
I think it depends more on the personality of the dog, rather than a certain type or breed and I have found
that strong bonding doesn't always result in good recalls. For instance, an insecure dog would hate to being
left alone so may keep more frequent visual contact with his handler, while a bolshy type may just not care
and do their own fun thing. I keep two scent hound littermates, one male, one female. The male used to be
great on recall until his sister went into heat; now based on past experience my money would have been on
HIM to maintain his recall as he was always my "favourite". Since she went into heat or the first time, he
now suffers from selective hearing while HER recall has improved tremendously.
Weirdly, he is useless at home as he feels 100% in charge of the environment. When out walking though,
he is like a baby in unknown territory which I am exploiting now for my purposes.
On the other hand, I adopted a lurcher/longdog (deerhound x greyhound) a few good years back, the dog
was approx 4 years old when I got him. While there was no bonding process needed/going on (we just
clicked from the first second of meeting) and he turned out an A1 companion, we NEVER trained a recall.
Bar from seeing a cat, his recall was to die for. He never failed me and I managed to even train him to the
level where he would go and "retrieve" a deaf-blind puppy for me when she strayed away too far or onto
different surface where she couldn't receive my stomping signal for recall.
The bassett is ONLY co-operating when he is "working", e.g. when we are going through our morning
routines; he "helps" letting the dogs out, sorting out the horse and cats, following a certain routine.
Let off to his own devices ... it can take me up to an hour to persuade him to come back.