Hound Hunters Are Not Cruel Killing Monsters

Talk about Big Game Hunting with Dogs
treeing walkers
Bawl Mouth
Bawl Mouth
Posts: 205
Joined: Mon Jun 25, 2007 6:53 pm
Facebook ID: 0
Location: washington

Hound Hunters Are Not Cruel Killing Monsters

Post by treeing walkers »

Not getting many views in the other section so I figured I would place it over here. Any comments or ideas for this article would be great. This is not article material but maybe with all your help it could be. This is just what I came up with.


Hound Hunters Are Not Cruel Killing Monsters
Written By Treeing Walkers




I’m a fellow hound hunter and I’ve been reading articles that have been published in the last 6 months that have mislead the public about the hound hunting community. We as a lot of people believe, are not cruel, killers and immoral. We have a sport that a lot of the public doesn’t understand. The public has been mislead and railroaded to think that we are a bunch of redneck killers. Yes it’s true most of the hound hunters drive a muddy Toyota truck with a dog box in the bed. But as any hunter would know driving in the woods your truck is going to get muddy. The box is to haul the hounds to and from the woods safely. It’s a must in the hound hunting world. For people saying we don’t have a sport that is far from the truth. We as hound hunters pride ourselves in our sport and the more we love and take good care of our hounds. To contrary belief we invest a lot of time and money into our beloved hounds. Any hound hunter would tell you that we go to great lengths to keep our beloved hounds out of harms way. Just as the next dog owner would. Of course our dogs are in the woods hunting as they have been bred to do for over 100 years now. They are in situations that a normal non-working dog isn’t, but that is because they are working dogs. They go through different training than a non working dog is accustomed to. They also go through some of the same training that non working dogs go through to. Is it wrong or cruel to train the dog for what it’s been bred to do?? I say no. I would say it’s crueler to the dog to not train it for what it’s been bred to do. Hounds are a very smart breed. They deserve to be out doing what they are bred to do as any lab deserves to be a bird dog. We hound hunters care and love for our hounds as we do for our sport.

I have read in other articles, comments that we don’t have a sport, we are killers. Contrary to the belief we are killers we as hound hunters don’t harvest 10% of what we tree. Even in states where cougar and bear hunting is legal to hunt with hounds. Since Dec. 1, 2003, hunters holding special permits have tracked and killed 43 of 61 cougars targeted for removal this year under a long-term plan to reduce cougar populations in areas where they are raising the greatest concerns. That ongoing effort follows on the heels of the regular hunting season, when hunters took more than 100 cougars statewide. Only about 30% of all special permitees under last year's new system were able to remove cougars It’s also a fact that 90% of treed game is done by 10% of the hound hunters. Why you ask? It’s a fact that training a hound to hunt and tree game consistently is a full time job. Not anybody off the street can buy a hound puppy and take that hound to the woods and tree game. Without the proper training a hound isn’t an efficient hunting hound. Then after you have a trained hound you still can’t take it to the woods and catch game, maybe if you are lucky here and there. It takes a skilled hunter to know the games habitat and where it more than likely is at. After the hunter has done his homework and with luck on his side he may then put trained hounds down and let the dogs work from there. Of course we have radio collars on our beloved hounds but this is to insure that they come home safe. Contrary to past beliefs that we follow the radio signal to the hounds treed is not true. When the hounds are on a trail you can hear where they are going and when they tree. Hound hunters don’t just let their hounds out and sit back and drink beer and wait till they feel the hounds have treed then turn on the tracking box and find where they are. From the time the hounds hit the ground till they are back in our trucks we are trying our hardest to keep up with them and follow everywhere they go. Most hound hunters very rarely use their tracking box. Of course time to time you’ll find yourself in a situation where the hounds have crossed over a ridge or through a canyon that takes more time to get around or cross then it took the hounds. At these times is where the collars come into play. Wouldn’t it be more inhumane to not have the collars to help find your lost hounds ??

