What a great thread Andy. You brought out some heavy hitters. I sure enjoyed reading it and learned some things about myself by reading it.Trueblue wrote:Now if your goal for the day when you go hunting is to put game in a tree then this is the most effective way to do it, but if your goal for the day is to train your young dogs to be the dependable one, then there are other more effective methods...in my opinion.Some guys go to the woods to put game in a tree and others go to the woods to train dogs.There is a difference..
And before I say anything more, just want to say to any new-comers that recognize me as the author of a book, please don't give any more weight to my reply as to any one else on here. There are many who have shown up on this web-site much more qualified than me to write a book on bobcat hunting. It is just that I did it and they didn't. Mostly because someone developing and maintaining a pack of bobcat dogs does not have much time or energy for stuff like writing books.
I sure related heavily to Trueblues post because I really evolved from going out there to catch cats to going out there to see how much I could get out of a young dog. If I didn't have a young dog to work on, honestly I got bored. It was that young dog that pulled me out of bed when I really wanted to lay there awhile. It was that young dog that sent me to the woods when I sure could have been doing something that made money instead. The young dog called me out of the house in the nastiest of weather when anybody with a little common sense would have stayed in. The young dog had me out there even when conditions were so bad it was 100% certain we could not catch a bobcat.. and 100% certain there were things that young dog could learn toward becoming the best dog she could be.
And that was the driving force for me...that burning question that tortured me until I had the answer: What is the hidden potential of this pup, and what can I possibly do to see ALL of it. Not part of it, but ALL of it. In other words, if this pup gets all the right stimulus at all the right times, what could it possibly become? We all stress intelligence as important. And really I think we are largely talking about problem solving ability when we say intelligence. We also know that the neuro pathways in the brain are formed with use when young. So I value forcing a pup to work out problems on his own. Of course part of his stumulus includes how to key off other dogs. But in my opinion, that is the easiest of all lessons for a pack animal to learn. Largely, I save it for later. So it is never "me too" but "how can we help each other to solve this problem".
I am not trying to find the dog that can get the job done. Not even trying to find the dog that can simply lead the pack. I am trying to develop the dog that makes me smile real big, scratch my head and ask "how in the world did he do that?" And I am left with something to ponder literally for the rest of my life.
This is a tremendous amount of "work" doing things this way. And it is a huge gamble that most folks are not going to take the time for. You can end up putting a lot of time into a dog that genetically was not really worthy of all that effort. And on the other hand, I have had very few dogs trained in this way that would not be very pleasing to most hunters. And when it does turn out to be the dog genetically worthy of all that effort, I have the dog I always wanted. So I get bored, sell it, and start over


