UKC Forums Pages (3): « 1 [2] 3 »
Show all 59 posts from this thread on one page

UKC Forums (http://forums.ukcdogs.com/index.php)
- UKC Coonhounds (http://forums.ukcdogs.com/forumdisplay.php?forumid=4)
-- lay up coon (dogs) (http://forums.ukcdogs.com/showthread.php?threadid=485461)


Posted by Redwood Hounds on 02-24-2012 04:18 AM:

My parents have a true layup dog. She's sadly not much of a track dog. But, she's never had to be. She will just kinda wonder off sit down, and bark treed. Shine above her and she will have a coon, she'll be sitting right under it. She typically doesn't even tree on a tree. Just stands around like a dog lost in the dark. First night we took her hunting we thought, "by god whats this idiot dog standing around babbling for"? Sure enough we found a coon above her. Treed 7 coon that night, none of them ever touched the ground, and none of the other dogs knew they existed. This was in an area we were lucky to tree one coon a weekend at.

I have a good "winding" dog, but I wouldn't call her a layup dog. Mostly because she doesn't run coon. But she is deadly accurate treeing grey fox. She will be back away from the tree, standing on her back legs, treeing on the scent coming down.

Here's the pedigree on that old layup dog. Sad part is she never bred her, and lets her just sit around in a kennel. The dog hasn't been hunted in about 4 years, and she won't sell her.

---------------------------------------- PR ROY'S JAP
-------------------- GRNITECH PR CHARLEY CREEK MAC
---------------------------------------- PR ROY'S LITTLE LADY
NITECH PR PAW PAW CR GUNNER
---------------------------------------- GRNITECH GRCH PR READ'S KY CLIPPER
-------------------- NITECH PR KEEN'S INDIANA JEWEL
---------------------------------------- PAW PAW CR DIXIE
PR INDIANA RITA (DOB 2001)
---------------------------------------- GRNITECH PR MINKLER'S KANSAS DANCER
--------------------NITECH PR TREE GRIPPIN RIP
---------------------------------------- GRNITECH PR CHARLES' CRICKET
PR TREE GRIPPIN KATE
---------------------------------------- GRNITECH GRCH PR HOUSE'S LIPPER
-------------------- PR LIPPER'S SPRING CREEK CRICKET
---------------------------------------- PR SPRING CREEK SUGAR

__________________
Cassandra Davis
UKC Bench Show Judge & Master of Hounds

REDWOOD'S TREEING WALKER COONHOUNDS
& LOUISIANA CATAHOULA LEOPARD DOGS
http://www.RedwoodCoonhounds.net/

NITECH CGRCH FCH GRCH 'PR' Redwood's All Night Aspen
(2014 #1 UKC Top Ten All-Breed Conformation Treeing Walker)
NITECH CCH GRFCH GRWCH GRCH 'PR' Redwood's Wild Gamble


Posted by l.lyle on 02-24-2012 04:41 AM:

quote:
Originally posted by Redwood Hounds
My parents have a true layup dog. She's sadly not much of a track dog. But, she's never had to be. She will just kinda wonder off sit down, and bark treed. Shine above her and she will have a coon, she'll be sitting right under it. She typically doesn't even tree on a tree. Just stands around like a dog lost in the dark. First night we took her hunting we thought, "by god whats this idiot dog standing around babbling for"? Sure enough we found a coon above her. Treed 7 coon that night, none of them ever touched the ground, and none of the other dogs knew they existed. This was in an area we were lucky to tree one coon a weekend at.

I have a good "winding" dog, but I wouldn't call her a layup dog. Mostly because she doesn't run coon. But she is deadly accurate treeing grey fox. She will be back away from the tree, standing on her back legs, treeing on the scent coming down.


I have two males that are full brothers. One of them does it regularly and the other never has once. The one that is good at it is a regular track and tree dog 9 times out of 10. On certain nights he might get two or three layups/winding anywhere on the place. There is one 10 acre patch of oaks on a high bluff That is his honey hole and I normally let him hunt it by himself . I think it has something to do with the way the air drops off that bluff that brings the scent down. If the fog is drifting in from the marsh it doesn't work.

I never thought of it before but that entire place gets burned off in the quail management that they do. Some days they cannot burn because the wind is too strong. That makes common sense. Somedays though they can't burn because the smoke might settle around the highways at night. That is determined by the Forestry Service. I bet they could pick out the best nights to use my layup dog. LOL


Posted by Glenn Wells on 02-24-2012 06:28 AM:

Yep Nocturnal Skipper was great at passing on the layup trait, even to lines that are not known to possess the talent. It sort of shook Jess Dickerson when I ask if Skipper showed the trait, ask how I knew about it, told him as I had bred his momma's grandmother and her mother had done it as well as her mother before it was a pretty good bet.
l.lyle - you use the wind and temp to hunt if you are hunting layups, If it is hot, turn loose up high like on ridge with wind coming toward dog. If Temp is dropping sort of fast you turn loose lowest point, the air is coming down and he will be able to hunt out a good area without even taking a step.

