infront of the TV with dogs in the house. They went to bed as usual.
This morning I let them out and left them in the garden (as I often do) while I prepared for a busy day. I took a phone call which scuppered all plans so I had to make some emergency calls to stop people making wasted journeys. I guess the dogs were in the garden (with kennel door and conservatory door open) for about an hour but when I went out, only two cockers and no springer in sight.
Last summer we had a problem with him getting out (twice) after bitches but since his anatomical adjustment he's been fine - until today. I sent the search parties out and organised a neighbour to stay in the house manning phone and sure enough after about 20 mins the call came to say he was at the vets (my old vet not current one). I went up to get him to be met by our local police inspector who'd found him in town, 1.5miles away, eating burgers left over from last night!

Rightly so, I got quite a reprimand, not least of all because he wasn't wearing a collar (although of course he was microchipped). The vets told me off because I they didn't know he'd been castrated! :rolleyes:
My current reflection is how to stop him scaling 6' fences and how can I be comfortable with him safely wearing a collar. I know the answer is adapting the fences so they have wire at a 45 degree angle inwards or leaving him either in the house, or garden with supervision only. His safety is paramount and I'll be phoning the fencing chap tomorrow (bye-bye xmas presents (sorry James, I know you wanted an X-box)., and if I put a collar on him, what happens if he gets into the field and goes straight into the hedgerow? I've twice had to get dogs out of deep undergrowth when they've been hung up on collars. I know this isn't such an issue with dogs who don't work, but for dogs that do, I am not sure what to do. Damned if you do, and damned if you don't.
I do genuinely feel awful and I don't like the fact I've failed at responsible dog ownership, for today at least. It's such a shame that castration hasn't stopped him on the odd occasion although it has at least stopped him fathering puppies irresponsibly I guess.