Another point I keep reading about is how unsporting it is to release hounds and walk into a tree and harvest the game. The numbers will show that this is an efficient way of harvesting the right animal for age and gender. This is how we can preserve our game animals that no other hunting method can. I disagree with the argument made by supporters of the ban that hunting cougars with hounds is not humane. Hounds tree the cat they’re chasing, which allows the hunter to get a good look at the cat before shooting it. The alternative that’s been used since the ban went into effect is to let people shoot on sight. What’s more humane ?? The state of Washington reported that since 1996’s ban took effect that the average cat has been 3 years old and mostly females. Prior to the ban the average was 5 years old and mostly males. The female harvest went way up, resulting in the death of existing kittens and a steep drop in the production of new litters. When it’s in a tree, if you use a hound, you’re right there, and if the hunter is experienced they can tell what sex it is and decide not to take it. It’s more selective way of controlling the species. As for just walking into a tree it’s not that easy. Most of the time when the hounds tree it’s a mile or more off any road. This is no stroll through the park. These trees are usually located in the nastiest part of the wilderness that the average person would shutter at hiking into. It is physically demanding to hike into most trees. This is the part that most people over look.

Hound hunters are real people with families and jobs. There is not one unemployed hound hunter that is hunting. We hound hunters have very good family and pet morals. We are no different then any other person except we enjoy a sport that most don’t understand or want to understand. Hound hunting is a family tradition. Most hound hunters have learned from a father, grandfather or close friend that showed them the way. There is no difference between bird hunting with gundogs to hound hunting. Both are sports and done for the love of the breed. Just so happens that dogs are used so that gives the uneducated public the thought that they must be not a sport hunter and are cruel killers. In fact we are not. Just as with any sport there are bad apples involved. These bad apples give any sport they are affiliated with a bad name, and that is what has happened to hound hunters. We had a few bad apples not hunting with in our ethic manner and got caught and the rest of the law abiding hound hunters feel the after math. To say that a sport that had a bad apple involved and got caught needs to be banned is unfair and unjust. If that was the case there would be no sports left. The numbers show that it takes 40 times the hunters to get the same result as it did before the ban took place. Instead of 1,500 Washington hunters with cougar permits prior to the ban, now there are nearly 60,000. Running across a cougar in the wild, is like getting struck by lightning. When I look at that harvest, what it tells me is we must have a huge number of cougars out there for people to be stumbling across them and shooting them.

As for the next time you encounter a hound hunter in the woods or at a gas station say hi and see how they respond. I think you’ll be surprised that they are just the same as the majority of tax paying citizens. You even might make a new friend. Try to talk instead of pointing fingers and pushing your beliefs on somebody else. We all don’t have the same beliefs or past times is that not why we live in America. Is this not “The Land of The Free and Home of The Brave”??
Last edited by treeing walkers on Wed Aug 01, 2007 2:11 am, edited 2 times in total.
If It Wasn't For Hounds, Beer, and Kids I Would Be A Wealthy Man
Josh Kunde
Bawl Mouth
Bawl Mouth
Posts: 334
Joined: Sun Jul 01, 2007 1:23 am
Facebook ID: 0
Location: Elko, NV
Contact:

Post by Josh Kunde »

I like it, I think you are doing a very good job of getting the public to understand our beloved passion of hounds. thank you very much treeing walkers for what you are doing here. I wish I could do more to help you but what is a 16 year old kid gonna do.so once again thanks.
Josh
Melanie Hampton
Open Mouth
Open Mouth
Posts: 923
Joined: Mon Jun 25, 2007 5:13 pm
Location: Oregon
Location: Currently hunting Southern Oregon

Post by Melanie Hampton »

I think it is great. I have messed around with writing one.. It is pretty much coming out the same as you just posted...
Melanie Hampton
Home of OutWest Hounds
Image

You've only got 3 choices in life
give in, give up, or give it all you got.

http://www.outwesthounds.com
whoflungdung
Bawl Mouth
Bawl Mouth
Posts: 163
Joined: Thu Jul 05, 2007 8:46 pm
Facebook ID: 0

Post by whoflungdung »

I think it looks good. Your effort is appreciated.
User avatar
Buddyw
Site Admin
Site Admin
Posts: 2298
Joined: Thu Jun 21, 2007 2:39 pm
Location: Washington
Facebook ID: 100000011567041
Location: sw Washington
Contact:

Post by Buddyw »

Wes,

Sent you a PM..
treeing walkers
Bawl Mouth
Bawl Mouth
Posts: 205
Joined: Mon Jun 25, 2007 6:53 pm
Facebook ID: 0
Location: washington

Post by treeing walkers »

This is just an idea or a rough draft. I would like to get everyones input and get this as close to perfect as possible. Nothing will ever be done with this with out all of the local and nonlocal hounding community behind it a 100%. Once something is published it is set in stone and for all eyes to see and judge. It would potentially effect us all. So for everyone reading this help and make this a master piece even if it means starting over. I or someone more qualified can write and re-write till its what we all want to say about our beloved sport.

