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Posted by Preacher Tom on 03-14-2024 10:09 PM:

cold nose dogs

What line of Walker dogs are known for working up a cold track and putting a coon at the end?

__________________
Tom Wood


Posted by MOcoondogs on 03-14-2024 10:32 PM:

I don't know about all of them but I was training a clover bred walker female for a guy, about a year ago, that did pretty good with a cold track. I saw her, with a younger dog too, run a bobcat. I saw the cat once but they couldn't hold it in the tree. The moon was bright enough that it would see me walking in, even with my light off, and jump out. That's just my experience.


Posted by OLD TIMER on 03-15-2024 01:08 PM:

Cold nose went out the window when—

Hides went from $60 to $3
Tree points are rewarded more than strike
And having a fun night to see who had the best for a trophy to a $50,000 check or a new truck

__________________
OLD TIMER


Posted by CONRAD FRYAR on 03-15-2024 01:18 PM:

Fryar’s Treeing Walkers on Facebook
Old Walker blood that has that nose😊
NTCH. Hardwood Saul
NTCh. Yadkin River Buck

__________________
Striving to breed balanced Treeing Walkers.

"Life is short boys, Hunt an intelligent hound"

Born in sin, convicted by the Word, saved by Grace.


Posted by buff1978 on 03-15-2024 03:55 PM:

Tidewater dogs that James powers out of Virginia has cold nosed dogs.they open on tracks other dogs don't even know is there.if your interested in talking to him message me and I'll send you his phone number.hes 85 years old and still hunts.


Posted by Preacher Tom on 03-15-2024 10:31 PM:

quote:
Originally posted by buff1978
Tidewater dogs that James powers out of Virginia has cold nosed dogs.they open on tracks other dogs don't even know is there.if your interested in talking to him message me and I'll send you his phone number.hes 85 years old and still hunts.


Thanks for the info. He's a long way from me and in less than 2 months I'll be 75 so don't know that I should really be looking for a pup but I miss good track dogs. I will say this though, been coonhunting since I was 8 and a track dog that consistently put a coon on the end was never plentiful. I remember when a lot of hunters hunted 2 dogs to have one good one, a track dog and a tree dog.

__________________
Tom Wood


Posted by Dave Richards on 03-15-2024 11:18 PM:

quote:
Originally posted by Preacher Tom
Thanks for the info. He's a long way from me and in less than 2 months I'll be 75 so don't know that I should really be looking for a pup but I miss good track dogs. I will say this though, been coonhunting since I was 8 and a track dog that consistently put a coon on the end was never plentiful. I remember when a lot of hunters hunted 2 dogs to have one good one, a track dog and a tree dog.


Tom, I agree with you 100 percent. I am 75 and remember the days when folks hunted 3/4 Dogs or more just to get what 1 good dog could do. Some were really good strike dogs, some were good track dogs and some were dogs that trees good, but few were good at all 3 phrases strike, track and tree. I have been fortunate to own a few top coons dogs that excelled in all 3, but they are rare indeed. Saying that, the rare ones spoil a man and the others are a disappointment or at least to me. If I were to get a pup, it would be from Conrad Fryer stock of dogs. Dave

__________________
Dave Richards Treeing Walkers Reg American Saddlebred and Registered Rocky Mt. Show Horses


Posted by shadinc on 03-16-2024 03:59 AM:

Re: cold nose dogs

quote:
Originally posted by Preacher Tom
What line of Walker dogs are known for working up a cold track and putting a coon at the end?
You might have settle for a bluetick.

__________________
Donald Bergeron


Posted by Donnie Stevens on 03-16-2024 06:06 AM:

Re: Re: cold nose dogs

quote:
Originally posted by shadinc
You might have settle for a bluetick.


Lol

__________________
Friends don't let friends hunt blueticks


Posted by Dave Richards on 03-16-2024 08:19 AM:

Re: Re: cold nose dogs

quote:
Originally posted by shadinc
You might have settle for a bluetick.


