Hoosier Outlaw
UKC Forum Member
Registered: Jun 2010
Location: Marion, Indiana
Posts: 4280 |
quote: Originally posted by Mark Zepp
Shane -
I hate it, but I agree with 99% of what you have said.
Most of the really successful breeders I know stay away from repeat crosses and breed them to something else because they've tried it and it can't seem to replicate the results. I am sure they work sometimes and I am sure they don't at others, why that is, I have NO idea.
I don't agree with guys who say it's in the DNA so these crosses have to work and are surely going to be successful. I can't sit at dinner table for more than 2 minutes with my brother before we are throwing our salads back and forth at each other. He's skinny, I'm fat and we have NOTHING in common... we don't think the same way about any subject, anyone or anything yet we were raised in the same house by the same parents.
On your statement, " There is no way to reliably check facts on pleasure dogs because you have to depend on peoples opinions."... I agree but also say this, bullying handlers, inept judging, guys hunting the wrong dog, scorecards getting changed, guys never going to the woods and filling out a scorecard, etc. have to enter into how some of these "world beaters" got their titles.
I saw somewhere where you mentioned culling pups at birth because of this breed defect or that..... yet Stylish Queen, arguably the greatest, or one of the greatest reproducing/influential females in the Walker breed was born with one blue eye and sold for $50 as a pup at Kenton.
If people would have used that same philosophy, my buddy John Delcamp would have been knocked in the head at birth and I would have been denied the privledge of ever knowing him!
Good Luck to All!
Mark
When I was talking about culling at birth or a very young age I mean for physical defects that would keep a dog from being able to hunt and tree coon as effectively as any other dog. I don't consider eye color one of those...lol
But, I imagine some people who show dogs might cull pups like that. This last litter I raised had a few pups that had kinks in their tails. I watched almost all of them be born and they came out like that. I thought maybe they got broke in the birthing process, but was told later by people familiar with this line that it is pretty common to see this and some of the best dogs in this line show that. The female I kept shows it....and it doesn't bother me that much. I do like a good looking dog....but just like in people....looks are not a good indicator of what's on the inside (thank God, cause I got the short end of the stick in that department...lol)
Mark you are a pretty lucky guy to have been able to spend alot of time around one of the all time great thinkers and trainers in the sport of coon hunting.....John Wick. I have read his books and magazine articles and I arrived at many of the same conclusions in training that he has over the years. What I like about John and what he writes is the fact that if he says he came to a particular conclusion through his personal experience....most of the time....if you test that method....you will come to the very same conclusion. Now I learned early on that when ever you can learn from other peoples mistakes....it is usually wise to do so and just about every problem that a trainer is likely to encounter can be found and explained in one of John's books. Just like this topic we are discussing on repeat crosses. John Wick did his own homework and made many repeat crosses and kept track of the results and my findings pretty much mirror his findings and many others who have studied this phenomenon. I wish I knew why they don't work as well...but it is probably going to remain a mystery....along with why pups from the same litter who came from the same parents can look different and act different. It is what it is and in my mind....making a repeat cross is a missed opportunity because if the first cross proved the parents were good reproducers and you can be pretty sure a repeat cross will not produce as good.....why not breed that female to another proven reproducer....then her 2nd litter may indeed be better than her first 
Good to hear from you buddy....you need to take a break from selling all those Garmin products and get out in the woods before you forget why the rest of us won't turn a dog loose without one 
__________________
Shane Maxey
Proud lifetime member of the NRA
Banshee Wildlife Products
Hoosier Outlaw / Moonlight Redbones
1994 American Redbone Coonhound Association Hunter of the Year
My first 3 redbones raised from pup's were:
Dual Gr.Ch. Outlaw Billy the Kid
Dual Gr.Ch.- PKC Ch. Outlaw Timber Girl
Dual Gr.Ch. Outlaw Scarlett Fever
(((( Current Favorites ))))
2013 AKC Ladies World Champion
Gr.Nt.Ch.- PKC Ch- AKC Ladies World Ch Ky Moonlight Breanna
Gr.Nt.Ch. - PKC Ch. Ky Moonlight Woody
Dual Grand Moonlight Deana
Dual Grand Ch.- PKC Ch. Moonlight AfterShock
Dual Grand Nighty Night Amber
Gr.Nt.Ch. Moonlight Big Time Britt
Gr.Nt.Ch Outlaw Billy Jean
Gr.Nt.Ch-PKC Ch.-2015 PKC Red Days Champ Outlaw Cherry Bomb
Gr.Nt.Ch Outlaw Breeze
Gr.Nt.Ch.Gr.Ch. All Grand Outlaw G-Man (over $20.000 won in PKC & CHKC) 2019 Southern Redbone Days Overall Champion
Gr.Nt.Ch. Moonlight Outlaw Mac
Gr.Nt.Ch. Classy Cali (Heavy Outlaw bred)
Gr.Nt.Ch. Moonlight Cat Scratch Fever
Gr.Nt.Ch. Moonlight Addiction
Gr.Nt.Ch. Moonlight Overdose
Gr.Nt.Ch. Moonlight Jinx
Gr.Nt.Ch. Moonlight Banshee
"Always outnumbered...Never outgunned!"
To enjoy lots of pics and videos of out redbones, find me on Facebook
as Shenandoah Maxey
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