John Wittenborn
UKC Forum Member
Registered: Apr 2004
Location: Cutler, Il.
Posts: 1631 |
What does an old whiskey bottle, a Prince Albert can, & binder twine have in common ?
That was part of your coon hunting gear. It's still drizzling a little outside, & here I set instead of hunting. Looking at some of the threads about which light, tracking system, breed of dog, etc. is the best, got me to reminiscing. We have come a long way from the one room country school to the present. We wore the clothes that we did the chores in, along with the five buckle over-shoes when we went hunting. I was raised on a dairy farm so we had plenty of milk to feed the dogs. All the dogs were grade dogs, never heard of a reg. coon hound. Dad usually kept about 15-25 fox hounds, 8-10 coon hounds, & 2 shepards.
When you got ready to go hunting you filled your whiskey bottle with clean water, filled the Prince Albert can with carbide, & made sure you had several pieces of screen wire to clean your light tip out with. Get your 2-3 cell flashlight to shine trees with, put a waded up hand full of binder twine in your hip pocket, just in case you ever had to lead a dog, get the 12 guage shotgun & plenty of shells, & step out on the back porch where all hell broke loose. Here is where you young guys would have a high speed melt down. there would usually be 5-6 dogs including the shepards running loose, then you would start turning dogs loose that were tied up to dog houses, & get the ones that were locked up in the barn, & you ready to head for the creek. HELL, I remember a lot of nights we would have a rabbit race, a possum treed, a coon treed, & fox race going on at the same time. There were dogs barking every direction. Hunt 3-5 hours, come home eat a snack & go to bed. Get up around 4:30- 5:00 & help with the chores, then get ready & walk one & a half miles to Plum Creek school. Got sent home alot because I smelled like skunk. Oh yes, if we drove off some place to hunt, we hauled our dogs in the trunk or back seat of the family car. Trucks usually had feed or something on them & were used for farm use only.
I tried to condense this as much as possible & still tell you a little bit what it was like back a FEW years. Yep, it sure has changed. My first competition hunt was a possum rule hunt in 1948. Hope to see you at one of the hunts.
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