Kemble's Field
Winter Shoot Preparation Camp Two (All Breeds) - 9th to 13th November 2026
Winter Shoot Preparation Camp Two (All Breeds) - 9th to 13th November 2026
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If you would like to book individual shoot experience days, please click here.
The best way to cement your hunting, pointing and retriever training before going on an actual shoot day is to practice everything you’ve learned on live and freshly shot game.
Aimed at intermediate and advanced dogs, the focus will be on hunting and retrieving, and working with live game, building greater reliability in your gundog's behaviours along with increasing duration and distance.
Our Winter Shoot Preparation Camps are split into preparation days and shoot experience days.
The preparation days will look at ensuring you are well equipped with all the essential skills you need for the shoot days. The exact programme of activities will be tailored around the handlers and dogs booked on the camp but will likely include steadiness, stop whistle, picking cold game, retrieving over water and obstacles, hunting in different types of cover, as well as informing handlers about what to expect on a shoot, shoot etiquette, how to work in a beating or picking up line.
Our shoot experience days are run exactly like any other shoot day, but the Guns are there solely for the dog's benefit, allowing you to test your dog’s ability and control in a more relaxed environment than on a formal shoot. These days will challenge your dog and will also get you up to speed on how a driven shoot is run in the UK.
If you are booked on the full camp, you will be able to choose a beating or picking up role, or do a bit of both. If you would like to book individual shoot experience days, please click here.
For beating dogs and their handlers, this is a valuable opportunity to:
- Learn how to find and follow game scent in different types of cover
- Work as part of a group in a beating line
- Get used to multiple handlers, environmental distractions, and varying terrain
- Distinguish between whistles in a noisy environment
- Cope with tapping, and other unfamiliar noises such as walkie-talkies
- Get used to hearing multiple shots, without seeing anything fall
- Take instructions from the gamekeeper and adapt to changes
- Develop an understanding of the beating line’s role in driving birds over the Guns
For picking-up dogs and their handlers, it’s a chance to:
- Practice standing calmly behind the Gun line
- Develop steadiness to shot and patience over long periods
- Work without a guaranteed retrieve on every drive
- Watch other dogs retrieve game
- Retrieve warm and freshly shot game
- Watch, locate and collect runners
- Navigate water retrieves
- Sweep an area carefully for injured or fallen game
- Learn how to humanely dispatch injured game
- Develop an understanding of how birds fall and improve marking skills
Please note: these days are for intermediate and advanced dogs only. While our team will be on hand to answer questions, troubleshoot any issues you're having and offer support throughout the day, you will need to be confident in handling your dog independently (particularly on the shoot experience days), and your dog should already have the basic cues in place (such as recall, heelwork, stop, hunting and retrieving) even if they are not yet "perfect" or proofed around game or highly distracting environments.
Scenarios on the preparation days will be tailored to the group's needs, but on the shoot days, everything will be realistic and unscripted, just as they would be on a real shoot, and we cannot guarantee anything.
Our Shoot Preparation Camps, led by Helen, are suitable for:
- Those who think their gundog is ready to work on a shoot (beating, picking up, or rough shooting) but would like some experience in a similar environment before entering a formal setting.
- Handlers who would like to fine-tune their dog's behaviours in a shoot environment.
- All breeds of gundog, including retrievers, spaniels and HPRs, plus any crossbreeds or non-gundog breeds that will be worked on a shoot.
- Dogs which have already been introduced to shot and are not gun-shy.
- Handlers looking to take their Kennel Club Working Gundog Certificate on Game.
Our Shoot Preparation Camps are held at Kemble's Field in Charlton, near Evesham, Worcestershire.
On Wednesday evening, there will also be a group supper at a local pub. This is scheduled for 4.30 pm so we can leave straight from the training venue. This is a dog-friendly pub, and your dogs are welcome to sit with us in the restaurant area while we eat. There is a great menu of home cooked food.
The format for the Preparation Days is as follows:
- Timings vary depending on day, please see above.
