1bludawg wrote:I thought JC and Marks comments were right on.When i was in my 20's i believed i was a great handler and trainer.Years later i realized a well bred hound will make almost anyone look good .
Anyone who can take pups from scratch and make cat dogs out of them with or without the help of an older broke dog sure better give theirselves a little credit for being a dog handler or trainer. I have known to many that had bought good broke cat dogs to build a pack around and within a year them good broke cat dogs wasn't broke no more.
One feller had bought some good straight cat dogs from me. He was a little worried about them working in his area where he lived. I gave him a months trail. About 5 days into the first week he called me back to cash the check said he had done caught 2 cats and they were going to work. Things went well for a while with him catching more cats than he thought he could in his country. Then he went to buying young dogs and adding to the pack. Before long he had about as many young dogs as old dogs. Then he got to telling me how the cats could run up there in his country. Boy ever now and then they would pull out of the country, they could really run. This went on for a while. He had quit catching cats. He thought he had just got down to cats that had got spoiled and could really run. Then he called me, telling me about his race that morning. Long hard race really getting after it, then finally bayed straight up the road ahead of him. He jumped in his truck run down the road a ways and could see the dogs baying in a bush right off the side of the road. He jumped out run over to encourage dogs to get that cat, then with a closer look realized they were baying a half grown coyote. Said he couldn't believe it!
He had a good straight (or was straight) cat dog he had gotten from me about 6 years old at that time by the name of Buckshot. I asked him what did Buckshot do when you run up there as they were baying that yote in the bush? He said nothing just kept baying. I asked he didn't get scared when he saw you? He answered no. I then reminded him of his long races he had been having on them spoiled cats. He got real quite on the other end of the phone line. Then I told him if Buckshot never flinched, never missed a beat baying that coyote when you run up there, I can promise you that isn't the first coyote you have run. Buckshot had done got comfortable with running coyotes, he didn't think there was anything wrong with it. Long story short he had a bad coyote problem.
There are very few dogs that are broke forever "IF" you keep exposing them to off game. After a while broke dogs go to thinking "Hey, this is alright!" So....just because we have that good solid straight cat dog to train our young dogs with and we just hit the lottery with plenty of money and more time to hunt than ever before. Don't get to relaxed out there in the woods with the dogs. We still have to read what's going on with the dogs, are things can go haywire in a hurry! Another opinion.
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