Free: Contests & Raffles.
How have you been! They are everything my blueticks were with one exception, the way they handle. They are plenty cold nosed Lep curs, they open every bit as much as my blueticks did, tree just as hard and just as long. I have seen Randy put them on a track and they open up and head off hard and I have seen him find smaller tracks and call the dogs back, they come back and jump right back up on the box. They rig just like a hound. I have been to a tree with a bear in it and the dogs are hammering away, take photos and Randy will tell them let's go, back to the truck. They all leave with him...no leashes. I am not BSing you they are just as effective, fast, gritty and handle like a dream. Are they all perfect, not by a long shot. But I am much happier with these curs then I was with my hounds. They tend to hunt a smaller patch of land, which in this day and age is good with so much land being smaller chunks. They seem to me to be easier to trash break. They come in an assortment of colors, black and tan, black brindle, merle, blue merle, high tan. Too much white is undersiable. But here is the thing I love about these dogs, they cannot be bred until three guys witness and sign off that the dog can start it's own track and trail and tree it's own game. That is why, IMO the UKC will ruin Leopards that are registered as hounds. They are the flavor of the month right now and guys will be breeding lep to lep no matter how they hunt and you will end up with a ton of junk out there. The ALCBA will maintain it's strict registration policy. I have actually seen guys state the following, which blew me away: "The UKC move will be better to register more dogs and expand the number of leps, not necessarily good for the breed." If it's not good for the breed then it shouldn't be done, IMO. Only time will tell. If you were to try one of these dogs out I would recommend a permanetly registered ALCBA dog or pup. There are some really good ones out here on the west coast.