deschmidt27
UKC Forum Member
Registered: Jun 2008
Location: Burlington, CT
Posts: 1758 |
OK... reread my post, and realized someone is bound to ask, what would I prefer to hunt???
I would prefer to hunt a dog that leaves the lead strap maybe in a trot, but not a gallup! I want them to strike a coon nearby if one is there, and if not, go find one. I don't want them to run away from me, and maybe by chance run across a coon, or not start hunting until they get to the back of the woods, or worst the next woods over.
I would like them to tree whatever coon they strike, and if they and another dog strike the same coon, they should tree together. I don't want t a dog that seems to have a need to "get by themselves".
And yes, I want to have the best dog in the woods, but that doesn't mean getting by themsleves... it means striking the first coon, and then with or without help, treeing it first! I think the need to get by themselves only exists if they can't move a track quickly and therefore tree first.
So if I have a dog that gets down to work quickly, and has a decent nose, they should get first strike. If they have a good nose and can move a track, they ought to get first tree. And if you put them in coon, this should all happen 100 yards from the truck, right?
So if you think about it, the modern "competition dog" was perhaps developed to get out there by themselves, because they couldn't beat the other dogs to the same tree. Instead of developing a dog that had a good nose, and could move a track fast, we developed a dog that just gets by themselves so they can tree at their leisure. Maybe, just maybe, instead of creating a better coon dog, we created an independent dog to mask other weaknesses.
David Schmidt
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