Hunting Washington Forum
Other Hunting => Coyote, Small Game, Varmints => Topic started by: ryan13 on September 28, 2016, 12:06:58 PM
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Im very much of the opinion that you can train any dog to just about anything if you put the time into it. My question is has anyone on here used a bloodhound to coon/birdhunt? Ive done a bit of reading and come across the general opinion that there two slow to run coons. But if anyone on here has done it id love ato hear any info you have. Getting a pup right around christmas and trying to prepare myself.
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20 years ago I had a Beagle. He was a bird finding machine. I shot pheasants, huns, and chukar with him. The one thing I could never break him of was his speed. I was a lot younger but it was a bugger trying to keep up with him. The other problem was he would follow his nose, and you never knew what he was chasing until it flushed.
I now how a Springer, who has a lot of drive but hunts are a slow speed. And when he gets hot its only for a upland bird
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Springers are by far the best bird dogs ive ever hunted behind. But ive wanted a hound since i was a kid and now have the oppurtunity to get one so i guess the only way to really find out is give it a go
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I was raised with a beagle/walker cross hunting birds. Fantastic, reliable, hard headed
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Try one of these guys! Teach him and he will hunt anything. Coons, birds, dogs, Jaguars, boars etc. Eats and poops a lot though. Not slow and doesn't tire easily.
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I've hunted over beagles since I was 13 and I'm 66 now. Let me tell you that they are EXCELLENT BIRD DOGS!!!!! I have shot hundreds of pheasant in my lifetime over my beagle(s). Hounds have the best noses of all dogs and the Bloodhound ranks #1 with the beagle a close second.
One of my closest friends hunts pheasants with a Redbone hound named Roscoe and he limits on every hunt.
HOUNDS ARE AWESOME HUNTERS!!!!!
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Meet Angus. 13 months old 130+lbs. Fila Brasiliero or Brasilian Mastiff. They are Brazil national dog. Portugese bloodhound and English Mastiff and Old Roman bulldog are the lineage. Rare in the USA but these are remarkable dogs. I believe you could hunt bear, cougar, deer, coons and birds if you trained em. Very loyal and eager to please and would protect its people from a Grizzly till death.
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20 years ago I had a Beagle. He was a bird finding machine. I shot pheasants, huns, and chukar with him. The one thing I could never break him of was his speed. I was a lot younger but it was a bugger trying to keep up with him. The other problem was he would follow his nose, and you never knew what he was chasing until it flushed.
I now how a Springer, who has a lot of drive but hunts are a slow speed. And when he gets hot its only for a upland bird
I have a hard time imagining keeping in range for the flush behind a hound. Especially one of the larger breeds and a running pheasant.
A trained springer spaniel will stop on a whistle command and let a fat boy catch up :)
No doubt a long legged hound would put up lots of birds, he may not be in the same county as his handler. LOL
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I've had four labs, but the best versatile hunting dog I ever had was a border collie. We shot over 100 grouse over her in the September she was 7 months old, and she was so much fun to jump shoot ducks with - would sneak alongside me to jump shoot stock ponds.
A friend had a Jack Russell that was a great quail dog, and another friend had a Doberman that was an incredible pheasant dog. I agree most working dog breeds can be trained to a wide variety of tasks.
With the exception of dogs overly inbred for physical traits (show dog lines, toy breeds), most dogs can be taught to do and enjoy a wide range of tasks.
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my old neighbor had a beagle that would trail pheasants. took her many times to the feel free to hunt spots outside of Warden. She wasn't very fast as from the time she started barking/trailing one you could make a sandwich and knit a scarf before she got close enough for it to flush...98 % of the time it was a hen but exciting none-the-less hearing her trailing one