Re: hunting solo----what "Type" of dog
Posted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 4:11 am
A bayed bear or lion?
Wow..................impressive.........
Wow..................impressive.........
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ZeluvaRIP69er wrote:Ok.
I was just sayin, for my sake.
Nikki,
I'm glad you clarified a few things because there are some people around here that spent a lot of time with your dad and hunted with him a lot, and they pretty much say what you did... that the Greg they knew would NOT be OK with having any of his dogs leave a bayed up bear just because he hollered at them across the canyon.
I suppose for the weekend hunter that is just out for a little jaunt, has some cheese and crackers in his fanny pack and is anxious to get back to town to his computer, handling is probably the most important thing.
Problem is these days we are taking a sport that is maybe the most wild, primitive thing left on this planet... a dog trailing and bringing his quarry to bay, and we are trying to modernize it and take as much of that wild primitive element out of it.
When the old timers hit a track, they were committed and they knew it. No telling where the dogs might go, when they might get back home, or what might happen. They were generally a foot or horse back and when those dogs opened, they were committed. No big ATV's, no fancy sleds with deep tracks, no tracking collars, GPS collars, shock collars...
Just a dog going down a track into no man's land, locked on his quarry. That's as wild and primitive as it gets. I have no problem with technology and I use it too, but these days we have machines to get us where we need to go, we have GPS collars so we can watch what's going on, shock collars to punish a dog from a distance, all kinds of neat little gadgets to make our lives easier. When our dogs go into some hell hole, many of us want to sit at the truck with a tracking box and munch on snacks and hope the dog makes it out, or make excuses for why we can't get to them. Not knocking anyone else, hell I've done it myself.
We just don't seem to have that level of commitment anymore when we turn loose. Really the only truly wild, primitive thing left about this sport is the dog driving the track, with that same burning desire to catch the game that the great dogs have had for hundreds of years. We breed and breed for that kind of drive and desire, that wild primitive urge to trail that animal into hell if he has to, to catch and hold it.
That's all we have left and I do not want to take that out of my dogs. I guess we all look for something different in a dog, but the best dogs I've ever seen, and they generally belonged to someone else, they all had at least one thing in common....
When they had hot lion or bear scent in their nose, you weren't whistling them off anything from a distance. For the weekend hunter now, who doesn't need to make a living off his dogs, handling is probably the most important thing.
But I will still take that one dog who is so focused and honed in on that track that he won't even hear your whistling, let alone leave the animal and come back to you... I'll take that one dog over Ten who will leave the track and come back.
Honestly, I don't have a dog on my place I believe I could holler off a hot bear track and I wouldn't keep a dog like that. If that suits someone else, fine by me. But at the end of the day, I am still looking for that dog whose drive and desire is so strong that he cares about catching that animal above everything else.
So I guess to answer the original question, what "Type" of dog do you look for... Some clearly look for a dog that handles above everything else. Not me. Give me a dog that still has that wild primitive spirit down inside him, and when he hits that lion or bear track down in the canyon, I am COMMITTED because he is.
None of the "away they went and that was that" bullshit. I want the dog that smells warm lion scent and your hollers fall on deaf ears, because generations of breeding have taken over and it's wild and primitive again. A dog and a cat, in rough country, may the best win and who cares about the dumbass standing at his truck whistling and hollering because he needs to be back home by 2:00 for a wedding.
But hey, that's just me. I don't expect everyone else to feel the same way. But if you are looking for a dog you can whistle or holler off a hot track or a bayed up bear, don't bother coming to my place. I can tell you right now, I don't have it and don't want it.
If you got that kind of dog, more power to you. And have fun at that wedding. You'll probably make it in time with room to spare.
HoundDawg wrote:Melanie,
I wasn't really trying to pick at you. I'll confess that I'm really just a little BITCH and I didn't really read many of the posts on here, I was just razzing Ike a little because I'm so jealous of him. Just too hard to resist, since I'm such a small person
So I wasn't directing anything at you, just poking at ike because of my lack of ability.![]()
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But I did figure out why Ike always tells it like it is about why he hunts alone and doesn't drop dogs with anyone. It all makes sense now, since he knows perople like me are little more than party animals and gangbangers, who neither have any regard for the law or the animals we chase.
I realize that I suck most of the time and only come in here to start crap. I guess I'd hunt alone too if I had the ability or was man enough.![]()
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Just stirring it up a little. I got my "fix" so I'll stop now.![]()


ZeluvaRIP69er wrote:Ok.
I have been to your website Ike,
I know you can catch game by there and what you say here,
Do you take paying hunters? As you know I am no longer an outfitter myself, so now I get to play the paying client who gets to ask all those annoying questions they do! Like me and dads favorite "What would make a bear/lion/bobcat/elk/deer/yellowed belly sapsucker go there?" LOL, cuz it wanted to maybe??![]()
Anyways, if you are taking hunters, let me know, I would love to come hunt with you, and maybe shoot my first bear
Take care everyone!