brogy
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I would have culled the dog and even in his corrected state, I don't feel the dog should be bred regardless of what he might win now. There is enough junk out there to begin with. If this dog naturally didn't want to tree and had to be man made to tree, what about the pups it may produce? Even if the majority do not show this fault, is this the type you want putting out there in the public's hands so they have to go through the same procedures just to get a coondog?
I also wondered, does this dog just cover anything that trees now?
I hate a man made independant dog as much as a man made tree dog. Anyone who needs to beat a dog to make it not cover anything just for the sake of winning nite hunts, thats a joke IMO.
I like an independant hound as much as the next guy. But I don't like a dog that will work a track with a group and refuse to tree with them or one that insists on blowing out of the pocket consistently to get by itself.
If a dog is cast into a woods, it should hunt that woods out. If a dog strikes a coon track along with another dog, both dogs should finish that track but if the dog strikes a track it should finish it regardless of what the other dogs are doing, if they tree it should still finish the track it is working.
I know there are some outstanding trainers out there that can take natural junk running track minded idiots or a wood monster and shape them into consistent cast winners. I don't have a problem with that, but I don't care to see those dogs being bred because there ain't that many good dog trainers out there.
Our young dogs never see more than 1-2 caged coon, if any at all. I've never put much stock into what a dog does on a cage coon, I've seen more dogs spoiled because of them if anything. When the pup is old enough, I simply haul it to the woods with whatever dog I'm hunting at the time. If that pup can't figure out why its supposed to be out there within a short time, than it needs to go in the boneyard. I might give a dog a little encouragement on the tree but not excessively like so many people do. Just enough to let them know that is what they are supposed to do. A scratch behind the ears can go along way. As soon as they can run and tree a coon with little help from another dog, I start hunting them alone a majority of the time. If they are a naturally independant dog thats all a guy should have to do. I might tune them a little on some things like recasting off a tree, or tightening them up if they get to milling, but that's about it.
If I have to do more than that to get a dog to tree coons consistently, I wasn't starting with good stock to begin with. JMO>
Last edited by on 01-04-2010 at 04:34 PM
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