![]() |
Pages (2): [1] 2 » Show all 27 posts from this thread on one page |
UKC Forums (http://forums.ukcdogs.com/index.php)
- UKC Big Game Hunting (http://forums.ukcdogs.com/forumdisplay.php?forumid=36)
-- Sucess Rate Poll (http://forums.ukcdogs.com/showthread.php?threadid=167021)
Sucess Rate Poll
Lets find out what our real life experience has been. Lets say success mean a dog makes a solid hound. A solid hound will Start a cold track, Run the track with good speed, Bay a bear or lion. And Stay treed untill you get there. Lets make this about what you have seen Not what you think it should be,
Jess
__________________
Jess
Light Foot English
"They are often imitated but never duplicated"
22 looks and One vote !!!!!!!!!!!
don't be shy
Jess
__________________
Jess
Light Foot English
"They are often imitated but never duplicated"
The dogs that I first starting hunting with... 75%..... All the same line of dogs.. I have hunted with probably about 30 different dogs that were all half brother/sister from about 5 different litters off one old dog.....
I have since tried other lines of dogs to see if "the grass is greener on the other side".... I am running about 30% or so....
I think the grass is plenty green where I started
__________________
~Melanie Hampton~
OutWest Big Game Hounds
You've only got 3 choices in life, give in, give up, or give it all you got.
Well , being as I'm not a breeder , I can tell you only what I've seen over the years. Now , keep in mind , these are all colors , makes , and models. And owned and handled by about 20 different people.
About 1 in 10 that I've seen go on to make a good , solid bear dog.
I've seen alot of young ones start out good , but by their third year , they're done.
Alot of breeders will say it's the training. But , I've never seen a trainer yet that can " train " a dog to " want " to catch a bear. Or anything else for that matter. It's got to come from inside.
Just like a pro football or basketball player. You can't " make " them want to do it , they have to want it. All you can do is give them the opportunity.
Most dog breeders are like car salesman.........
Buy one of mine , it'll be the best you ever had !
I read one time that EVERY pup out of the famous plott cross of Butch and Jill made bear dogs. I only seen one go and when he was turned loose on a bear , he went and stood at the truck. Kinda made me wonder just " how " good the rest were. LOL
Like I said , not many. But , then again , I've never hunt with a whole litter either. Maybe I only got to hunt with the bad ones.
__________________
Bob Brooks /
Jordan Tyler (grandson)
BackWoods River Walkers/Beagles
Just all 'round , meat gettin' hounds.
I would say I have seen somewhere between 50-75%.jackbob I don't say its the training.I say its the hunting.Hard hunters give the pup more opportunity to go on.I totally agree about, you can't train for desire.I always say give me the trashy ones that will BURN a deer or coyote for hours or the one that may be a little tree happy(Sure I'd rather they were straight.)I'll take that ten or eleven month old that will run a deer for five hours to catch over the one that bawls around for 15-30 minutes and is back in the road.Same with one that may grab a tree alittle quick when he's young as long as it hasn't been let go as to become a problem,I'd rather "train" him to check himself than to have to beg him and all that other cr^p we've all done trying to get one to tree that never will.You can train them to back off but you can't make them want to.
__________________
Home of Strawberry Mt Kennels
Never underestimate the Power of Hillbilly Mac and Southern Sound
Nt Ch Owens Glassy Mt Skip
Nt Ch Southern Sound Jimbo
Gr Nt Ch Ch Southern Sound Matlock
Gr Nt Ch Strawberry Mt Korn
Pr Strawberry Mt Sadie
The reason I hunt this bloodlines is a quote an old friend gave me,"Your either making dust or your eating it."
NO !!!!
Right or Wrong Answer's
Just what you have seen.
Good Honest Opinions so far.
Jess
__________________
Jess
Light Foot English
"They are often imitated but never duplicated"
i breed and train all my own hounds, so i`ll say 75%. i totaly agree with travis.
__________________
www.kcshounds.com/index.php
585-216-5113
I'd say it's about a 50% chance. A "Solid" dog to me is not a Great dog. It's a dog with some holes (as they all have) that you can deal with, yet still catches you game. No dogs perfect, not even the great ones. What's great to one, would be another man's cull...
Not sure how a cold nose makes a dog a "solid bear dog." I like treeing game now, not 8 hours later, not tomarrow. I don't care if a dog finishes 90% of every cold trail he starts. I don't have patients.... I like knowing the second my dog opens his mouth, that its buisness. We're gonna see a bear in a tree, if not it's not because "he was cold trailing." I don't want em so hot nosed they have to hear brush snapping. But I feel that is one trait that is a personal opinion more than a "must have for a solid bear dog."
