1978 National Amateur Field Champion
Field Champion and Amateur Field Champion
Kannonball Kate
(Note: The following was reprinted
from Volume XIV, Number 5, July 1978 of the Retriever
Field Trial News with permission.)
Nobody wanted the tiny, stringy runt of the
litter when breeders Eddie and Kay DeWitt finally sold
her to Buck Miller. Even then she bounded around from
place to place before Buck could get her down to California.
...Buck gave Kate an excellent start and right from
the first Kate's fantastic water work, drive and natural
marking ability impressed everyone who saw her. She
had 10 derby points when, at two moved into the Peter
Lane's home. Pete and Carrol had an idea then that Kate
was a dog that "could do it all," and her tractability
and eagerness to please quickly made her a prized part
of the Lane family.
Kate's excess energy and wild desire had now
begun to channel in the right direction. Pete ran a
few qualifyings to "get with the dog" but knew this
was going to be an Open dog, and that's what he worked
for. By the time she was three she had settled down,
making her FC and AFC. That year, 1975, she was the
youngest bitch at the Open National, completing seven
series. Kate and Pete have qualified for every Open
and National Amateur since.
In 1976, Kannonball Kate was High Point Open
and High Point Amateur dog with 63 points. In 1977 she
was High Point Open and High Point Amateur bitch with
83 points, winning two double headers. Kate was the
first winner of the Professional Retriever Trainers
Association Award and also won the Mahlon B. Wallace
Memorial Trophy for 1977. Not including this National
Amateur win, Kate has a lifetime total of 200 points.
She is very close to (bettering FC-AFC Tigathoe's Mainliner
Mariah's record of 254 points and) becoming high point
bitch of all time.
Peter likes to train Kate. "Kate is so tractable
and easy to train. She really tries to please you. She
has a tremendous desire for birds, and is always in
the water - even when you let her out to air she would
rather be in the water. She likes to work and runs in
training just like she runs in trials. It doesn't hurt
to let her sit for a couple of weeks, and I usually
give a month off in December, but Kate's not happy unless
she's working". ...
... Sitting in the Lane's study, across from
the plain glass fronted bookcase overflowing with silver,
club pins and other trophies, it was hard to imagine
the little dog, curled up on the sofa or stretched out
beside Peter's chair, as anything more than an affectionate,
easy going house dog. Except for the ears and eyes.
They were always moving; alert to a hand gesture, her
name in the conversation, the sound of a child outside,
a bug crawling on the floor. She doesn't miss much.
And at the National she never missed a thing.
Kate ended her field trial career with 410.5
All Age points. This total consisted of 173 points from
Open places and 237.5 were from her Amateur places.
After this article appeared in the RFTN, Kate qualified
for 5 more consecutive National Amateurs and was a Finalist
in 1981 and 1983. She qualified for three more National
Opens in 1979, 1980, and 1982. Kate also shined in the
National Open of 1977 where she was one of the Finalists.
Contributed to Working Retriever
Central! by Richard
Halstead, Lino Lakes, Minnesota.
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