FIELD REPORT — MURDOCK: TRANSITIONAL DEVELOPMENT BETWEEN SOLO RANGE...

June 2, 2026 Comments Off on Field Report: Larsen – The First Registered Full Blood Elkhound of the Kamia Full Blood Registry Client Stories & Field Reports

Field Report: Larsen – The First Registered Full Blood Elkhound of the Kamia Full Blood Registry

Kayley × ARCO — Brother to Murdock and Sola Stewardship Placement: Pat & Craig

Larsen stands as a milestone in the Kamia program—the first officially registered Full Blood Elkhound under the new Kamia Full Blood Registry. His placement with Pat and Craig marks not only the continuation of the Kayley–ARCO lineage but also the beginning of the next chapter in the restoration of the ancient Elkhound working architecture.

From the moment he left the northern Alberta facility, Larsen demonstrated the hallmark traits of the Full Blood line: composure, adaptability, handler focus, and instinctive environmental awareness.

Pat and Craig travel out from Ontario to get Larsen, what an exciting time, so happy for them.

Travel & First Impressions

Pat and Craig’s first message said it all:

“Larsen traveled like a Rock Star.”

That is the Full Blood temperament—calm under transition, confident in new environments, and grounded in the internal stability inherited from both Kayley’s maternal dynasty and ARCO’s old-male architecture.

Larsen and Pat, bonded instantly, exceptional handler focus behavioral and instinctive.

Within hours of arrival:

“Larsen has bonded to Pat already. Amazing to see in such a young pup. This is day one!”

This early bonding response is a signature of the Kamia Full Bloods. They imprint to their stewardship handlers with remarkable clarity, forming a working partnership rather than a dependency. It is the same trait seen in Murdock and Sola—deep instinctive alignment with their humans from the outset.

Craig and Larsen, best pals immediately. Can’t beat the great energy bond they have with Larsen.

Off‑Leash Range & Early Field Work

Larsen is already hiking off leash with Pat and Craig, maintaining a natural working range—right with them, not drifting, not wandering, not distracted. This is the ancient perimeter‑keeping instinct functioning exactly as designed.

Pat and Larsen, off leash walk around the campground. Exceptional behavior from such a young rascal.

They report:

  • Phenomenal hiking companion already
  • Attentive to both handlers
  • Reading terrain and staying in correct proximity

On his very first night, a group of Wapiti (Elk) came into camp to check him out. That is a rare and telling moment—wild ungulates recognize the presence of a true Elkhound. Larsen held his composure, demonstrating the calm, steady presence that defines the Full Blood temperament.

You can’t make this up, divine intervention for certain. Some Elk come by to say hello to Larsen, the ancient ungulate hunter from way back!

Leash Work & Physical Development

Pat and Craig took him out for a short structured walk:

“Took Larsen out on the trail and he was really good walking on the leash. It was about 20 minutes and he was keeping up, taking the hills with no problems.”

At roughly 7.5 kg, Larsen is developing exactly on schedule—strong, coordinated, and athletic. His hill work and gait stability reflect the ARCO–Kayley biomechanics: deep chest, correct shoulder layback, and the efficient drive that allows these dogs to cover ground effortlessly.

Larsen doing excellent on leash work as well.

Trainability & Cognitive Architecture

One of the most telling comments from Pat and Craig:

“Amazed how trainable he is as such a young pup, didn’t have the same experience with mals. The difference good breeding and genetics make.”

This is the Full Blood cognitive profile—clarity, retention, and early pattern acquisition. These pups do not require repetition-heavy training. They observe, internalize, and execute. The genetic architecture behind this comes from:

  • Kayley’s maternal intelligence line
  • ARCO’s old-male mentorship lineage
  • The multi-generation restoration of instinctive working cognition

Larsen is demonstrating all of it.

Larsen, few days before he left, he was already waiting for Pat and Craig to arrive. He knew, his handlers were coming.

Summary

Larsen is a flagship example of what the Kamia Full Blood Registry represents:

  • Stable temperament
  • Immediate handler bonding
  • Correct off‑leash range
  • Environmental awareness and composure
  • Strong physical development
  • High trainability and cognitive clarity

Pat and Craig are doing an excellent job stewarding him, and Larsen is responding exactly as a Full Blood Elkhound should—instinctive, capable, and aligned with his handlers from day one. A huge Thank You to Pat and Craig for the great life Larsen will have with them.

Larsen is focused, paying attention, keeping and eye on Pat, this is a great Full Blood Elkhound male. No Doubt About it Total Rock Star!