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-- i want to hear from the trainers (http://forums.ukcdogs.com/showthread.php?threadid=928376422)
i want to hear from the trainers
Just out if curiosity i want to know how the big winning dogs started out did they know the dog was amazing when it was under a year old? Or did it take them longer ti go on to make a dog? Or did some appear to be culls at a young age and went on to other people to make world winners?
I too would like to hear how most got started. I think I read an article one time that said Mr. Clean was a late starter but Im sure those trainers can let us know for sure.
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Clay Hoskins
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i think jeff travis wasnt happy with homer early on just kept on him till he turned the crank.
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thats great that he didnt take him out back lol....
I don't consider myself really a trainer but some of the better dogs I have started were late starters
quote:I must have a goodun here now then.
Originally posted by patches9452
I don't consider myself really a trainer but some of the better dogs I have started were late starters
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Michael Ghorley
ive seen some of the best start both ways........some start early and just seem to have been born finished.......and some who were totally uninterested one day just explode and have all the talent in the world.
as a trainer ive also seen some "early starters" explode and go stupid.....or look like a million in a cast type situation and we totally worthless when hunted alone...and ive seen some "late starters" do the same or worse yet just never start.
what the greats always seemed to have to me was two fold.
1) they had a hook or "unusual special talent" in some form that showed early even if the rest of there skills wasnt so glitzy...and they were always VERY predictable from early on.....
2) they thrived on being pushed......ie the harder they were hunted the better they looked......again even if all the tools weren't in the toolbox yet
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when policemen ignore the law, then there isn't any law. there's just a fight for survival.
*billy jack
It is well that war is so terrible, otherwise we should grow too fond of it.
Robert E. Lee
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I can't train one but I can tell you how to. lol
I think the good trainers know what is acceptable and not acceptable behavior. In other words they have enough experience to know if the dog has the natural ability to make it and when it does make it will they have the qualities to make him a winner. In other words if your hunting a pup and look into his eyes and don't see something you can work with, then maybe you should move on.
I woke up this morning thinking about Divers and how they are graded due to the difficulty of the DIVE. Well we as trainers have a difficulty factor figured into our dog training. You need to realize this and if the difficulty factor is too high due to your environment then somewhere else the dog stands a chance.
What contributes to your difficulty factor is the dog and its natural ability. Your environment and the time you have to train a dog. Your experience with how to correct a dog as soon as some little thing starts to go wrong in the training process.
I will just take one thing. There is no way in the world I can correct a slick treeing dog and do a GOOD job of it.
By the time I chop my way through these woods to get to the dog it has already been treed a long time. Then these trees are so thick by the time you actually determine if it has a coon you have already spent too much time with your dog at the tree. Then you have to a brave soul to be in the middle of a bad swamp and to whip a dog off the tree only to know he is only going deeper into hell and you have to follow.
Another example on difficulty factor. Just Tuesday night I had a dog 12 months old fall into the swamp on a hot track and do a nice job treeing. We shot out the coon and we then decided to lay the coon at the base of the tree, walk her 30 seconds not a minute due to how bad the swamp was and send her on, then come back for the coon. We did just that and she left there looking for another one like a seasoned pro. Then shortly she got struck and had another track going. Problem was it was a DEER. The good news is I can fix that and it really didn't give me much heartburn. The difficulty factor on me fixing a deer running problem is a lot lower than a slick treeing problem down here.
Speaking of Jeff, I have never met him but from reading the boards you have to admire his determination. I started a little saying when faced with a decision on training a dog. "What would Jeff do"
quote:
Originally posted by blackflagginit
ive seen some of the best start both ways........some start early and just seem to have been born finished.......and some who were totally uninterested one day just explode and have all the talent in the world.
as a trainer ive also seen some "early starters" explode and go stupid.....or look like a million in a cast type situation and we totally worthless when hunted alone...and ive seen some "late starters" do the same or worse yet just never start.
what the greats always seemed to have to me was two fold.
1) they had a hook or "unusual special talent" in some form that showed early even if the rest of there skills wasnt so glitzy...and they were always VERY predictable from early on.....
2) they thrived on being pushed......ie the harder they were hunted the better they looked......again even if all the tools weren't in the toolbox yet
What do u consider Late ??
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Country Boy Can Survive
Anderson County Coon Club
Lance White
865-919-7234
My best dog I bought at 5 yrs old (Walker Male) and from what iv been told my multiple people is that he was running and treeing solo at 6 months old. The best dog iv ever started, and kept to finish never treed her own coon until she was 16 months old. The reasons I kept her is that she never did anything great but she always did the small things rite which gave me patience with her. Iv started a lot of dogs from people (All Breeds) and from what iv seen most of them start treeing solo around 11-16 mo old.
quote:locating ability just knowing a coon is there. thats a biggie! and a mouth you can hear that crack if u kno what i mean. yo can do a lot with a pup thats got these two things. but you cant just coon hunt a pup like this.
Originally posted by dchartt
What do you consider unusual or special talents in pups?
imo
in my opinion anything after two is for sure a late starter but im not at all saying thats a bad thing at all most of the time its not the dogs fault just lack of time in the woods but i dont believe a dog is in its prime till its four years old either but like i said thats my opinion..yah sure i have seen ten month old pups put up coon like a pro but still lacks the experience of those hard runnin bore coon...but what i wanted to get out of this post is i wanted to know about those world class dogs that consistently won big hunt...i want to know how they started out
quote:
Originally posted by dchartt
What do you consider unusual or special talents in pups?
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when policemen ignore the law, then there isn't any law. there's just a fight for survival.
*billy jack
It is well that war is so terrible, otherwise we should grow too fond of it.
Robert E. Lee
quote:
Originally posted by old ben
What do u consider Late ??
__________________
when policemen ignore the law, then there isn't any law. there's just a fight for survival.
*billy jack
It is well that war is so terrible, otherwise we should grow too fond of it.
Robert E. Lee
quote:
Originally posted by hunter todd elk
The best dog iv ever started, and kept to finish never treed her own coon until she was 16 months old. The reasons I kept her is that she never did anything great but she always did the small things rite which gave me patience with her.
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when policemen ignore the law, then there isn't any law. there's just a fight for survival.
*billy jack
It is well that war is so terrible, otherwise we should grow too fond of it.
Robert E. Lee
a friend of mine hunted BID D when he was young and he needed shot , if i went hunting with my buddy and he took him you could plan on being out all night.
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I am hunting the best dog I have ever owned at the moment. We ran coyotes with him and his littermates till they were 2.
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