I read Wolters' books, taking into account the era they were written, and enjoyed them tremendously. His love for dogs clearly shines through all his writings. Blending his information with my own regular dog training skills got me started. His books make you believe an amatuer can train a decent retriever, and have fun doing it. Since then I've gotten the Lardy videos and others, plus practically every single book written on training hunting retrievers. The "lingo" made much of the newer stuff hard to understand. You are just expected to know what they are talking about. Poison birds and many other terms made no sense in the beginning. James Spencer's writings helped me decode much of the retriever language. Again, perhaps not the best trainer, but very beginner friendly and inspiring. I believe there is a place for all the books.The more you read, the more discerning you become about what will work for you, and your dog. We recently had our young pup at very small club training day. Pup is collar conditioned, but has not yet been FF. He was doing quite well in new setting, running much longer marks through heavier cover than he is used to. He needed encouragement on recall with his last return, responded well to come-in whistle with collar reinforcement. Then he dropped that last bird at my feet rather than delivering to hand. I realized I had pushed him a bit too much, showing him off, and packed him up. He is collar conditioned, but not yet FF. A club member that started the sport the same year I did, told me that was "all wrong" and "you must FF before CC, Lardy says so" . I told him there are no rules to training and we were doing just fine. I was polite enough not to point out that he had pulled his first pup out of HT at the started/junior level for severe "sticking"(see now I know the lingo), and it never misses a chance to run a bank. My dog of the same age, our current pup's mother, is a UKC titled Seasoned hunter, with AKC senior passes. So, my take on books and videos...read them all. Learn what you can from each- about the standards required, and how to teach dogs. You can "pick a program", to use the most oft written phrase on RTF, but don't follow it blindly. A program ensures skills are taught sequentially, and nothing important is missed. Programs may differ slightly, but there are only so many skills to be taught, and there are only so many basic methods of educating dogs. So unlike my fellow club member, I won't trash anyone with a different plan. I think someone can still take a dog they love, read Wolters' books, and have fun training themselves a hunting dog. If you want a competitive FT dog, that is another matter all together. Even a top level HT dog now needs more than just Wolters, the games have changed so much.
If someone has never, ever, used a computer, you don't just hand them a Windows8 manual. You give them a book descibing what a computer is, and how it functions. I equate Wolters' books to that introductory step. You'll be able to use computer as a word processor and send email. You need more resources to do Excel spreadsheets or Powerpoint presentations.