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-- "Bill Tinnin Classic" a "Weekend with the LEGEND" hunt and show set for Oct.1st& (http://forums.ukcdogs.com/showthread.php?threadid=374696)


Posted by thedirtyrat on 09-07-2010 12:06 AM:

"Bill Tinnin Classic" a "Weekend with the LEGEND" hunt and show set for Oct.1st&

The Jerry Clower CHA will be hosting the annual "Bill Tinnin Classic" a "Weekend with the LEGEND" hunt and show October 1st and 2nd. Over-all show winner will receive a plaque/clock and a 50 lb. sack of Enhance. Over-all hunt winner will receive a plaque/clock and a 50 lb. sack of Enhance. High scoring dog of either night with plus points will be the "Bill Tinnin Classic Hunt Champion". You DO NOT have to hunt both nights. All cast winners with plus points will receive a 50 lb. sack of Enhance. If you are scratched the second night and you have a high score friday night you are still in the running. As you know our club house and the surrounding area was hit by an F-4 tornado that wiped out everything in its path for over 150 miles. Since then the club house has been restored. Come join us for this prestigous hunt as we get our feet back on the ground. Hope to see you there! JCCHA

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Posted by thedirtyrat1 on 09-07-2010 04:31 PM:

t

Top

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Posted by delta nightlife on 09-07-2010 05:40 PM:

i will be there jay

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Posted by thedirtyrat1 on 09-07-2010 05:47 PM:

Tt

Good. See u there.

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Posted by thedirtyrat1 on 09-07-2010 07:51 PM:

tt

Tt

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Posted by thedirtyrat on 09-10-2010 07:04 PM:

Bill Tinnin

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Posted by thedirtyrat on 09-10-2010 08:54 PM:

