Brady Davis wrote:I have done it your way; wasted a bunch of money and time.....hmmmmm

I'm not trying to stir the pot, just making a point. We as houndsmen are behind. Rockcreek, you and the world beaters are the exception....most $50 pups arent solid, I'm sure there are a few Seabiscuts out there (cheap underdogs who turn out to be worldclass) but in ANY animal world, if you want good stuff you PAY for good stuff. Racehorses, rope horses, bird dogs, etc.
I'm not trying to stir the pot either bud

. I have learned from experience that good dogs are where you find them. I have paid lots of money for pups and have had some work out and some not, I have also got pups from hard hunting friends for little or nothing and have had some of them work out and some not... So that has taught me, just because you spend $$$$$$ on a pup, it doesn't guarantee you a thing.
If all you want to do is have a couple dogs that will catch game, you'd be money, time, frustration, pick up's, boots, relationships and countless other things ahead if you saved and paid the money for well proven dogs.
Fact is if I was getting into the hound game all over again, I would spend the $500 dollars(Or whatever amount) I had saved up for a pup, not on a pup, but on some hunting trips with people that would have me along.
If you love to raise pups and watch them progress into game catching hounds you can be proud of, (Like I do) you'll learn that sometimes when you pay the big money for the HYPE (Current popular, most advertised, talked up dogs) all you end up with is HYPE and a cull.
I agree that most average, run of the mill, $50 dollar pups are usually not the way to go. There are some people that care more about where their pups go to and who gets them, than making a buck. It's certainly not easy to find these kind of people, but sometimes you get lucky and meet them. After paying your dues(Waking up in pre-dawn hours to go freeze your butt off looking for a track to run, logging countless hours in a truck, on a sled, wheeler, or horse and missing some important "Functions", spending untold hours looking for young dogs that are "Still out", and many other things to feed your fire and do this the right way) you may get lucky as I have through the years and find pups worth feeding, for reasonable prices.
That still does not mean they will all work out, you still have to do YOUR part and hunt them and give them every opportunity to be what they were born to be. It's not easy, not by a long shot(That's why you would be all of those things I mentioned before ahead) but it is certainly worth it.
So after all that being considered, and all the "Blood, sweat and tears" that go into making a real game catching hound, I hope you see what I mean when I say that (IN MY OPINION) a weaned pup has very little value to me... after all they are just pups, and there is lot's more to it, than a "Fancy story".