__________________
Cassandra Davis
UKC Bench Show Judge & Master of Hounds
REDWOOD'S TREEING WALKER COONHOUNDS
& LOUISIANA CATAHOULA LEOPARD DOGS
http://www.RedwoodCoonhounds.net/
NITECH CGRCH FCH GRCH 'PR' Redwood's All Night Aspen
(2014 #1 UKC Top Ten All-Breed Conformation Treeing Walker)
NITECH CCH GRFCH GRWCH GRCH 'PR' Redwood's Wild Gamble
quote:
Originally posted by jackbob42
About 1 in 10 that I've seen go on to make a good , solid bear dog.
Good Post Pete !!
If I lived closer to Eddies (live Bear Bay) in Cowpens S.C. and Lived next door to Pete in VT. and if I trained the whole litter I would say at least 80%+... But that would be in a perfict world..
Their Are good trainers out their and if a pup gets in their hands well they have a 90% chance of making it.. Their is one in Victoria B.C. "Dave Smith" now he can produce a high % out of your Stock !! But I watched Dave work one Female for 2 years before she made it and now she is a Great Lion or Bear hound. But Dave also lives in an area that you can just drive down the road and drop hounds on bear just standing on the side of the road !!
How a pup is raised is atleast 35%+ of the out come to Their Full Potential.. You have to know when to turn on the right Switch in that pups Head !! If you miss the timing well you drop the %.
Then their is the Other Side, the ones that "I dont mess with the pups till their over a year old" and the ones "I have tried every type of hound out their and none are any good" These are the Fokes that Drop your % down to 10%..
When you Sell to the Unknown Public your % Drops ..
We know of one Switch that will up the %.. And that is the Coon Pen .. The pups and one adult (Usuly our Golden Retriver) turned loose in the Coon Pen and if a pup gets bit its alowed 20 to 30 sec. to shake of the blood and get right back on the coon. If this happens well that pup is ready for anything with hard Game drive..
__________________
Steve Morrow "Saltlick Majestic's"
"Never Have Hounds Or Kids And You Won't Get Your Heart Broke"!!
540-421-2875
PR, Saltlick's Blue Misty Linga "Bluetick Coonhound"
French X American Hounds
quote:
Originally posted by Majestic Tree H
....
Then their is the Other Side, the ones that "I dont mess with the pups till their over a year old" and the ones "I have tried every type of hound out their and none are any good" These are the Fokes that Drop your % down to 10%..
When you Sell to the Unknown Public your % Drops ..
We know of one Switch that will up the %.. And that is the Coon Pen .. The pups and one adult (Usuly our Golden Retriver) turned loose in the Coon Pen and if a pup gets bit its alowed 20 to 30 sec. to shake of the blood and get right back on the coon. If this happens well that pup is ready for anything with hard Game drive..
__________________
Bob Brooks /
Jordan Tyler (grandson)
BackWoods River Walkers/Beagles
Just all 'round , meat gettin' hounds.
Train-ability is a Factor
I think more good prospects are Hurt, by Trainers ?
Than are helped.
I don't think you can train Speed/Nose/Desire/Athletic Ability.
You can break them from running trash.
You can Over Handle a dog.
You can be impatient and fail to give a young dog the time needed. < my worst problem>
However this poll is about results, Not methods.
Jess
__________________
Jess
Light Foot English
"They are often imitated but never duplicated"
Re: Train-ability is a Factor
quote:
Originally posted by hellcat
I think more good prospects are Hurt, by Trainers ?
Sam
I would hate to see a poll about the % of Trainers who are Good !!!! lol
Jess
__________________
Jess
Light Foot English
"They are often imitated but never duplicated"
Re: Sam
quote:
Originally posted by hellcat
I would hate to see a poll about the % of Trainers who are Good !!!! lol
Jess
I find it interesting the different traits that people find important.
Dogs that rig and run hard are fairly common here, Cold trailers are not.
I also would have picked a smaller percentage if it was available for a dog with this definition of "solid"
All I know is what I've seen in WI and our conditions. Very few dogs can jump a tough cold track, have enough speed to keep up with the lead pack when jumped, stay bayed/caught, and tree until you get there (whenever that may be).
A much, much lower percentage can do this all by themselves. It takes a heck of a dog to stay on a tough bear by itself. Granted no-one tries to have a dog solo on a bear like that, but it happens. The good ones hang on long enough for you to get in there and get them help. I can't fathom a way to "train" that.
I'm with Jackbob on this. I might show a critter to get the dogs fired up, maybe let them try to run it. I'll also try to get them on a easy couple to get there feet wet. After that it's all OTJ (On The JOb) training. The more chances you get at the job, the better your chance of figuring out how to do it well.
I think everyone is looking at it for the area they are in.. That is the way I did.. My "cold nose" might not be someone else's definition of one. And I am looking at the dogs as cat dogs (not superior bobcat dogs, but solid cat dogs)
If we could run bears where I live I would know that it really isn't too difficult for a single dog to put one up a tree. Not something I would want to do (run a single bear dog)... but do-able. but again, if we could run bears, I would imagine the majority of them would pop up pretty easy and very few "mean' ones...
