Fisher13
UKC Forum Member
Registered: Dec 2012
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 2027 |
There's a million different things that ya can try.
He should grow out of the worst of it on the other hand he will probably never be a crazy never quit hound.
When I have this problem my go to is to put him in the box the minute he comes back, and then let him sit in there while I hunt another hound. I then will drop him again if I FEEL LIKE IT, if he comes back, back in the box he goes. After a few weeks he should figure it out.
Sometimes a good layup cures these issues. Higher strung dogs seem to respond well to hard hunting, and lower key dogs seem to fall apart to hard hunting. A pup like your describing can burn out imo.
If there are cases of lymes in your area, it could be something like that. If you think it may be lymes I would treat him on doxycycline for a week, if you see immediate change after several days continue the dosage for a full 30 days. If you don't see any noticeable change I would discontinue after a week.
A higher octane food can make a big difference.
Hunting a pup in familiar woods can help build a confidence.
The thing that your describing to me seems to be maturity issue or confidence, probably both. Even though he looks good from track to tree, he probably doesn't completely feel comfortable going on his own. It will just take time and maturing. What I think goes on in these situations, is that early in the night the pup is so wound up and excited he throws caution to the wind and takes off running through the woods, gets struck, then trees....a lot of excitement and natural instincts but not a lot mentally going on there.
Then we walk him away, he starts to calm down, a lot of the excitement wears off. You cut the dog loose he runs about 30 yards and then realizes because he is now thinking and uses his brain, that it's dark, he is in a strange place, and shows more caution about getting in the woods. As he becomes more comfortable with the woods, and understands his job better, he should grow out of this.
Just use common sense, make it fun for him, and don't expect a coon dog over night. Try different things, until you find something that works, be creative. The problem solving aspect of training a dog is what makes it fun and challenging at the same time.
__________________
"If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous, he will not bite you; that is the principal difference between a dog and a man."
Mark Twain
Last edited by Fisher13 on 12-17-2014 at 05:22 PM
Report this post to a moderator | IP: Logged
|