Thanks for all the comments and suggestions so far lets keep 'em coming and get the ball rolling in our favor for a change. No time is better than present with everything happening around us we have backing right now , lets educate the public and get 'em on our side ??
If It Wasn't For Hounds, Beer, and Kids I Would Be A Wealthy Man
User avatar
nmplott
Open Mouth
Open Mouth
Posts: 907
Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 5:42 pm
Location: The only John Wayne left in this town
Contact:

Post by nmplott »

its important that articles like this get out. We do not want to self eliminate our sport by killing everything.
DesertDweller
Tight Mouth
Tight Mouth
Posts: 103
Joined: Mon Jun 25, 2007 11:04 pm
Facebook ID: 0
Location: Nu Acres, Idaho

Post by DesertDweller »

Although you express a few good points others can be left out, no need to talk about rednecks, muddy toyotas, beer etc etc, I would tighten it up, stick to facts not personal opinions, it makes it sound like your trying to defend yourself from washing your pickup, which is stupid IMO.
Bearkiller
Open Mouth
Open Mouth
Posts: 715
Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 8:10 pm
Location: Utah

Post by Bearkiller »

DesertDweller wrote:Although you express a few good points others can be left out, no need to talk about rednecks, muddy toyotas, beer etc etc, I would tighten it up, stick to facts not personal opinions, it makes it sound like your trying to defend yourself from washing your pickup, which is stupid IMO.



My thoughts exactly. If you want to get it printed anywhere you better shorten it WAY up. If its to long winded they either won't print it or they'll edit it for you, which you definately don't want.
manistee rvr hounds
Posts: 13
Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 9:39 am
Facebook ID: 0
Location: Michigan

Post by manistee rvr hounds »

Am I reading this right?

Contrary to the belief we are killers we as hound hunters don’t harvest 10% of what we tree.

I think this is a good article and I could be reading it wrong but, when posting an article such as this proof reading is a must. This is by no means a put down but, in the wrong hands someone may say this is exactly what you were thinking. Once again I could be out of line.
treeing walkers
Bawl Mouth
Bawl Mouth
Posts: 205
Joined: Mon Jun 25, 2007 6:53 pm
Facebook ID: 0
Location: washington

***REVISED***

Post by treeing walkers »

Here a revised version that with all your help I have come up with. Hope this is a little closer ?