Bill Tinnin interveiw by Billy Johnson

A lot has changed in the Delta in the last 75 years. Farming has gone from using mules to three hundred horse power tractors guided by satellite technology. Kids have gone from shooting marbles and flying kites to using cell phones and video games. The deer population was only a fraction then of what it is now. But there is one thing that hasn't changed; Bill Tinnin is still hunting coons. In his lifetime he's seen the sport go from nearly nothing to being really big. Then it has gone back down again. Coon hunters are a special breed to start with. The heart of the sport is the dogs the hunter's raise. That relationship between a hunter and his dog's is what coon hunting is all about. I've heard Bill Tinnin's name in hunting circles all my life. I'd been waiting to meet him and it was worth the wait. It's been said that walking is good for your health. Walking the woods behind his dogs for 75 years has kept Mr. Tinnin is good shape. At the ripe old age of eighty-five he is still hunting. As a matter of fact he bagged a trophy ten point buck this past deer season. Mr. Tinnin has a sharp mind and he is a virtual walking encyclopedia when it comes to coon hunting. He was born in Inverness in 1924. His father raised bird dogs and coon dogs. He became interested in hunting as a young boy. "We mostly hunted possums to start with. Men worked for 50 cents a day during the depression and coon hides were worth a lot of money. People just about wiped the coons out. It wasn't until the late '40's that we got a good population of coons back in the Delta", Mr. Tinnin recalled. In the early days Mr. Tinnin could walk from Inverness and hunt most anywhere he wanted. Coons destroyed corn patches and stole chicken eggs and folks wanted you to hunt them then. But now it is a different story. "So much of the woods I hunted have been cleaned up and folks are real touchy about their hunting land. Now coon hunting has mostly died out around here and trophy deer hunting has taken over. There's really not much hardwoods left in our part of the Delta," Mr. Tinnin said. As a young man he hunted with a carbide light, a .22 rifle, and a axe. He'd put on a pair of hip boots and follow his dogs all night. In the '60's and '70's coon hunters started riding mules. Later four wheelers replaced mules. "Mules are a lot of trouble. You got to feed and water them and keep them up in a dry place. They take a lot of time to tend to," Mr. Tinnin remembered. Through the years coon hunters upgraded from the old carbide lights to the wheat lights that coal miners used. They are bright headlights with a wet cell rechargeable battery the hunters wear on their belt. Mr. Tinnin got the dealership on wheat lights and sold them all over the world. He sold $50,000 dollars worth of lights in one month in the early '80's. He's got letters from people from places like Brazil and Alaska that he sold lights to. He later designed a brighter light he sold called "The Tinnin Light". He has fond memories of his many friends and all the years they hunted together. "We made three TV shows for Mississippi Game and Fish Commission and on for Paul Ott. John Weathersby helped with the shows. He hunted with us, but liked to stay in the road alot. Chris Potter from Hollandale helped with on show. We did one on frog hunting, too," Mr. Tinnin said. In the '50's he started deer hunting at Catfish Point Hunting Club. They had a good turkey population that was being thinned by an over abundance of coons. Well in eleven nights Mr. Tinnin, his hunting buddies, and their dogs bagged one hundred and two coons. Mr. Tinnin raised deer dogs and ran them on Catfish Point. His scrapbooks are a virtual history of that club where he hunted nearly thirty years. He has many photos of his hunting buddies like Dr. Lewis Farr, and Pee Wee Horton, but it was one photo that really got my attention. It was a picture of a sign in the woods at Catfish Point that said Tinnin's Waterloo. It is a good picture and has a good story to go along with it. "Well, they got me good that time. We were always pulling tricks on each other. They put a stuffed deer and hide in a tree top where I was going to he hunting. I saw it and shot it. It looked so real," Mr. Tinnin laughing. It was alot of good people in that club and we had a lot of good times," Mr. Tinnin recalled. For a man who's spent his life raising dogs, Mr. Bill didn't hesitate answering the question of which one was his best dog. "It was a black and tan named Ben. That dog was the best I ever had. It got cancer and died when it was nine years old," he recalled. Mr. Tinnin's wife of sixty years Madine remembers his good dog's as well. "They were having a big water race for coon dogs up near Tupelo. Bill had a little dog named "Mighty Mite" that was a real good swimmer. The top prize was $50 dollars. Well, Bill's little dog won the prize. He was so proud and excited you'd have thought he'd won a million dollars," Mrs. Tinnin recalled. He and his partner Bill Bennett put on "coon-on-a-log" contests all over the country. It was good entertainment at fairs and field trials that people really enjoyed. "We had a guy from Ohio that would send us real big coons with some weighing up to 25 pounds. He'd send them down on the train. We'd use those in these contests. Your dog would have a minute to knock the coon off the log. We never made any money at it, but we had a lot of fun," Mr. Tinnin remembered. I had looked forward to meeting and interviewing Mr. Tinnin, but I was anxious to pick his brain as well. I was not disappointed. I've always been interested in nature and somebody that's hunted 75 years thoughts on that subject are of keen interest to me. "Well nature has a way of taking care of itself. Habitat changes and the animals change with it. I think everyone has the instinct to hunt. Some are just more interested in it than others. What man does effects nature. When catfish farming got big in the Delta, these birds came in here to feed on the catfish. Those birds like frogs, too, and they really cut down on the frog population in the Delta," Mr. Tinnin said. (Comorants) Flipping through all the articles that have been written about Bill Tinnin over the years made me realize that no one article could tell his story. It is enough material to write a book. There was one article in American Cooner magazine entitled "Legends of the Sport" that really portrayed his love of the sport. What is a legend in the hunting and fishing world? To me, a legend is a person who's passion is for that one particular thing that they do. It is a person who preserves the traditions of what they do and passes it down to the next generation. In Bill Tinnin's case it is many generations. It is a person who's earned the respect of his peers and hunting buddies. The Delta has produced many nationally known sportsmen who I consider to be legends. Dock Cavender was known for his crappie fishing. Tom Walsh and Herman Caillouet are known for winning the world duck calling championship in Stuttgart , Arkansas. Sonny Rich is known for his trap shooting. In the coon hunting world, Bill Tinnin is nationally known. He is a modest man that is thankful for the good health he's had to still be hunting at the age of 85. He's proud of the dogs he's raised, the freinds he's hunted with, and a lifetime of memories from thousands of nights running his dogs. In the words of the old timers, Bill Tinnin is much man. Anybody that can catch a falling coon with his bare hands ain't afraid of to much. Anybody that loves to hunt and fish can only hope and pray to one day be where Bill Tinnin is: still at it at the age of eighty-five years old.

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Posted by thedirtyrat1 on 09-29-2010 06:20 PM:

Hunt is this weekend! Be there!

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Posted by thedirtyrat1 on 07-15-2011 12:43 PM:

quote:
Originally posted by thedirtyrat1
Hunt is this weekend! Be there!
tt

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