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rthompson
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Aug 2013
Location: sw mo
Posts: 971

corn fields

Just wondering how you northern guys tackle them. are there certain ways you want your dogs to hunt them? When you recast do you cast back into the corn or down the edge? Just give some examples please.

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Old Post 08-24-2015 04:02 AM
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john Duemmer
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Mar 2008
Location: Western N.Y.
Posts: 3995

We hunt alot of corn, theres nothin more fun,a smart cornpatch dog runs the edges and pops em up in the hedge rows while the dummy bellars around in the corn runnin cross tracks all night.

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Old Post 08-24-2015 04:32 AM
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ole hoss
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Dec 2013
Location: ky
Posts: 2264

Im not from the nw but down here I use them for all sorts of things. My young pups that arent really treeing yet but have tons of energy I cut right in the corn and beans and they may run all night. My dogs that are treeing I send down the edge and I dont let them spend much time in the corn. Its great for the pups and will teach the ones with less heart to hit the edge and the timber. Ones with big hearts it will cut to peices and their ole eyes will be madded shut the next day. I like corn for tracks but hate navigating around it

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Old Post 08-24-2015 07:15 AM
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RLenhart
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Dec 2013
Location: PA.
Posts: 1738

Re: corn fields

quote:
Originally posted by rthompson
Just wondering how you northern guys tackle them. are there certain ways you want your dogs to hunt them? When you recast do you cast back into the corn or down the edge? Just give some examples please.

I cast mine down the edge. If you've ever noticed 99% of the coon damage you'll see in a cornfield is in the 1st 4-6 rows around the edge closest to the woods. If you send them right down the middle of the field it's hard to say what you might chase out of that corn IMO.

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Old Post 08-24-2015 11:45 AM
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Dale Huff
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Jan 2014
Location: Michigan
Posts: 32

We cut them down the edge of the corn. But the coon do not just hang out around the edge. If you haven't seen corn damage way out in the middle of the cornfields before its just because you haven walked out there. A lot of our corn will be tore up around the edges but for some reason there will be big areas way out in the middle matted down. There won't be a tree anywhere in site.

Takes a good track dog to get them runners out of the corn. Nothing like a good cornfield race! A good track dog can drive them out of the corn and not boo hoo around in it all night!

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Old Post 08-24-2015 05:55 PM
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rthompson
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Aug 2013
Location: sw mo
Posts: 971

So half say cut the dog down the edge"first 4-6 rows" other half says cast into the middle. ive done both not real sure which is better is the only reason i ask. We dont have alot of corn here but enough to hunt just tryin to figure the best or most productice to tree the most coon quick.

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Old Post 08-24-2015 10:08 PM
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Duckassassin
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Feb 2015
Location: California
Posts: 1150

I hunt a river that boarders fields (corn,cotton,almonds etc) i hunt the dirt road in between the river and the fields. Ive found that the coons will cross that road from the river to get to the fields. Most of the time the dogs will strike a track of the coon coming out of the fields headin back to the river.

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Old Post 08-24-2015 10:18 PM
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Slowpoke 2012
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Jul 2012
Location: Odessa, Mo
Posts: 2066

Corn

There's corn and soy for as far as the eye can see around here. ALWAYS cut them down the edge. Letting your hound run around in the middle is a bad idea. They will likely bump some trash, their eyes will be tore up and I've seen two hounds overheat from being in there to long. Plus them coon seem to know where a drain tile or hole is way out in them fields, with corn or tall beans it sucks getting to them. And that farmer your hunting on don't want you in his crop. Stay to the edges where the corn meets the timber. There's a reason why we say "aww $&!!" when they head into the middle of a field around here.

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Old Post 08-24-2015 10:24 PM
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RLenhart
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Dec 2013
Location: PA.
Posts: 1738

quote:
Originally posted by rthompson
So half say cut the dog down the edge"first 4-6 rows" other half says cast into the middle.

LOL Did you really expect a different result from this board?

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Old Post 08-24-2015 10:28 PM
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RLenhart
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Dec 2013
Location: PA.
Posts: 1738

quote:
Originally posted by Dale Huff
A lot of our corn will be tore up around the edges but for some reason there will be big areas way out in the middle matted down. There won't be a tree anywhere in site.