Hound Hunters Are Not Cruel Killing Monsters
Written By Treeing Walkers



I’m a fellow hound hunter and I feel the public has been mislead about the hound hunting community. We as a lot of people believe, are not cruel, killers or immoral. We have a sport that a lot of the public doesn’t understand. The public has been mislead and railroaded to think that we are a bunch of cruel killers. My dogs are all family dogs, as I assure you that many others are too, they are part of my family in every bit of the word, and they brighten my families’ day whether it is at the house or in the woods as they go for walks, rides, and even have been to the beach on vacation. There is a connection here with a group of dogs that I have never seen or had before, you look at an old hound and you will see courage, you will see grace, you see dignity, and you look into his eyes and you will see wisdom, passion, and desire. These dogs are doing what they love to do and please know that it is all about them, what they do and how they do it, some of the best memories I have is sitting listening to my hound and telling a group of boy scouts, friends, or family about how my hound is talking to me the whole time while he is out there in the pitch black night. They ask what I mean by that and that opens up a wonderful topic, and one that I love to discuss: My hound on the trail is talking the entire time to me and I'm listening, this is the best part of what we do. He tells me when he has found the scent of the desired animal he tells me which direction that it is going and how recent it traveled, he tells me as he gets closer and closer, then he gives me the I think that I have him and all goes quite. This is my favorite time everyone that is with me usually asks what is going on I tell them that he is checking or circle checking and soon to follow comes the announcement for me to come to him that he has located the desired animal. This is what is all about for majority of us, not the kill, but the pursuit, the trial the chase and the tree. The kill which is rare because we all know that if there are none out there to lay the scent down there is none for our hounds to follow, I think that majority of hound men are caretakers of the land and always leave 90% in the tree to run another day and for another generation.
Since Dec. 1, 2003, Washington hunters holding special permits have tracked and killed 43 of 61 cougars targeted for removal under a long-term plan to reduce cougar populations in areas where they are raising the greatest concerns. That ongoing effort follows on the heels of the regular hunting season, when hunters took more than 100 cougars statewide. Only about 30% of all special permitees under the new system were able to remove cougars It’s a fact that 90% of treed game is done by 10% of the hound hunters. Why you ask? It’s a fact that training a hound to hunt and tree game consistently is a full time job. Not anybody off the street can buy a hound puppy and take that hound to the woods and tree game. It also takes a skilled/seasoned hunter to know the game’s habitat and where it more than likely is at. After the hunter has done his homework and with luck on his side he may then put trained hounds down and let the dogs work from there. Of course we have radio collars on our beloved hounds but this is to insure that they come home safe. Contrary to past beliefs that we follow the radio signal to the hounds treed is not true. From the time the hounds hit the ground till they are back in our trucks we are trying our hardest to keep up with them and follow everywhere they go. Most hound hunters very rarely use their tracking box. Of course time to time you’ll find yourself in a situation where the hounds have crossed over a ridge or through a canyon that takes more time to get around or cross then it took the hounds. At these times is where the collars come into play. Wouldn’t it be more inhumane to not have the collars to help find your lost hounds?
The numbers will show that treeing game with hounds is an efficient way of harvesting the right animal for age and gender. This is how we can preserve our game animals that no other hunting method can. I disagree with the argument made by supporters of the ban that hunting cougars with hounds is not humane. Hounds tree the cat they’re chasing, which allows the hunter to get a good look at the cat before shooting it. The alternative that’s been used since the ban went into effect is to let people shoot on sight. The state of Washington reported that since 1996’s ban took effect that the average cat has been 3 years old and mostly females. Prior to the ban the average was 5 years old and mostly males. The female harvest went way up, resulting in the death of existing kittens and a steep drop in the production of new litters. When it’s in a tree, if you use a hound, you’re right there, and the hunter can tell what sex it is and decide not to take it. These trees are usually located in the nastiest part of the wilderness that the average person would shutter at hiking into. It is physically demanding to hike into most trees. This is the part that most people over look. The numbers show that it takes 40 times the hunters to get the same result as it did before the ban took place. Instead of 1,500 Washington hunters with cougar permits prior to the ban, now there are nearly 60,000.
Hound hunters are real people with families and jobs. There is not one unemployed hound hunter that is hunting. We hound hunters have very good family and pet morals. We are no different then any other person except we enjoy a sport that most don’t understand or want to understand. Hound hunting is a family tradition. Most hound hunters have learned from a father, grandfather or close friend that showed them the way. There is no difference between bird hunting with gundogs to hound hunting. Both are sports and done for the love of the breed. Just as with any sport there are bad apples involved. These bad apples give any sport they are affiliated with a bad name, and that is what has happened to hound hunters. We had a few bad apples not hunting with in our ethic manner and got caught and the rest of the law abiding hound hunters feel the after math. To say that a sport that had a bad apple involved and got caught needs to be banned is unfair and unjust.
I too will pass this great sport of hound hunting on to my kids because when taught the right way as I have been you learn respect, admiration, stewardship, responsibility, ethics, self-accountability, self-reliance, team work, and most of all pleasure. The right kind of pleasures the kind of pleasure that American boys and girls are missing and finding elsewhere in places that they shouldn't, don't take this away, there is no bond as strong as the bond between and man/woman/boy/girl and a hound that they have shared many trials with.
If It Wasn't For Hounds, Beer, and Kids I Would Be A Wealthy Man
Bearkiller
Open Mouth
Open Mouth
Posts: 715
Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 8:10 pm
Location: Utah

Post by Bearkiller »

It’s a fact that 90% of treed game is done by 10% of the hound hunters



Thats not something you want to write either because the immediate answer is to let that 10% of hound hunters hunt. Oh yeah, they already do that ;-)
Emily
Babble Mouth
Babble Mouth
Posts: 1155
Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 1:13 am
Facebook ID: 0
Location: Catskill Mountains, NY

much improved

Post by Emily »

I'm going to give it my magazine editor's touch and repost it for you. may not get to it until later tonight, though.
esp
User avatar
Arkansas Frog
Open Mouth
Open Mouth
Posts: 595
Joined: Mon Jun 25, 2007 4:13 pm
Location: ar
Location: mtn home ark.

Post by Arkansas Frog »

Josh you can help a lot by talking to your friends at school, you can change a lot of kids minds, Make a class project out of it.

