msinc
Banned
Registered: Oct 2013
Location: Maryland
Posts: 2633 |
You would be hard pressed to find someone that has tried this more than me...it don't work, it don't help, it can and usually does make things worse. It's pretty simple...what I believe happens is that the dog pops up a few easy coons and thinks that is the way it should happen, then when you take the "easy" away and try to get the dog to go out and find a coon, work out a bad track, locate the tree that has the coon at the end of it, well it seems like the dog wonders "why all this work????" It was all so easy before. Maybe another way of explaining it is: it's like expecting welfare to improve someone. Two years of a free ride and now all of a sudden they have to go out and make it on their own???? yeah, okay.
Don't get me wrong, I think feeder buckets used right can be an excellent way to help get certain young dogs started on the right path, but once they are started then the free ride needs to be over. Ultimately, don't we all want a dog that doesn't need that free ride???
Edit: what really made me quit pushing dogs on easy coons is that the last couple I tried it with began running off game when they couldn't find a coon within 100 yards of the truck. Both of these dogs had been pretty well broke off of fast game, but it's that "path of least resistance" thing...red fox and deer are way too easy as opposed to a half cold feeder track that takes a little effort.
Last edited by msinc on 01-18-2017 at 04:46 AM
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