History:
I've been a frequent viewer and posted to this board over the past and have found it very helpful and thank you all for your insight and suggestions. I would consider myself new to the sport of beagling and am in it strictly for hunting purposes(I've had my own dog for three years now). I've been around beagles all my life as my grandfather was an avvid rabbit hunter and have recently started with my own dogs after he passed away.
I currently have a three year old female which I bought as a pup and have trained myself. For hunting purposes I would call her an adequent dog with her major faults being rather slow(not always a bad thing and she does have different gears based on conditions) and she will not hark to other dogs which I think think this is due to to her being trained exclusively solo for her first 2-1/2 years. This spring I had her bred to my uncle's dog and the pups are now 10wks old and showing some real promise already, looks like I may have gotten good traits from both sides of the breeding.
Here are some questions I have as I train this new pup:
1. While my female listens well, she does not know the "down" command. I would like to improve this with the pup and am wondering what regiment to use to train this.

2. Anything I can do at this time with the female to improve harking to other dogs? The biggest obstacle I may have with this is other dogs I have to run with are of a faster speed and she doesn't keep up.

3. I have been exposed to a new friend through beagles who has a 1yr old female. She is EXTREMELY high strung and incredibly fast but her line control is horrible. I already know I can't and won't run this pup with her. She is a good jump dog but when running she swings wide(20-30yards) back and forth across the line and opens each time she crosses, never settling in and running steady. If she were mine I'd have culled by now but I can tell this person to do this. Any advise I can offer him on training to improve her running style?

Thanks again for all your advice
Brian Ott
Appleton, WI
P.S. There seems to be a bumper crop of rabbit here in NE WI this spring