I helped a kid with trapping and he made a A on the paper and the kids loved it. [about your age]

FRog
Frog
Emily
Babble Mouth
Babble Mouth
Posts: 1155
Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 1:13 am
Facebook ID: 0
Location: Catskill Mountains, NY

Re: ***my edit*** esp

Post by Emily »

This is rewritten more than a bit. Don't want to impose anythng on you that isn't you. If I've put too many words in your mouth, take them out! Mostly, I rearranged the order of things to make it a little less defensive and more positive... And if you want to make sure they print it, send a close-up pic of one of your flop-eared hound's faces with it!
esp

[quote="treeing walkers"]
Hound Hunters Pursue American Tradition
Written By Treeing Walkers (use your real name in a paper)

I enjoy hunting with hounds and am proud of my dogs and my chosen sport. Hounds are a noble part of a longstanding rural American hunting tradition, and the world would be a poorer place without houndogs and human beings' bonds with them.
Many of you read and enjoyed "Where the Red Fern Grows" as children. Coonhunting is still the same impassioned sport described in that book, only now we don't chop down trees to get to the quarry, and we take much better care of our dogs than the characters in the book did. Those people fed their dogs mostly stale cornbread! Ours get high quality, well-balanced feed and plenty of close companionship and exercise.
Hounds are remarkable creatures with exquisitely tuned noses. They are bred to team up with humans who know how to put those noses to use. Hound dogs love using their noses more than anything in the world. Hunters that chase hounds have a very close connection to their dogs. Dog and hunter must learn to understand each other over a distance and in the dark, and the hound makes music to tell his hunter what he is doing.
My dogs [throw in a couple of your dogs' call names here] can sense exactly where game has been hours, even days, before. They teach me details about the habits of wild animals that I would never have noticed without my loyal hounds pointing them out to me. My hounds take me to wild places I would never consider going without them leading me there--swamps, roadless canyons, steep ledges--often in the middle of the night. They get me close enough to game to see the size, age, sex, and other individual characteristics of every creature they run up a tree and hold for me. That allows me to carefully choose which animals to kill---10% or less of the ones we pursue. Our hunts are about the pursuit, not the death of an animal.
What my hounds reveal to me is as exciting as acquiring a new sense, but it takes a lot of training to get to the point where I fully understand what each dog instinctively knows and communicates. I know my individual dogs far better than I would if they were just pets. We trust each other and have a close bond, both in the woods and at home. My dogs are all part of my family in every way. They brighten my family's day, whether at the house or in the woods. They go for walks, rides, and even have been to the beach on vacation with us.
Some of my fondest memories involve sitting still in the dark, listening to my hound, and translating his song for a group of boy scouts or other youngsters, friends, or family. My hound is talking to me the whole time while he is out there in the pitch black night. The friends that I am introducing to the hounds ask what my hounds are saying, and I love being able to explain it. New friends frequently become friends for life after sharing this experience.
While my hound is talking to me on the trail, I'm listening. This is the best part of what we do. He tells me when he has found the scent of an intersting wild animal. He tells me what kind of animal it is, which direction his quarry is going and how recently it traveled there. He tells me as he gets closer and closer to the object of his desire.
Then, he gives me the "I have him!" and all goes quiet. That brief silence is my favorite time. My hound is "checking" or "circle checking"--walking around the tree to make sure that the animal that went up the tree hasn't come back down agian. Soon after, he "trees"--a heartfelt bay that summons me to the tree he has sent his quarry up. Then I have to trek through whatever rough country he has crossed to see the game, pet my hound up and bring him home.
This is what is all about for the majority of us hound hunters. Not the kill, but the bond with the dogs and their excitement in the pursuit, the song of the trailing hound and his passion for the chase, and the joyous end at the tree. The kill is rare, because hunters know that if there are none out there to lay the scent down, there will be none for our hounds to follow. That knowledge motivates the majority of hound men and women to take care of the land and always leave at least 90% of the game alive in the tree to run another day, and into the future for our children and grandchildren. We savor retelling the stories of our hunts and the difficult hikes in to the treed dogs.
Washington has forbidden this traditional pastime in pursuit of mountain lions. In our state, for the most part, our hounds can only chase raccoons. [did I get this right?] But , since Dec. 1, 2003, Washington hunters holding special permits have tracked and killed 43 of 61 cougars targeted for removal under a considered game management plan to reduce cougar populations in areas where their presence raises the greatest concerns for people.
Only about 30% of all special permitees under the new system were actually able to remove cougars, because it is not easy to train a hound to hunt and tree game consistently. It takes a skilled/seasoned hunter to know the game’s habitat and where it is likely to be. It takes a patient hunter to get into the head of an independent-minded tree hound and get him to understand what is wanted. But once the hound does understand, both hound and hunter complement each other beautifully, with the hound supplying the nose and the hunter the brains to keep the dog safe and choose which animals are suitable to harvest.
After the hunter has done his homework, and with luck on his side, he (or she) has given his dogs a sporting chance. Even then, the game often outsmarts the hounds. Sometimes the hounds run for miles in pursuit, especially on lion, and come back exhausted or just lie down and sleep until tracked down by the hunter.
Some people apparently think that putting radio collars on our hounds makes the pursuit unsporting. Not true. We do that to ensure that our beloved hounds make it home when the hunt is over, successful or not. We rarely follow the radio signal to the treed hounds. From the time the hounds hit the ground until they are safely back in our trucks we are trying our hardest to keep up with them and hear them everywhere they go.
But, sometimes they run out of our hearing, and we need to be able to find them--for their own good and because we love them. Most hound hunters rarely use their radio tracking equipment, leaving it at the truck until its apparent that the hounds are missing in action. Sometimes the hounds have crossed over a ridge or through a canyon that takes more time for me to get around than it took the hounds. When I fall far behind them, I use the radio signals to catch up. Otherwise, the dogs could be lost and starving in the woods for days. We wouldn't subject our hunting partners to that if we could avoid it.