__________________
D. Glenn Wells, Jr.
UKC MOH


Posted by l.lyle on 02-24-2012 08:33 AM:

quote:
Originally posted by Glenn Wells
Yep Nocturnal Skipper was great at passing on the layup trait, even to lines that are not known to possess the talent. It sort of shook Jess Dickerson when I ask if Skipper showed the trait, ask how I knew about it, told him as I had bred his momma's grandmother and her mother had done it as well as her mother before it was a pretty good bet.
l.lyle - you use the wind and temp to hunt if you are hunting layups, If it is hot, turn loose up high like on ridge with wind coming toward dog. If Temp is dropping sort of fast you turn loose lowest point, the air is coming down and he will be able to hunt out a good area without even taking a step.



LOL The bluff I am talking about is 15 feet high . Once you get on top you can go for miles at about a foot drop per mile and if you get to the bottom you can go for miles and not change over an inch. But it sounds Good! LOL Seems like 99% of the time if I shoot a coon out standing on the top of that 15 foot high bluff the coon will hit at the top edge and go rolling down the hill, which means I got to go down there and get him. On the way up my boots gets to slipping and I got to grab a bush toting a coon and a rifle, to help me up. By the time I cling my way all the way up I am give slap out and I wonder to myself ? How in the world do those Hillbillies do it? I had a mountain cur one time that loved to fetch them out. she wasn't much of a coondog but I fed her for fetching more than anything. She died. I don't like to have to ever use a leash on a dog when I am hunting but if I get to the bottom of the hill I'll leash up whatever dog I figure will pull. Guess what? NOT. He liable to snatch you back down the hill just as you get to the top. It's like leaving a barking dog in the box when you go to a tree figureing he will bark and call you out. BS. He will bark his stupid head off till you need hin to then he will for sure shut up. That is my experience, what's yours?


Posted by Tully on 02-24-2012 12:13 PM:

quote:
Originally posted by l.lyle
LOL The bluff I am talking about is 15 feet high . Once you get on top you can go for miles at about a foot drop per mile and if you get to the bottom you can go for miles and not change over an inch. But it sounds Good! LOL Seems like 99% of the time if I shoot a coon out standing on the top of that 15 foot high bluff the coon will hit at the top edge and go rolling down the hill, which means I got to go down there and get him. On the way up my boots gets to slipping and I got to grab a bush toting a coon and a rifle, to help me up. By the time I cling my way all the way up I am give slap out and I wonder to myself ? How in the world do those Hillbillies do it? I had a mountain cur one time that loved to fetch them out. she wasn't much of a coondog but I fed her for fetching more than anything. She died. I don't like to have to ever use a leash on a dog when I am hunting but if I get to the bottom of the hill I'll leash up whatever dog I figure will pull. Guess what? NOT. He liable to snatch you back down the hill just as you get to the top. It's like leaving a barking dog in the box when you go to a tree figureing he will bark and call you out. BS. He will bark his stupid head off till you need hin to then he will for sure shut up. That is my experience, what's yours?


I'd like to see ANYWHERE where there is no more than a foot difference in elevation change in a mile LOL! 90% of people have twice that in their driveway!

__________________
It's just a game!
Tully Beeghly
Liscomb, IA

Grnitech Grch4 $KC Ch Sky's Bawlin' Blue Rocket
Rocket's Dowd Creed Wack
Emma's Blue Power Amigo
Ch Rocket's T&T Gnarly Blue Smash
00 Dowd Creek Wack
Rocket's Dowd Creek Lil Deuce

641-352-0706


Posted by chuck west on 11-26-2012 04:14 PM:

Btt ,,Good posts .

__________________
Gold Life member of G.P.A.A. #257936
Member of The Lost Dutchman's Mining Association #02890729


Posted by Dan D. on 11-26-2012 06:52 PM:

Ive had a few

I hunt black dogs and used to have a female that was exceptional at layups, would also run cold tracks hot tracks it didnt matter and she was open mouthed. she had an uncanny ability of just fallin treed and other dogs didnt know what the heck was goin on. she was deadly accurate. her son also had the ability even better all round dog than she was and his son at 8 mths old would make guys with nt ch. and gr nt ch scratch their heads cause their dogs wouldnt tree with a pup. these dogs also alot of times would be running track and come in to a tree locating from 20 to 30 yards and have the coon. tryin to get some of that back but the young dog got killed on road at 15 mths old and dad and grandma had already died to.

