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I use to go to a man trailing seminar in eastern Okla. The man that put it on would lay a track to a pond that had tall hills on three sides of it. He would walk the track into the pond, sit around for a while to let his scent get strong in there, then walk straight up the side of one of the hills and walk back home.
He would put the most adavnced handler and blood hound on the track every six months he did this at the seminare and never had anyone that had enough since to take there dog to the top of the hill and cut the track away from the water. They would waller around down in all that scent till we got threw laughing and went and picked them up.
They scent is stronger at the water and they think they are back tracking by leaveing strong scent for a weaker track out. If you don't have a dog to teach it leash it up and make a big circle around the pond or what ever till the dog hits the track leaveing the place. Let it lead you away far enough it won't go back. Then cut it loose again.
OR ir you have a good handle on your dog tell it to get the ___ out of there and walk the way it need to go to most likely hit the same coon. The leash thing is better becouse you have more control on getting it back on the same coon.
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UNITED WE STAND DIVIDED WE FALL
Grady Jarvis
808 N. Main St.
Tonkawa Okla. 74653
580-628-0507
CH 'PR' Grady's Dark Woods Waylon -Bluetic
NITECH 'PR' Grady's Insane Tinker Bell (Tink) - Treeing walker --Okla. State Hunt open redg. winner
'PR' Grady's Barley - Treeing Walker
Last edited by Okie Dawg on 11-29-2011 at 03:51 AM
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