Fisher13
UKC Forum Member
Registered: Dec 2012
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 2027 |
quote: Originally posted by msinc
I "must call bull" back...where do you see the word "quirky" in my post????? Maybe before you jump you might want to make sure we reckon "shy" the same. I am talking about a dog you cannot get your hands on, one that would rather be hiding in the dog house than out running around because a person is there.
When I was your age I really thought I could fix every problem every dog had too, then I grew up, got some experience and got over it. You will too, whether you want to or not, all in due time.
Your universal advice of "all ya gotta do is just hunt the dog more" is worn out here...you might want to try dreaming up something different to tell everyone that post about training.
You said you never saw a shy dog amount to anything.
I'm not sure what you define as shy, but a dog that does not want to be petted by a stranger I would call quirky or shy.
If the dog won't come out of the box or let you get your hands on him, the dog clearly hasn't accepted you as a friend or pack leader. Plain and simple. Is it a desirable trait Idk, I would say probably not no one likes to see a child be bitten by a fear biter. Does it effect there ability to track and tree. I would say there completely unrelated.
I have a friend who hunts coyote, he uses an old line of trig hounds, he says everyone is human shy,but they will never back down from a yote,even one on one. I have a female that was extremely quirky and shy as a pup, but she was an all natural in the woods. Just now around 2 years old will she let strangers pet her. Correct me if I'm wrong but it is much easier to socialize a dog and take them to tractor supply once a week then it is to teach a dog to tree coon.
Im not saying it's desirable I'm just saying a dog being human shy has no effect on there ability to tree coon. A dog not having enough nose, or being dumb, or having physical defects, will surely impact it's ability to tree coon.
I apologizing for derailing the thread, but I would argue a dog not having enough nose will have more of an impact on a dogs ability to tree coon, then temperament. I would also add that I was told that shy dogs tend to be dead loners in the woods,I have also seen that in the line I hunt. This imo is a trade off I will make any day of the week, but that's just me.
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"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 02-17-2015 at 08:01 PM
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