__________________
Doherty's Northern Nights Black & Tans
(815) 291-7129


Posted by chuck west on 11-26-2012 06:58 PM:

Mr. Dan D. knows about those layup dogs,, Once you've owned one you want another,,Man they are a fun dog to hunt ,,,lol

__________________
Gold Life member of G.P.A.A. #257936
Member of The Lost Dutchman's Mining Association #02890729


Posted by jculler8 on 11-27-2012 04:53 AM:

Re: big difference

quote:
Originally posted by prostockpat
a lay up dog does NOT check trees!!!

layup dog; can 'wind' the coon with his head off the ground.the scent is in the air not on the tree!!

'tree checker'; is not a lay up dog.to me a tree checker is a lazy hound that doesn't want to go deep or work hard to find a track.so they check trees hoping to get lucky.50% accurate,even worse when bores are rutting.
jmo



I have seen dogs use trees to be "up on the wind" in the woods. Sometimes people mistak that for "checking trees"...

__________________
OAKS POINT KENNELS

HOME OF

PKC CH GRNITECH GRCH 'PR' OAKS POINT COON BUSTIN' BELLE HTX 2013 UKC Top 100 (May 2006-January 2017)

'PR' OAKS POINT STRIKE-EM OUT BEAU (May 2006-June 2016)

PKC CH NITECH GRCH 'PR' COON BUSTIN' WHITE STUFF

CH 'PR' GOLD RUSH EXPO

'PR' BLACK KNIGHT'S BALU JETTA (May 2013-October 2015)

CH 'PR' CHERRY CREEK XBOX 2016 Treeing Walker Days King of Show


Posted by Two Toes on 11-27-2012 06:01 PM:

Their around........Them kinda dawgs ~

__________________
"Quality not Quantity & hunt what you breed"~"IF you don't, please don't breed what you "DON'T" hunt" ~"If their not good enough for you they sure as tootin ain't good 'nuff for us" ~


Posted by blackflagginit on 11-27-2012 11:05 PM:

I have walked behind a few of them........i owned 5 different dogs sired by Blue Boy Ten, who was the best reproducer i ever saw when it came to TRUE layup dogs (not silent dogs who just get treed, but TRUE layup dogs)

Those dogs would walk through the woods on hind legs winding coon like bird dogs.......and were deadly accurate at picking the right tree.


the absolute BEST i ever saw at it........the definition of a TRUE LAYUP DOG......lives in virginia atm

her name is NTCH Ozarks Rebel Battle Cry, and i have seen her slam hundreds of layups most others didnt even know were in the woods.


Posted by jimmywayne on 12-22-2012 03:42 AM:

T

__________________
jimmywayne


Posted by iforce on 12-29-2012 04:17 AM:

Grntch grch pkc ch buck fork dollar London ky is very good at this.i mean very good.

__________________
TEAM DOLLAR
Dollar's bank roll


Posted by headless01 on 12-29-2012 03:36 PM:

quote:
Originally posted by iforce
Grntch grch pkc ch buck fork dollar London ky is very good at this.i mean very good.
will he open any on ground before he tree's a lay up? just wondering.


Posted by iforce on 12-30-2012 12:54 AM:

No, locate and change over to tree, very impressive when he does it

__________________
TEAM DOLLAR
Dollar's bank roll


Posted by bluecole on 12-30-2012 01:00 AM:

i got got a female that many have seen get turned loose behind other dogs and tree coon,that dont mean i think she's a lay-up artist or nothing but she can tree em when others cant smell em.i think the world of her..!


Posted by jimmywayne on 12-30-2012 03:59 AM:

and they do it behind some petty good dogs

__________________
jimmywayne


Posted by Dirtdevil on 12-30-2012 04:28 AM:

How can so many people be an authority on something they can't even touch , taste , see , smell or hear ? Coon scent might as well be fairy dust if we are gonna talk about it first person.

Our experience with scent and trailing is all second hand and gained from of all people ... a dog !


Some dogs tree without trailing , was their scent on the tree or
not ? Of course when our dog does something neat we want to assume the situation is more impressive than it really is.

If the dog is winding actually scent from a live coon , then it's fresh and other dogs can smell fresh coon , who knows why they don't tree em'. But that argument that dogs wind layup coon and other dogs can't smell them is silly ... of course a poodle could smell fresh scent coming from a live coon just a few dozen feet away ... yall ever stop to really think about what you're saying.

