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-- Road Hunting (http://forums.ukcdogs.com/showthread.php?threadid=928531814)


Posted by Dave Richards on 08-09-2020 02:07 AM:

Road Hunting

How many have tried or actually road hunt their coon dogs? My hunting buddy and I used to do a lot of road hunting, but have not road hunted in several years until just recently. We bought a new dog that will road hunt and have road hunted him a few nights. I had forgot how much fun road hunting could be, been treeing coons every time we road hunt and boy is it easy on my old bones. Dave

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Posted by Reuben on 08-09-2020 02:32 AM:

Dave...glad you are able to road hunt...😎

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Posted by Bryan K Webb on 08-09-2020 02:40 AM:

I had a buddy that had a dog that would hunt out in front of the vehicle and we treed several coons when they were really moving.. I had a real nice dog years ago that would rig hunt he was a lot of fun to have around.. You could turn him loose in a hollar with a pup and tree a couple of coons.. Put him in the back of the truck and a lot of nights he would tree a coon or two before you got home... Lol


Posted by jerrydillon17 on 08-09-2020 04:25 AM:

Yes

Hey Dave yes road hunting is pretty nice !! My gyp will drop hunt or road hunt love when she trees coon 50 to 60 yards off road makes so nice an easy lol !!

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Posted by Dave Richards on 08-09-2020 08:47 AM:

Road hunting

Thanks Rueben, this dog we recently bought will hunt in front of your truck and sure is fun to hunt. He hunts just right stays in sight of the truck and handles like a dream, he cast hunts really nice, pull up to a holler and cut him and he hunts the holler and ridges like one is supposed to hunt. Tonight was a perfect night to hunt, temps in the high 60's low humidity and real dark. We cast hunted him and treed a couple of singles, then road hunted him and treed 2 more singles, both close enough to the road that I could see the coons from the road. I was real pleased with not having to walk much. Our new dog has fired me up for the Fall and Winter hunting season, especially the road hunting part. We can road hunt the National Forest lands when the kill season opens on October 15th in Virginia. I was just real curious as to how many coon hunters actually done any road hunting. Dave

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Posted by Bruce m. Conkey on 08-09-2020 12:31 PM:

.

I had 10,000 acres near me that a developer came in, cut roads, dug canals. Which left nothing but block after block of woods. Use to road hunt that area all the time. I had one that could do it pretty well and started a lot of pups with him. I love watching a road dog's actions and you can tell before they strike one that they smell one. Learn a lot about a dog watching them hunt. I did it a lot also in the early morning when I got off working the midnight shift. Can tree coon pretty close most of the time. Had a man from Summerset, Ky that would come down every year in the fall and we would hunt. His nickname was Hoppy and real name E.L. Stepp. Had the best road dog I ever saw. On many hunts about half way through the night my dog would get tired and his tail would start to drop lower and lower. Hoppy"s hound/cur was tireless and deadly on a coon.

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Posted by Dave Richards on 08-09-2020 08:14 PM:

Bruce Conkey

Enjoyed reading your post, yes it sure is fun to road hunt when you have good places to road hunt a dog. A dog can cover a lot of ground running in front of a truck and watching the dog with his head in the air strike a track and leave the road never gets old. You can tree more coons road hunting and not get near as tired as spot hunting. Dave

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Posted by Travis Brown on 08-09-2020 09:29 PM:

I road hunt all of mine some of the time. Some travel a lot faster than others in front of the truck. I've noticed some could smell a track farther off the road than others. The ones that could smell a track a good ways are usually the good layup and rig dogs. I've had several that would rig some but one that was far better than the others. It's been my experience that the ones that road at a dead sprint don't strike as many coons as the ones that jog along with their head up looking for air scent rather than ground scent.