- We will work through a full programme of shoot preparation such as
- Exposure to game
- Different shooting scenarios from rough shooting to walk-ups and driven
- Hunting and retrieving in challenging terrain including thick cover and cover crops
- Continuous exposure to shot, including shot gun
- Steadiness, stop whistle, heelwork, recall, directional handling, and more in a shoot-like environment
The format for the Shoot Experience Days is as follows:
- Arrival time is 8.30 am, with breakfast and refreshments provided on arrival prior to a briefing.
- There will be two or three drives before refreshments at elevenses, which will include game-based finger food and drinks.
- We will then go back out for another couple of drives, returning for a late game-based lunch at 3pm. This will include a debrief, aiming to finish around 4pm to 4:30 pm.
- Dogs and handlers will be split into beaters and pickers up and will get to experience everything these roles include on any standard British drive shoot.
- Game will include pheasant, and may include partridge and duck.
- There may also be the opportunity to experience water retrieving on the river.
- All handlers will be offered the chance to take home any game shot and assistance will be given on request as to how to prepare this for the table.
If you would like to book individual shoot experience days, please click here.
All dogs must have been exposed to shot before attending.
Not sure if the camp will be right for you and your dog? Please email hello@kemblesfield.co.uk
FAQs
What shall I bring for my dog?
For your dog you will need a limited slip lead, whistle, and a drying coat / towel for rest time.
You may also wish to bring with you a large quantity of high-value treats (something that your dog would not normally have as a meal, e.g cheese, sausage, cooked heart, liver, dried fish, garlic sausage, or chicken) or your dog's favourite reward.
What will I need for me?
Please remember to come dressed in appropriate shoot attire. Wear dark / green coloured clothes, waterproofs, and sturdy waterproof boots.
For the shoot experience days you will also need to bring a beating stick (optional), game carrier, priest, spare trousers for the end of the day, a vest or bag depending on your job.
Refreshments will be provided throughout the day, but you will need to bring your own lunch if it’s an all day event. You will be able to use our kitchen facilities including a microwave, toaster and fridge.
If you are booked onto a group shoot day experience you will be provided with breakfast, game-based finger food and drinks at elevenses, and a light game-based lunch at 4pm. Please let us know if you have any allergies, dietary requirements or preferences by emailing helen@kemblesfield.co.uk
I can no longer attend, what shall I do?
Please email hello@kemblesfield.co.uk as soon as you are aware you will be unable to make it. If you are cancelling on the day, please contact your instructor Helen (as well as emailing) on 07947 043330.
Please familiarise yourself with our cancellation policies before booking they can be found here: Terms of service
How do I get there?
Directions to Kemble's Field, Charlton, Worcestershire, WR10 3LQ.
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The postcode does not take you right to the door so please read the directions before setting off.
Follow Ryden Lane from the village of Charlton, drive past Whitehouse Farm on the left, through the national speed limit sign on the right-hand side, and then take the first track on the left. You will see a sign for Clicker Gundog. Drive down this track to the end and the entrance to the field is on the right-hand side. If you missed the track and reached the purple house you have gone too far, turn round and retrace your steps until you reach a track on the right-hand side, turn right here.
If you arrive early, the gate might still be locked. Please wait in the lane for your instructor to arrive.
Otherwise, please drive through the gates (and if they are closed, please close them again behind you) and park in the car park outside the building on the right.
Toilet facilities are in the building and will be open on arrival.
What do I do when I arrive?
After you have parked your vehicle, please come into the barn initially without your dog.
If it is a warm day, please cover your car first and open any doors / windows to ensure your dog is both secure but has ventilation. Dogs will not be expected to stay / wait in cars if it is hot and dangerous for them to do so.
If you have had a long journey, you are welcome to toilet your dog before coming into the barn. Please keep them on a lead as other training sessions might be in progress and keep to the edges of the field.
You MUST pick up all of your dog’s poo please, which must be bagged and put into the bins provided. Please supply your own poo bags and do not put any unbagged poo directly in the bin.
About Helen Phillips
Helen Phillips, the owner of Kemble’s Field, is a qualified teacher and an Animal Training Instructor (ATI) with the Animal Training & Behaviour Council (ABTC).
She taught a Canine Training and Behaviour Course at Warwickshire College at 2 levels for 6 years and was a business partner with Learning About Dogs in Gloucestershire for 10 years. She has a Distinction in the Certificate of Canine Training and Behaviour from Warwickshire College and holds the City and Guilds Certificate Level 5 in Further Education Teaching Stage 3 qualification.
