
When I first got flatcoats that was the attitude we met frequently. I will always remember our first working test. Standing by the car putting on boots etc, listening to the barbour and green wellied chaps, looking down the list they saw my dogs name and one said, "Oh look it's a new one" to which the reply came, "Well we won't have to worry it is only a flatcoat". We were winning the test, but in the run off between us and an equally high placed lab, we lost half a point on the retrieve. After that we were taken seriously and at our next few tests, some competitors would just put their dogs back in their cars and go home rather than compete against us.
I would interpret the mans comment to mean he was trying to place your father and perhaps connect him to a known shoot. You will find on most shoots these days there are a good few lady handlers in both picking up and beating. So I don't think he would have been stereotyping you or your dogs.
With reference to working bred cockers, they are a handful even for the most experienced people to handle, unless you are lucky and have one Stella my friends working cocker, she is a gem! Working bred springers are slightly easier I reckon, but there is a saying that "a labrador enters the world half trained and a springer leaves it half trained!" So you can work out where a cocker would be in that.... lol