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Posted by clinewalkers on 08-10-2020 05:46 AM:

Dave

I was raised up road hunting here in these rough WV mountains. We do it all from walk hunt to road hunt and cast hunt. People say road hunting will make a dog lazy and make it not want to cast hunt but I beg to differ. If a dog has the will to hunt it’ll hunt however you want it to in my opinion. Now rig hunting is a different story I think. If you haul a dog on a rig every night and only cut on those hot easy coons then I wouldn’t want to run my guts out to find a track either. Lol. But here in southern wv coons are really thin and road hunting is a good way to cover a lot of ground fast and sometimes it’s not easy tracks. Most of the time road hunting here you’ll get to hear some 7-900 yard tracks and in the winter months maybe farther cause the coons love to run in these rough mountains!!! I’d love to have some easy flatland hunting and I might would quit road hunting so much. Haha


Posted by T Felderman on 08-10-2020 02:42 PM:

clinewalkers

If done to much, I've seen it make one lazy.

I love roading them but got a couple killed on the roads so I quit doing it as much. Now save it for the cold nights when it's 20 degrees or below.


Posted by Dave Richards on 08-11-2020 02:00 AM:

Clinewalkers

I feel your pain, I hunt in steep mountains just like you do, so road hunting is a real nice way to cover a lot of ground in a shorter amount of time. It's like trolling while fishing you can cover a lot more territory and catch more game. I wish we had more good spots to road hunt, but it is what it is. Lol. I HIGHLY DOUBT that road hunting makes a dog lazy, it sure does not bother this dog we are hunting NOW. He casts and hunts hard, he road hunt close to the front of the truck 25 to 50 yards and strikes coons as good as you could ask for, as we have treed several coons we have seen road hunting him. I know road hunting will get a dog in top physical condition . I love road hunting, as I AM the one that's LAZY, not my dog. Lol. Dave

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Dave Richards Treeing Walkers Reg American Saddlebred and Registered Rocky Mt. Show Horses


Posted by Donnie Stevens on 08-11-2020 02:42 AM:

Rigging one a lot will certainly take some go out of it, at least temporarily. If I stop rigging the dog after a few nights they get the idea and start goin harder off the snap. Not sure about roading... anything we've dumped out to hunt in front of the truck was lazy to begin with that's why we were doin it lol. The ones I'm used to hunting leave hard enough its gonna be like the Baja 500 if you're gonna keep them in your headlights lol

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Posted by clinewalkers on 08-11-2020 03:56 AM:

The roads we hunt on here aren’t good roads to get one killed. 90% of the roads we hunt is 4x4 country and they’re plenty of places to road hunt. I don’t mind if they stay in my headlights or get deep as long as they don’t just road run and pass coons up. My old dog always hunted fast whether u road hunted him or turned him up a holler and never passed up coons. Just watch ya garmin or listen for him. I could road hunt him 5 miles and stop and head him up a creek and watch him go to the head. In my opinion, if it makes them lazy then they was born lazy to begin with. A coondog should have one thing on its mind no matter how it’s hunted and that’s to find the next coon!!!


Posted by Dave Richards on 08-11-2020 04:10 AM:

Clinewalkers

Your post describes the kind of dogs I enjoy hunting, either cast hunting or road hunting, they should have one thing on their mind and that is finding a coon. I will say it's really hard to find a real good road hunting coon dog, but they can be found. I really enjoy road hunting on those bad weather nights, something about sitting in a warm dry truck and letting the dog do ALL the work just appeals to me. Lol. Dave

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Posted by Donnie Stevens on 08-11-2020 04:25 AM:

Dave it appeals to me too I just tie mine on the back lol. I like a good rig dog.

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Posted by DL NH on 08-11-2020 03:22 PM:

Roading males in front of a vehicle can be a pain in the but. They have to stop and pizz on everything! Course I suppose in this day a little trickle of electricity would probably stop that! LOL!

Personally roading a dog was never something I enjoyed much but I understand it’s usefulness for some people.