Treeing game with hounds is an effective way of limting the harvest of game to the right animal for management purposes--full grown males. No other method of hunting can be as selective. Seeing a cougar up close is awe-inspiring. Yet the only way we can experience that in any semblance of safety is with the help of hounds.
The cougar management alternative that’s been used since the ban on hunting them with hounds went into effect in 1996 is to issue lots of cougar permits to hunters of other game, and let these other hunters shoot on sight any cougar they randomly encounter. That has had undesirable consequences.
Since the hound hunting ban took effect in 1996, the average big cat killed by hunters has been 3 years old, with the majority females. Prior to the ban on lion hunting with hounds, the average was 5 years old and the majority were males. The ban caused the harvest of fertile females to go way up, resulting in the death of existing kittens and a steep drop in the production of new litters. It takes 40 times the hunters to get the same rnumber of cougars removed as it did before the hound ban took place. Instead of 1,500 Washington hunters with cougar permits prior to the ban, now there are nearly 60,000, and they are killing the wrong individuals.
When it’s in a tree, held there by hounds baying below, the hunter can tell what sex it is and decide not to take it. Cougar trees are usually located in the most forbidding part of the wilderness, where few hikers would go intentionally. Following the hounds to these places is physically demanding and absolutely fascinating. Plus, you have to be in good shape to have any chance of keeping up with hounds.
Hound hunters are real people with families and jobs, and for the most part, most of us hunters have excellent values when it comes to family and pets. We enjoy a sport that most don’t understand and fewer and fewer have first hand experience with.
Hunting with hounds is also a rural family tradition. Most hound hunters have learned from a father, grandfather or close friend that generously shared their love of hounds and showed them how to handle the dogs, much as bird hunters with gun dogs do. Both are sports done for the love of the dog breed and the chance to be outdoors and sharply focused on the natural world.
I too will pass this great sport of hound hunting on to my kids. From it, they will learn respect, admiration, stewardship, responsibility, ethics, self-accountability, self-reliance, team work. Most of all they will get a great amount of pleasure, the kind of outdoor pleasure that American boys and girls are missing and replacing with less healthy pursuits.
Just as with any sport there are some bad apples running hounds. No sport should be outlawed just because a bad apple or two has been involved. The hound hunting community loves our dogs and what they show us. We are not cruel, cold-blooded killers or immoral. We have a sport worth preserving and passing on to future generations, even if only a minority participate.
When I look at an old hound, I see courage, grace, and dignity, wisdom, passion and desire. They are dang good company! When my soulful long-eared dogs hunt, they are doing what they love to do. The hunt is all about them, what they do and how they do it. I want my kids and grandkids to know the pleasure of training a hound and understanding it.
Post Reply

Return to “Big Game Hunting With Dogs”