I don't think it boils down to anything but there are top notch dogs that were trained natural and have experience and alot of brains and they learn to tree coon in all kinds of conditions .... and some dogs are more picky about how they like their coon and how smart they are and how much work they wanna put into it.

But telling me that a dog that winds the body scent of a live coon a few feet away is smelling something other dogs can't .... well , that's just ego talking .... and we will never know what it smells like or why some dogs do it and some don't .... we are just standing their guessing .


Posted by chuck west on 12-30-2012 04:38 AM:

Say What ,,lol

__________________
Gold Life member of G.P.A.A. #257936
Member of The Lost Dutchman's Mining Association #02890729


Posted by prostockpat on 12-30-2012 03:26 PM:

???

big difference in a "tree checker" and a true"layup dog".


Posted by JimmySeward on 12-30-2012 04:21 PM:

lay up

back in the 80s my dad had a hammer bred bluetick that could tree lay up coons we know that to because weve seen it several times be walkin in a place to hunt and see a coon in a tree and billyboy would go crazy and wwe had a old redtick that could tree lay ups too but thats been a long time ago

__________________
piney creek blueticks
pr piney creek janes addiction
pr maddog ar blue smoke 2
nitech pr hoss smoking bullet has 2 wins towards grnite $1449.38 won in pkc and proud member of team maddog


Posted by Plott55 on 12-30-2012 06:09 PM:

Lay up dogs

Come on guys!!! Bear hunters have used lay-up dogs for years!!!! They call them RIG dogs. They ride down the road and the dog picks up scent from both sides

The Ole PlottMan


Posted by chuck west on 12-30-2012 06:24 PM:

Re: Lay up dogs

quote:
Originally posted by Plott55
Come on guys!!! Bear hunters have used lay-up dogs for years!!!! They call them RIG dogs. They ride down the road and the dog picks up scent from both sides

The Ole PlottMan

Finally a true understanding Man about Layup/Wind Scenting ability of hounds ,,,,great post!

__________________
Gold Life member of G.P.A.A. #257936
Member of The Lost Dutchman's Mining Association #02890729


Posted by blackflagginit on 12-31-2012 01:40 PM:

quote:
Originally posted by Dirtdevil
How can so many people be an authority on something they can't even touch , taste , see , smell or hear ? Coon scent might as well be fairy dust if we are gonna talk about it first person.

Our experience with scent and trailing is all second hand and gained from of all people ... a dog !


Some dogs tree without trailing , was their scent on the tree or
not ? Of course when our dog does something neat we want to assume the situation is more impressive than it really is.

If the dog is winding actually scent from a live coon , then it's fresh and other dogs can smell fresh coon , who knows why they don't tree em'. But that argument that dogs wind layup coon and other dogs can't smell them is silly ... of course a poodle could smell fresh scent coming from a live coon just a few dozen feet away ... yall ever stop to really think about what you're saying.

I don't think it boils down to anything but there are top notch dogs that were trained natural and have experience and alot of brains and they learn to tree coon in all kinds of conditions .... and some dogs are more picky about how they like their coon and how smart they are and how much work they wanna put into it.

But telling me that a dog that winds the body scent of a live coon a few feet away is smelling something other dogs can't .... well , that's just ego talking .... and we will never know what it smells like or why some dogs do it and some don't .... we are just standing their guessing .




go back to kindergarden and when your a big boy and know what your talking about.....then comment.

the difference isnt that some dogs can smell the body scent and some cant, its that some CHOSE (through breeding) too. some dogs locate, track, and tree by body scent, and then there are still some walkie talkies who track and tree by foot scent ( the 2 are very different). its also usualy the difference between a dog who trees where a coon IS and a dog who trees where one WAS.


Posted by Dirtdevil on 12-31-2012 01:45 PM:

Most good layup dogs are good cold trailing dogs too ... we'll never know what scent dogs are smelling , or how cold something is or if some dogs can't smell what another is treeing on or not .... it's out of our perception.


When a dog decides to wind a coon from body scent , it's fresh scent that the dog next to him that isn't treeing on can smell too ... just not all dogs will tree on it .


Talking about experience or facts is fine , but the layup dog debates are some of the silliest there are ... everyone brags up some dog they had like no other dog or hunter could know what they are talking about ... and then starts talking about coon scent like they can smell what the dog smells.


All times are GMT. The time now is 09:59 AM. Pages (3): « 1 [2] 3 »
Show all 59 posts from this thread on one page

Powered by: vBulletin Version 2.3.0
Copyright © Jelsoft Enterprises Limited 2000 - 2002.
Copyright 2003-2020, United Kennel Club