Rocketman55
UKC Forum Member
Registered: Aug 2008
Location: SE Ohio, Glouster
Posts: 2244 |
msinc hit the nail on the head for ya on this one. From reading your post I'm guessing your young dog has had little exposure, and what little exposure it has had, is not in the most ideal of conditions.
If you tie your pup to a box, then leave it tied to the box. If your pup is in a kennel, then leave it in the kennel. You see, that is where your pup is the most comfortable, for that is the area it most recognizes as a safe place. Now put a coon in a roll cage or in a live trap, if you do not have a roll cage. Bring the coon up to within 5-10 feet of the kennel/tie out chain, (or what ever distance where you first start seeing you pup become uncomfortable and then step backwards 3 feet. Now bring an old dog to the cage that will fire up and start giving that coon the what for. Start encouraging the pup by voice command to get involved with what the old dog is doing. When the pup barks a couple time, walk up to it and pet it and encourage it to bark some more. When you see it starting to show more interest to bark, put your lead strap on the pup and let it out of the kennel/off the chain, but keep it on the lead strap. Continue to encourage the pup to bark, If the pup won't bark, tie it to the outside of the kennel and start shaking the cage, all the time sicking the pup, and start dragging the cage away from the pup. This will cause the older dog to become more aggressive, which will in turn, signal to the pup that it is ok to become more aggressive. Dogs are chase animals, and will always show more aggression when the animal they are barking at, starts to run away. Do that every other day for three treatments and then see if the pup is showing more aggression or less aggression than it did the first time you showed it this caged coon.
That should at least get it to start barking at a caged coon, but don't get completely discouraged if it don't cause some of the best coondogs in the country will not pay any attention to a caged coon. Matter of fact, I had two different Grand Nights that would let a coon come inside their kennel and eat their dog food out of their bowl, and never bark at it or try to kill it. I never to this day have figured that one out and each dog had treed well over 500 coon in the wild.
Good Luck
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