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cajunl
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« on: Yesterday at 08:53:47 am » |
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t-dog
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« Reply #2 on: Yesterday at 03:47:21 pm » |
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You must have those suckers broke to a feed sack! You’ve been putting it on them pretty dang good I’d say.
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Cajun
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« Reply #3 on: Yesterday at 05:36:32 pm » |
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Those are some fat hogs. How has Dash progressed?
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Bayou Cajun Plotts Happiness is a empty dogbox Relentless pursuit
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cajunl
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Thank yall. It is sugarcane, corn and watermelons cropland them jokers stay fat. Them bar hogs from that country make the best sausage around.
Mike he just turned 2 in feb. He is a one dog show. Not a real rough dog, but that works for me because of the range.He is usually the first out the box. He really works well for the crops. There are heads and cypress ponds between 30 to 200 acres surrounded by crops. I usually send him and he trails and will bay in the middle. Ill usually leave him bay solo and catch the other hogs leaving out of the head with cur dogs.
I could not really tell you how cold nosed he is. I need to track hunt him more. In the big woods i generally just cast him and leave and go hunt the cur dogs. He will usually be bayed or running.
That said....if you don't have hog sign around around. That joker will absolutely scald a deer! Still a work in progress
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t-dog
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Those deer he’s scalding are supposed to go with those boars you were talking about for sausage. I had a dog that considered being a part time deer dog a few years ago. I took a fresh road kill deer and laid out in my dog yard. I put a dog collar on the deer then ran a lariat rope through the collar and attached it to the dog with the dog wearing the “E collar”. I let the dog walk up to the deer on its own and smell it good. I pulled the rope slack as the dog got closer and closer so it wouldn’t connect me to their punishment. A soon as the dogs nose was full a mashed the button and wild not allow the dog to retreat. It thought that deer was eating him. I finally let him have slack and retreat.after a couple minutes I sucked him back up to the deer and done it again. That was all it took to convince him he wasn’t a deer dog. My little Dilly gyp’s brother bumped into a yote a couple months ago and ran him a little bit open and took it right past her where she was hunting. She fell in with him. We didn’t know what they were running but could see they were driving it hard. It came out of the second set of woods behind that yote and they were about to catch him. That electricity convinced them that yotes were a bad idea. I never say a word to my dogs when I shock them. I let them think it’s the animal doing the biting.
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Hollowpoint
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Cajun, you’re definitely right in the middle of the action. Lots of good dog work for sure.
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make-em-squeel
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Thats allot of hobbling, what do you do with all those live hogs?
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cajunl
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My hunting partner is retired. He takes the hogs and sells them to high fence outfits.
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cajunl
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Catching is easy.....the dragging to the trailer makes it feel like work!
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