__________________
~Melanie Hampton~
OutWest Big Game Hounds
You've only got 3 choices in life, give in, give up, or give it all you got.
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Nolte
[B]I find it interesting the different traits that people find important.
Dogs that rig and run hard are fairly common here, Cold trailers are not.
I also would have picked a smaller percentage if it was available for a dog with this definition of "solid"
{QOUTE} Originally posted by hellcat
{B} A solid hound will Start a cold track, Run the track with good speed, Bay a bear or lion.
Jess
Nolte, I agree about Cold trailing. I did include that in what I called a Solid Hound.
Jess
__________________
Jess
Light Foot English
"They are often imitated but never duplicated"
Good posts.
Im might be hunting hounds that Pete, JackBob, and Nolte consider culls lol.
But honestly a good houndsman does more evaluating than training (except handling). Unless your starting from scratch, ur pack is the trainer. You just do some fine tuning and get em out and on game with the seasoned hounds. Then cull from there, without prejudice.
Id hate to have to start from scratch.. especially for bearhounds.
"I much rather breed and look for naturals rather then just trainable ones" I was told something to that effect years back by Pete I believe.
quote:
Originally posted by ladycathunter
My "cold nose" might not be someone else's definition of one. And I am looking at the dogs as cat dogs (not superior bobcat dogs, but solid cat dogs)
If we could run bears where I liveI would know that it really isn't too difficult for a single dog to put one up a tree. Not something I would want to do (run a single bear dog)... but do-able. but again, if we could run bears, I would imagine the majority of them would pop up pretty easy and very few "mean' ones...
Exactly!! Everyone idea of a solid dog is going to be different to where they live to how the animals behave in the area they hunt. Can't say one person is wrong... maybe for a different area, but not for theirs.... I sure would like to go see some bear dogs at work.. Not the sorry excuse for cat dogs that we put on bears
__________________
~Melanie Hampton~
OutWest Big Game Hounds
You've only got 3 choices in life, give in, give up, or give it all you got.
I guess I'm different.My idea of a solid dog is one that is not going to embarass me no matter where I go to hunt.If i'm hunting at home or if I am traveling to Wisconsin or North Carolina or down to California.If my dogs look like crap I'm not gonna use the excuse that,"they just aren't in their kinda country."If they have the heart and desire it don't matter to me where their at.Success rates to me,tie into not having to be hunted in a specialized setting.As I said in the beginning of this post amount of time hunted not trained I believe is the biggest factor(besides breeding)LOL
__________________
Home of Strawberry Mt Kennels
Never underestimate the Power of Hillbilly Mac and Southern Sound
Nt Ch Owens Glassy Mt Skip
Nt Ch Southern Sound Jimbo
Gr Nt Ch Ch Southern Sound Matlock
Gr Nt Ch Strawberry Mt Korn
Pr Strawberry Mt Sadie
The reason I hunt this bloodlines is a quote an old friend gave me,"Your either making dust or your eating it."
Well I don't think they should embarass you.... But I sure believe if I take my dogs to Florida it sure the heck is going to take them a while to adjust to the swamp, humidity etc....
Guess what I am trying to say and for some reason it sure isn't coming out right...... One person's idea of a solid dog might not be anothers..... My idea of a solid dog isn't going to be the same as someone elses.. I don't need a gritty top notch solid bear dog because I need a solid cat dog.. And in my mind those dogs are different....
Maybe that came across the way I meant it If not... I give up...
__________________
~Melanie Hampton~
OutWest Big Game Hounds
You've only got 3 choices in life, give in, give up, or give it all you got.
This is a hard one to vote on. I had a couple solid dogs in the beginning then I went through six pups that were less than stellar. Got another good one and he got killed young. Went through some more then finally started getting some good pups. As time passed I became more selective and weeded through them a bit faster. I think not taking the time to finish them is a real problem. I gave some dogs way to much time, but I also kept one longer than I thought I should have and is still getting better at five. He has turned into a really nice dog. Of the last six dogs I have owned five have made dogs. Perhaps due to better breeding and hunting more. I think I am on a roll now and have found couple of very reliable sources for some dandy pups.
It seems that
82% of us have had a 50% chance or less of getting a solid hound with a new pup. I wonder what happens to the 50% that do not make solid hounds ?
Jess
__________________
Jess
Light Foot English
"They are often imitated but never duplicated"
All times are GMT. The time now is 07:38 AM. | Pages (2): [1] 2 » Show all 27 posts from this thread on one page |
Powered by: vBulletin Version 2.3.0
Copyright © Jelsoft Enterprises Limited 2000 - 2002.
Copyright 2003-2020, United Kennel Club