Lol. I have seen some cold nosed blueticks, but they were too slow on track to suit me. I have owned some cold nosed Walkers that could move a cold track as fast as a hot track, they could run tracks that good dogs could not smell and show you the meat. Dave

__________________
Dave Richards Treeing Walkers Reg American Saddlebred and Registered Rocky Mt. Show Horses


Posted by Dave Richards on 03-16-2024 08:19 AM:

Re: Re: cold nose dogs

I owned a blue tick/cur cross years ago that could run a cold track and was deadly accurate. Coons hides were high during that time and the man I bought him from made a living hunting coons. The first time I hunted with him I knew I had to own him and bought him for a big amount. I was highly satisfied with my purchase and would definitely own another one like him if I could find one. Dogs like him are scarce to say the least or I can not find one. Dave

__________________
Dave Richards Treeing Walkers Reg American Saddlebred and Registered Rocky Mt. Show Horses


Posted by shadinc on 03-16-2024 03:47 PM:

Re: Re: Re: cold nose dogs

quote:
Originally posted by Dave Richards
I owned a blue tick/cur cross years ago that could run a cold track and was deadly accurate. Coons hides were high during that time and the man I bought him from made a living hunting coons. The first time I hunted with him I knew I had to own him and bought him for a big amount. I was highly satisfied with my purchase and would definitely own another one like him if I could find one. Dogs like him are scarce to say the least or I can not find one. Dave
Well, the Walker folks weren't very encouraging. With that being said, after 50 years of hunting Walkers, the fastest and best track dog I ever hunted with was a bluetick.

__________________
Donald Bergeron


Posted by Preacher Tom on 03-16-2024 05:04 PM:

I'm not opposed to a bluetick but wouldn't know where to start there either. Actually my first hunting was with my dad's bluetick that wasn't full blood. He was medium to hot nose but a locator and tree dog.

__________________
Tom Wood


Posted by Dave Richards on 03-16-2024 05:36 PM:

Cold nosed dogs

Donald/ Preacher Tom, back in my younger days,( 75 now ) hunters in these mountains never had registered dogs, instead they bred coondog to coon dog regardless of breed. My first straight coon dog was bluetick redbone mix. She was a walk dog hunted close but could tree these old mountain coons. Mixing breeds based on ability was a common thing and registered dogs were a rarity in my part of the country. Von Plott based in the North Carolina Mts. Had registered Plotts, but most hunters were hunting hounds that were cross bred. Dave

__________________
Dave Richards Treeing Walkers Reg American Saddlebred and Registered Rocky Mt. Show Horses


Posted by Georgeb on 03-16-2024 05:59 PM:

Re: Re: Re: Re: cold nose dogs

quote:
Originally posted by shadinc
Well, the Walker folks weren't very encouraging. With that being said, after 50 years of hunting Walkers, the fastest and best track dog I ever hunted with was a bluetick.


I hunted walkers and english 30 + years and then only mt currs around 20 yrs and these Blueticks i have now are the best track dogs ive had.Never thought someday id say that.Not so much real big cold trailers but they dont have to have a hot track to tree the coon.Ive only had one hound that was a cold trailer that would end with a coon in a tree and she was a bluetick english.Ive got one of my bluetick females bred now.Looking forward to a pup.


Posted by Preacher Tom on 03-16-2024 06:40 PM:

Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: cold nose dogs

quote:
Originally posted by Georgeb
I hunted walkers and english 30 + years and then only mt currs around 20 yrs and these Blueticks i have now are the best track dogs ive had.Never thought someday id say that.Not so much real big cold trailers but they dont have to have a hot track to tree the coon.Ive only had one hound that was a cold trailer that would end with a coon in a tree and she was a bluetick english.Ive got one of my bluetick females bred now.Looking forward to a pup.


What bloodlines are your blueticks? Did you raise them from pups?

__________________
Tom Wood


Posted by Georgeb on 03-16-2024 07:37 PM:

Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: cold nose dogs

quote:
Originally posted by Preacher Tom
What bloodlines are your blueticks? Did you raise them from pups?


Yes ,Im not the breeder but i raised all 3 that i have from 7 week old pups and all 3 were early starters and made good dogs at a young age and did it in the hills where coon arent thick.Im very thankful i met the man that has this stock of hound. My two females are littermates and there mother is the same cross as my male.These pups will be uncle niece cross.Theyve been a pleasure to own .They are Smokey River bred. I bred my female 33 days ago and shes not showing yet.I hope she is pregnant.Ill know soon.


Posted by shadinc on 03-16-2024 08:50 PM:

Re: Re: Re: cold nose dogs

quote:
Originally posted by Dave Richards
Lol. I have seen some cold nosed buttocks, but they were too slow on track to suit me. I have owned some cold nosed Walkers that could move a cold track as fast as a hot track, they could run tracks that good dogs could not smell and show you the meat. Dave
I have two out Big Country that don't stay in the same place very long.