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Posted by fletch on 08-11-2020 03:33 PM:

Had a mt cur road hunted on coon and squirrel. Enjoyed hunting him that way. If you saw a vehicle you could holler at him to load up and he would come back to the truck and jump up on the tailgate. Was fun to hunt.

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Posted by clinewalkers on 08-11-2020 04:08 PM:

Dave

Yea that’s the way I start pups here and a lot of people around me road hunt. We have really thin coon population and u have to cover ground. I mean don’t get me wrong I like a dog to get in there and hunt if I cast him up a creek too but those dogs that have no reverse aren’t really for me around these parts. If the coons were thick then that wouldn’t be to bad but around here it’s hard to tell how far he’ll go to get struck and if he starts crossing ridges you’re going to be dog hunting while I’ll be casting 800-900 yards and then take back off road hunting treeing coons. Lol. Now when it get up in late season I’ll cast hunt more cause a lot of older guys around here will only road hunt and it gets tough to strike so u gotta hit them big lonely hollers. I bought a female back in December that had never been road hunted until I got her and she came out of flat country. After a few nights she caught onto road hunting but she’ll still cast if I want her to. For the ones that say it makes them lazy, well, I road hunt her a lot and took her to her first hunt in February and won a double header then took her to SETWD in Union SC this year and won my cast both nights and made her NiteCh this past weekend. For the ones that say it makes them lazy I don’t agree. It might some dogs but it won’t a COONDOG!!!


Posted by Dave Richards on 08-11-2020 08:27 PM:

Clinewalkers

Due to tearing my ACL in my right knee, I am a little handicapped as I have not wanted to have surgery to repair the tear. Road hunting is definitely more fun for me considering my injury, you usually tree pretty close to the road and it cuts down on my walking. We recently bought a dog that was trained to road hunt and we have had some fun road hunting him. I am looking forward to the actual hunting season when we can hunt on the National Forest lands and do some serious road hunting. Dave

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Posted by Gary Roberson on 08-11-2020 09:41 PM:

Road hunting is all that I do. I would prefer to hunt off horseback or mule but it is such a hassle to haul and mess with all the additional gear.
I love roading with the Garmin DriveTrack, makes it easy to see where all my dogs are, what they are doing and direction they are going.
Adios,
Gary


Posted by Dave Richards on 08-11-2020 10:55 PM:

Gary Roberson

You are the man, enjoy ALL your hunting shows. I only wish that we had plenty of places to road hunt, if we did I would road hunt all the time. Dave

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Posted by novicane65 on 08-12-2020 02:06 AM:

In my area you can road hunt a dog but it will get them killed 70% of the time. Why you ask? Because the dogs learn its okay to run down the road. And a dog doesn't know what roads it can or can't run down. Which is what I think 1 poster was trying to say. Not sure it would make one "lazy" but it can make 1 not want to go through brush and timber because its easier going in the road.

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Posted by yadkintar on 08-12-2020 02:11 AM:

My experience with it is you start road hunting them then when you start back hunting on foot they will peel out of the timber and hit the roads and openings and you can’t hardly break them from it.



Tar


Posted by 2ol2hunt on 08-12-2020 02:13 AM:

quote:
Originally posted by yadkintar
My experience with it is you start road hunting them then when you start back hunting on foot they will peel out of the timber and hit the roads and openings and you can’t hardly break them from it.



Tar

X2 same experience


Posted by clinewalkers on 08-12-2020 02:32 AM:

Tar

That’s why I road hunt them until I come to a nice holler or ridge with good timber and cut them. It keeps them from trying to find a road to hit and in these mountains they won’t find a clearing. Lol. I’ve never had any problems with it. I’ve road hunted my old male dog his whole life and when I pull to a place I want to cut him he’ll go. Sometimes when road hunting him and I pass a holler I’m not going to turn him up he’ll already be starting up it when I get there. I can take him to any mans woods and he’ll go. Never bothered him but like I said a COONDOG should have only one thing on its mind no matter how or where it’s cut!!!!


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