Reuben
UKC Forum Member
Registered: Nov 2011
Location: Freeport,TX
Posts: 1963 |
quote: Originally posted by novicane65
I'm not a fan of starting a pup with an old dog. I want a dog to show that its independent. I like for a dog to be indifferent towards others. And for the record I have hunted with very few dogs I like that were started with other dogs. A bunch of pups get hauled to the woods too young age wise and maturity wise to hunt with an old dog. And those pups learn to "me too" when started with the older dogs. Is starting a pup alone "harder" not really if you set the pup up for success. You can't just take it hunting without showing it what it should be chasing and expect it to just start treeing coons the first night in the woods.
Me personally, I'll let a pup run whatever their hearts desire for the first year its treeing coons. 80% of those pups naturally break themselves from trash. I hate seeing guys shock pups off any game until they know what they should be chasing.
So far 1 of the best young dogs I've hunted with went from being a 11 month old pup that had never treed a coon, at 13 months was like a seasoned vet 75% of the time. She'd have a few nights here n there that she struggled to get hooked but she looked darn good most nights.
As a kid I had two neighbors...one lived 2 miles to the west and the other 3/4 miles to the east...and both were friends of our family...there was no such thing as kennels or chains...I stepped out and called the dogs and go hunting any time and most any directions... I agree in that the pups learn best running loose...
Also, like you said even good pups develop into me too dogs if hunted too often with seasoned hunting dogs...sometimes it�s not me too dogs but these pups can become dependent to each other...I like dogs that can pack up or do it alone...that�s my preference when hunting hogs...
I test my pups for natural abilities and one very important trait I focus on is looking for that special pup when unloading for the first time in some decent woods to see what it does...it is very exciting to see one hit the ground running like he�s been doing it all it�s life...and I see that all the pups are following...after a few times of verifying this trait on the pup I leave him at home and see if another pup steps up when taken to the woods...
Below I call it setting the stage for success or just building the foundation...I pick the pups straight from the kennel in the morning before feeding...also before exercising...this is key...I want the pups ready for action, no feed and ready for exercise re-enforces the want to in them...I carry them to a good spot in the woods and tun them out and I sit somewhere and watch them play and explore...I learn how they operate...this carries a lot of weight when it comes to choosing a few pups...
And like you said about pups hunting with mature dogs...pups fall behind and start barking every breath trying to keep up and will fall out of the race...this happens when started too young and could create a me too dog out of the pup...using good judgement and doing the right things with the pups sets the stage for the pups in making good dogs...
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Training dogs is not so much about quantity, it's more about timing, and the right situations...After that it's up to the dog....A hunting dog is born...
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