__________________
Donald Bergeron


Posted by MOcoondogs on 03-16-2024 10:11 PM:

As a blue ticker I like the smokey river dogs and the great plains varmit hounds. They have all been natural starters with some starting earlier than others. I got my first pup from Warren hausler back in 97. If you stay with the line bred Smokey River dogs that Richard Edinger has or the Great plains varmit hounds that Guy Ormiston produces you can almost predict what you will have. Also my experience with breeding them to other bloodline is they will at least produce dogs that will tree coon. Both bloodlines are similar and have diamond Jim prominent in their pedigree. Both are known for handling tracks well, honest, and stay put on the tree. My experience has been that in thick coons on good nights a hot nose dog can do it faster. But when there's a 6 in snow and no one else treed anything that night, my old Smokey River dogs did. When it was -10 and the trappers had a dry run that night, my old blue dog cold trailed for an hour before falling treed with a coon up amongst a bunch of roosted turkeys. Here where I hunt coon tracks are scarce and it isn't like you can tree a coon every 100 yards. We have a lot of territory in these Ozark hills that these coons can hide in so even though it's better now than it was back during the fur boom it still takes a dog willing to take the first track it finds and work it out till the end in order to tree coons consistently.


Posted by buff1978 on 03-17-2024 02:25 AM:

quote:
Originally posted by Preacher Tom
Thanks for the info. He's a long way from me and in less than 2 months I'll be 75 so don't know that I should really be looking for a pup but I miss good track dogs. I will say this though, been coonhunting since I was 8 and a track dog that consistently put a coon on the end was never plentiful. I remember when a lot of hunters hunted 2 dogs to have one good one, a track dog and a tree dog.
your as young as you feel.think positive get a pup and keep hunting,it will keep you young and fit.lol


Posted by buff1978 on 03-17-2024 02:25 AM:

quote:
Originally posted by Preacher Tom
Thanks for the info. He's a long way from me and in less than 2 months I'll be 75 so don't know that I should really be looking for a pup but I miss good track dogs. I will say this though, been coonhunting since I was 8 and a track dog that consistently put a coon on the end was never plentiful. I remember when a lot of hunters hunted 2 dogs to have one good one, a track dog and a tree dog.
your as young as you feel.think positive get a pup and keep hunting,it will keep you young and fit.lol


Posted by Kler Kry on 03-17-2024 09:40 PM:

outstanding trackdogs

How many of the people that you regularly hunt with would you takes opinion on and drive 1000 miles to investigate?
How many hunts have you been on with others when your post hunt analysis didnt match the others?
When a cold nosed dog opens the thought of never treeing it should NEVER come to your mind.
A slick tree is an unfinished track.


Posted by Dave Richards on 03-19-2024 12:25 PM:

Re: outstanding trackdogs

quote:
Originally posted by Kler Kry
How many of the people that you regularly hunt with would you takes opinion on and drive 1000 miles to investigate?
How many hunts have you been on with others when your post hunt analysis didnt match the others?
When a cold nosed dog opens the thought of never treeing it should NEVER come to your mind.
A slick tree is an unfinished track.



Ken, I agree 100 percent a slick tree is just a unfinished track. I do not tolerate a slick treeing dog period. I hunt in steep mountains and refuse to hunt a dog that pull up short. Definitely not saying that they never miss, but it better be rare. I have followed you for several years, enough to know that you pack the better class of dogs, dogs that would suit me. Dave

__________________
Dave Richards Treeing Walkers Reg American Saddlebred and Registered Rocky Mt. Show Horses


Posted by Kler Kry on 03-19-2024 02:32 PM:

outstanding trackdogs

What I was trying to say, Is that of the hundreds of hunters that I've hunted with I've that I've got more fingers than I know hunters that give analysis of a hound that I would agree with. Not saying that I'm right, but the best dog that most call a great dog is just a nice dog in my opinion.
Ken Risley
Thanks for your complement


Posted by Dave Richards on 03-19-2024 04:12 PM:

Re: outstanding trackdogs

quote:
Originally posted by Kler Kry
What I was trying to say, Is that of the hundreds of hunters that I've hunted with I've that I've got more fingers than I know hunters that give analysis of a hound that I would agree with. Not saying that I'm right, but the best dog that most call a great dog is just a nice dog in my opinion.
Ken Risley
Thanks for your complement



Ken, you are correct at least in my opinion. I have hunted with many owners and dogs over the years and find your opinion to be correct. I have only known a few hunters that even knew what a real coon dog was or whose opinion I valued. I have been fortunate to have owned 3 to 4 top coon dogs, but they spoiled me. There are very few dogs that are actually top coon dogs in my opinion. Several good dogs and a bunch of just average coon dogs. I definitely respect your opinion on a top coon dog. Dave

__________________
Dave Richards Treeing Walkers Reg American Saddlebred and Registered Rocky Mt. Show Horses


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