That right there sounds more like bear damage to me. Coon do not mat corn down. They will knock stocks over to get the ears but the only thing I know of that mats crops down like that is bear.

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Old Post 08-24-2015 10:32 PM
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roger wickerham
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Apr 2013
Location: michigan
Posts: 416

Re: Corn

quote:
Originally posted by Slowpoke 2012
There's corn and soy for as far as the eye can see around here. ALWAYS cut them down the edge. Letting your hound run around in the middle is a bad idea. They will likely bump some trash, their eyes will be tore up and I've seen two hounds overheat from being in there to long. Plus them coon seem to know where a drain tile or hole is way out in them fields, with corn or tall beans it sucks getting to them. And that farmer your hunting on don't want you in his crop. Stay to the edges where the corn meets the timber. There's a reason why we say "aww $&!!" when they head into the middle of a field around here.
x2 we hunt alot of corn just send them up the edge dont make rocket science out of it mooost are on the edge and your good dog will find the rest

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Old Post 08-24-2015 11:45 PM
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dchartt
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Jun 2013
Location: PA 16646
Posts: 1120

quote:
Originally posted by RLenhart
That right there sounds more like bear damage to me. Coon do not mat corn down. They will knock stocks over to get the ears but the only thing I know of that mats crops down like that is bear.


Bingo

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Old Post 08-25-2015 12:27 AM
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DFred
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Feb 2015
Location: Ohio
Posts: 572

In my experience the coon get in the middle of the fields earlier in the season because the corn around the edges isn't ready to be eaten. Later on the edges start yielding better and the coon don't have to go to the middle. The edges don't ever yield what the center does. You can ask any farmer about that. We don't have bear and I've seen areas inside the first several rows that look like a helicopter landed. And no it was alien crop circles!!!!

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Old Post 08-25-2015 12:50 AM
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RLenhart
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Dec 2013
Location: PA.
Posts: 1738

quote:
Originally posted by DFred
In my experience the coon get in the middle of the fields earlier in the season because the corn around the edges isn't ready to be eaten. Later on the edges start yielding better and the coon don't have to go to the middle. The edges don't ever yield what the center does. You can ask any farmer about that. We don't have bear and I've seen areas inside the first several rows that look like a helicopter landed. And no it was alien crop circles!!!!

Well I guess you guys do have more coon than we do and you would know more than me what you got there but around here if I see a big area just flattened out in the middle of a field the culprit there is a bear. I'm sure we do get SOME coon working the corn out in the middle of the field but what I see out of them more is working the crap out of the first few rows they come to.

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Old Post 08-25-2015 01:14 AM
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dchartt
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Jun 2013
Location: PA 16646
Posts: 1120

I think it might be that raccoon apocalypse that msinc is geared up for

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Old Post 08-25-2015 01:40 AM
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walkerman75
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Jan 2009
Location: berkeley springs w va
Posts: 448

we always cut down the edges. dogs usualy go were ever.. an after tree. just walk out an down edge a little bit an send again. but i agree. coons in middle early an then move out as the corn gets ready

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Old Post 08-25-2015 06:50 AM
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Jrkb2012
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Nov 2013
Location: Convoy,Ohio
Posts: 1693

quote:
Originally posted by DFred
In my experience the coon get in the middle of the fields earlier in the season because the corn around the edges isn't ready to be eaten. Later on the edges start yielding better and the coon don't have to go to the middle. The edges don't ever yield what the center does. You can ask any farmer about that. We don't have bear and I've seen areas inside the first several rows that look like a helicopter landed. And no it was alien crop circles!!!!
I also live in Ohio,,and in my 40+ years of hunting,,I've never seen a bear,,except them 2 legged suckers that ain't got nuttin better than to harass you once in a while,,lol

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Old Post 08-25-2015 10:51 AM
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Dale Huff
UKC Forum Member

Registered: Jan 2014
Location: Michigan
Posts: 32

definitely coon not bear where I hunt. We always cut the dogs down the edge or within the first 10 rows.

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Old Post 08-25-2015 02:56 PM
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