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Posted by Cory Highfill on 10-09-2015 06:01 AM:

Stupid Adventures...

Finally got the kid in bed at a decent hour and decided to to boat hunt a little. First coon was a giant boar that didn't wanna climb and the young dogs ran him half a mile before they caught him on a rock jetty. They had a running fight but finally stretched him before I got there and that's where things got sketchy...
When I handled the dogs, one gyp was missing her tracking collar. The Garmin showed it to be 5-6 feet off the bank, in what I found out was about chin deep water. I put up the dogs, peeled off and eased in. Took about twenty minutes feeling around with my toes before I touched the collar strap.
It occurred to me when I went under to gather my collar that swimming naked, in October, alone, in the Arkansas River, might not be the wisest thing I've ever done...


Posted by mnb&t on 10-09-2015 08:08 AM:

that is fricking awesome and hilarious!!! i hunt almost every way possible but never boat hunted, sounds like fun (aside from cold swim)....

how cold tonight? was 45 degrees for low i seen in northern nebraska hunting tonight.

assuming your dogs strike off boat, im wondering how travelling slow like affects how well dogs strike but im sure a lot of tracks are coon that came to water.

i rig hunt a lot from truck or utv and always hear guys bragging about driving so fast and have dogs strike a track. in my experiences dogs that can strike, do better at decent rate of speed. i know vehicle moving fast swirls scent around and good strike dogs can pick it up even from great distance from road.

congrats on catch but remember a dang tracking collar isnt worth drowning over!!!

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Posted by skeets on 10-09-2015 08:22 AM:

cory i feel your pain buddy,i went under water tonight with my tracker on my back and got it soaking wet.i dont know how i got out of that deep water cause i cant swim,but i started tharshing around until i got to the bank. ive had that tracker for over 20 years but i could care less if its messed up,iam just proud iam able to sit here and type, and my dog is somewhere out there right now so in the morning iam going back and see if i can call him out.


Posted by stlavsa on 10-09-2015 12:20 PM:

Boat hunting huh? How true is it about when you hear the stories about boar coon intentionally drowning dogs? I've had people swear to me stories that they lost dogs that way.

That the coon lures the dog into the water and climbs on its back and drowns it.

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Posted by Cory Highfill on 10-10-2015 04:58 AM:

Boat hunting is the only way to travel! Especially with a young dog. Hunting islands where you have absolute control of the dog's whereabouts is worth a lot these days when everyone seems to shoot first and asks questions later.

It wasn't too cold, air temp was about 70, water was probably low-mid 60s.
Don't know about intentionally luring a dog to water, but a coon that they've run down knows his chances are better in the water. The dogs were fighting this one in the water and that's how she lost her collar. Seen them take to water pretty regular when boat hunting.

As far as striking out of the boat, I've had a few dogs with a real talent for it. Seems like if you're not careful though, you'll get a box-barking habit started. With young dogs, I'll usually cruise the bank and spot a coon, then back down the bank a ways and send toward it. As the pups get older, I'll send them farther and farther from where I've spotted the coon. Seems like it really helps a pup to fire off the chain. Dogs I hunt this way start looking for water (streams, creeks, etc.) when cast on dry ground too.


Posted by Rip on 10-10-2015 05:36 AM:

I remember one night a dog named Trudy had a coon treed across the creek, over chest deep and below zero. I had to strip off and swim the creek to get the dog. Then I dried off with a shirt and put the rest of my cloths on. The shirt froze in about two minutes LOL.

It was cold but we got the dogs back.

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Posted by Dave Richards on 10-10-2015 06:16 PM:

Rip

Rip-Just checking to see if you are the doctor who went to school at ETSU? II kinda lost track of your location. If this is the hunting doctor I am glad to see you are still hunting. Sorry about highjacking your post Cory-I just wanted to check on Rip.

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Posted by jockobluetick on 10-10-2015 07:03 PM:

quote:
Originally posted by Rip
I remember one night a dog named Trudy had a coon treed across the creek, over chest deep and below zero. I had to strip off and swim the creek to get the dog. Then I dried off with a shirt and put the rest of my cloths on. The shirt froze in about two minutes LOL.

It was cold but we got the dogs back.


Chess deap water freeze at zero dagrees

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blue are true


Posted by croatankid on 10-10-2015 07:24 PM:

quote:
Originally posted by skeets
cory i feel your pain buddy,i went under water tonight with my tracker on my back and got it soaking wet.i dont know how i got out of that deep water cause i cant swim,but i started tharshing around until i got to the bank. ive had that tracker for over 20 years but i could care less if its messed up,iam just proud iam able to sit here and type, and my dog is somewhere out there right now so in the morning iam going back and see if i can call him out.

I left my dog in the woods a couple of nights ago. She just didn't want to come out for some reason and I just couldn't bring myself to strip, wade 5ft water with my pack over my head. So I went home and got her the next day when she decided she'd rather sleep in the big bed.

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Posted by almost blue on 10-11-2015 12:16 AM:

When the dog is in deep water coon gets on the only thing above water and can drown your dog.


Posted by sleepy head on 10-11-2015 01:15 AM:

I had a stupid adventure 4 yr ago when the dogs crossed a frozen creek and were working a nasty track on the road, I got nervous and thought the ice would hold me, it didn't and I went in up to my neck, was able to use rifle to help get out. It was around 15*, when I got around dogs were treed and cloths were frozen solid.


Posted by Cory Highfill on 10-11-2015 03:16 AM:

If you hunt a great deal, and have sense enough to realize it, you put your life on the line pretty regularly. I have what most would call a pretty dangerous job, but almost all of my brushes with the hearafter have came while coonhunting. Almost hung myself via a squaller lanyard one night climbing a tree. Went in a stump hole one night and would still be there if I hadn't had a buddy there to pull me out. I've fallen off bluffs, been in scrapes with hogs, got dogs shot, been attacked by a meth-head, had a tree nearly fall on me, fell out of trees, crashed canoes, and even got hit by a truck while coonhunting.

I should write a book sometime.


Posted by croatankid on 10-11-2015 03:43 AM:

It's one thing to do something risky you're alone, that's dangerous. If you have someone with you, you can afford to be a little more careless.

__________________
happiness is: being saved by the grace of GOD! i'm happy and hope you are too!


Posted by dchartt on 10-11-2015 04:38 AM:

quote:
Originally posted by stlavsa
Boat hunting huh? How true is it about when you hear the stories about boar coon intentionally drowning dogs? I've had people swear to me stories that they lost dogs that way.

That the coon lures the dog into the water and climbs on its back and drowns it.



As far as luring the dog to water thats a little far fetched
When the dog catches the coon in the water the coon will grab onto the dogs kneck and the dog will have a hard time keepin his head above water and can drown, ive seen it happen but never had one drown luckily they got to the bank quick enough to not drown

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Posted by Rip on 10-11-2015 07:11 AM:

quote:
Originally posted by jockobluetick
Chess deap water freeze at zero dagrees


Ummm not when it is running at 20 miles per hour bud. The creek was rolling

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Let's go huntin


Posted by Rip on 10-11-2015 07:14 AM:

Re: Rip

quote:
Originally posted by Dave Richards
Rip-Just checking to see if you are the doctor who went to school at ETSU? II kinda lost track of your location. If this is the hunting doctor I am glad to see you are still hunting. Sorry about highjacking your post Cory-I just wanted to check on Rip.


Yep it's me. I don't get to hunt much but I have a cousin that keeps my dogs hunted up. Just too much work.

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