memo jaramillo wrote:THANKS TO ALL
you are very nice, I'm no expert I have 35 years of hunting and have many errors and every passing day I learn something with my dogs. and I always look at this site to learn from you.
It's difficult to hunt from the semi-desert, then on the beach and in the jungle
in the mountains and the plains
the dog has to be broke, no monkeys animals do not know wath family is, dog, cat, raccoon skunk or badger etc. I have never seen in the zoo, we have lots of exotic wildlife
I send my friend a Jeson photos to put here
my dogs, cats running when they bark
mabe is bobcat, ocelot lion, jaguar, jaguarundi all depends on where you hunt, only love this.
Adios Amigos
Memo
The day we quite learnin is the day we're lookin at the wrong side of the grass.....I've always though the best teacher is your own misteaks, you have a good memory and USUALLY do not do it twice, although I have caught myself eatin a bit of "Humble Pie" on occation!!!!
Before I had the chance to hunt leopard with hounds I thought how difficult it had to be to hunt jaguar with them in the jungle, as you mention all the trash that is there for the hounds to run if they are not broke.
That jungle is a different world, theres things livin there I can't pronounce or spell.
I got my first look at what I called broke hounds in Africa, we started a leopard track at daylight made about 6 hrs earlier, it had been walked on by every critter you could imagine from monkeys to elephant and the hounds still were able to catch the big tom after a long hot 4 hour chase.
These were hounds from Nico Lourens pack and they were so well broke off trash they would not even lift their nose from the ground if impala or other game ran in front of them...
I'll dig into my old photo's of with some of the big cats taken when I was in the jungle on that hunt and get them scanned and post a few...very interesting experience....
Where we hunt here in Canada and most of that is done with snow conditions there is little to break your hounds off and it's easly done with a bit of time spent working with them.
Benny
Thanks for the info on Richard, I figured either you or Mike Leonard would have a real good idea where his horse was tied.
Good Huntin