She has achieved the Learning About Dogs Clicker Trainers Competency Assessment Programme (CAP) at levels 1, 2 and 3 with Distinction and is still an active assessor for the scheme.
During the 1990’s Helen instructed for the Evesham and District Dog Training Club and was pivotal in gaining the Club’s Kennel Club registration. She achieved the Kennel Club Good Citizens Dog Scheme (KCGDS) levels Bronze, Silver and Gold with her Hungarian Vizsla ‘Kemble’, who the field and business is currently named after. She also taught general life skills classes for several years at the club and taught all levels of the KCGCDS awards. During this time, she also took part in multiple demonstrations and appeared in the local paper advocating for the training of dogs using science-based and ethical strategies.
Alongside this Helen trained with Kay Laurence of Learning About Dogs for many years and taught a variety of the Clicker Training workshops at Wagmore Barn in Gloucestershire, where she was fortunate enough to have the pleasure of meeting and working alongside Karen Prior, Ken Ramirez and Jesus Rosalez Ruiz and the rest of the Clicker Expo teams. She was also honoured to present alongside Ken Ramirez and Susan Friedman.
Helen has been breeding Hungarian Vizslas since 1998 and spent a lifetime with dogs from crosses to Spaniels and HPRs, as a result, she has extensive understanding of living and working with hunting dogs. She now has the pleasure of enjoying a good day’s rough shooting with her dogs and the focus is on working on the small shoot she owns at Kemble’s Field. She currently shares with her husband Chris, two Hungarian Vizslas, Jack and Dibble and three Springer Spaniels, Wren, Teal and Lark. All dogs are engaged in working roles apart from Lark who is still enjoying the freedom of being a puppy. Helen has also achieved the Kennel Club Working Gundog Certificate on Dummies and on Game, with two breeds of dog HPR & Spaniel, she has competed in working tests and has participated in grouse counting. Currently all her dogs appear in the training video’s that are available through the membership of The Gundog Trainers Academy (GTA).
Helen's focus is on promoting the use of force free, positive reinforcement training techniques and strategies within all aspects of dog training and field sports in general. She has a strong ethical stance in respect of this and endeavors to promote this within the shooting field and is an advocate for encouraging pet owners with any breed of dog to explore their natural abilities and expression of natural behaviour for wellbeing.
Alongside Jules Morgan, she is also a Director of and designed The Gundog Trainers Academy Ltd (GTA), to meet the increasing demand for ethical gundog training with a robust qualification and assessment procedure. The GTA’s mission is to support, nurture and encourage high standards of ethical, science based, non-coercive and effective methods of training for gundogs. The GTA has just completed the rigorous assessment process and gained accreditation to the Animal Behaviour & Training Council (ABTC) and is now a Member Organisation as well as Ambassador Partner of the Pet Professional Guild (PPG).
She is a member of the Special Council for the Pet Professional Guild (PPG). Helen is an Instructor and Assessor at all levels for The Gundog Club an organisation that declared its force free policy in 2018 and she runs courses each year for all levels. Helen is also the author of the very popular ''Clicker Gundog'' book which draws on building a strong connection between dog and handler working as a team in the environment.
About Chris Phillips
Together with Helen, Chris manages the small shoot at Kemble's Field.
Chris is not only the game keeper, he is also the shoot captain and very talented chef.
It is thanks to Chris' hard work that the shoot experience days are made possible.
About Lynsey Moss
Lynsey Moss is a fully accredited gundog training instructor with the Gundog Trainers Academy and is one of only two instructors in the country to have achieved the GTA full accreditation on game as well as dummies.
At Kemble's Field, Lynsey manages the picking up team on our shoot experience days.
She herself has English Springer Spaniels which are trained as beating dogs and over a decade of experience working her own dogs, as well as teaching others.
Alongside the training, Lynsey is also a fully qualified veterinary physiotherapist with a BSc (hons) degree in Veterinary Physiotherapy. She is also registered with the National Association of Veterinary Physiotherapists and the Animal Health Professionals Register. Lynsey now shares the benefits of fitness and physiotherapy, providing extra insights, to keep working gundogs fit and healthy.