TCB-Vince
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« Reply #20 on: September 29, 2010, 11:26:15 am » |
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Thanks for all the input. I like to understand and hear other peoples opinion to only better myself and my dogs. And I know what you mean that dog has to have it in them to hunt and you can breed two ofthe best dogs together and doesn't mean all of them will work or etc. I've learned that all the years with horses.
Rockin P Well in my arena out of the hunters I know or have met I can count on my two hands that I've seen them use bmc or plotts etc. Where I'm at people use catahoula or they use free dogs that are mix with anything and everything or border collies and etc. Yes I don't know how many guys try to train border collie to hunt hogs which ones to it's own. But in CA there not a whole lot of good catahoula breeders and if there here they are maiming show dogs that have no hunt. But all the old fellers use catahoula that they have had for years and all the other in my area have bought there pups and gone from there. I got a buddy down in Texas Scott and he tells me all the time down here catahoula suck cause there so many and they have breed all the hunt out of them. In CA it's hard to even find a catahoula. But he's had good luck with wager line this last few years. When I started I've been hunt around and with catahoula so I love the way they work. I haven't been around much black mouth or etc so can't say anything about them.
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cward
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« Reply #21 on: September 29, 2010, 11:38:12 am » |
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There are just as many sorry BMC as there are Cats! When people start saleing dogs then the culling stops! Its hard to put a dog down when you pay $300 to $500 a pup for it! But when I send a pup away I say right off the bat if he don't work then you know what to do with it! Now there are some hunting breeders that give a garentee on there pups and if you take it back to them they will do away with the dogs if it is a cull!!You can probally count on one hand how many breeders that do that! This is JMO on why there are so many culls verse good dogs!
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Hog hunting can start more crap than anything I have ever seen!(HDLCrystal) Remember John Wayne was just an actor the real cowboys is who he looked up to..........
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TCB-Vince
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« Reply #22 on: September 29, 2010, 11:45:34 am » |
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Cward I agree with you 100%. It's just like I know some breeders that if they get a def dog or blind they still sell it. I'm sorry that dog should be put dog that a mess up on the breeding. And like you said I know of two guys that will take a dog back if it does work and 50/50 change it was the hunter fault on why the dog not working. And if you can't cull the dog then atleast fix it so you can't breed it.
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Circle C
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« Reply #23 on: September 29, 2010, 11:51:21 am » |
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Paul, Not too long ago I remember reading about your line breeding project with cat x plott crosses. Are these dog being used on cattle? If so, what were the cats lacking that the plotts might bring to the table?
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Never get too busy making a living that you forget to make a life.
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Silverton Boar Dogs
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« Reply #24 on: September 29, 2010, 12:55:19 pm » |
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Chris,
Those pups have worked out very well on cattle. But I use them differently than the straight Catahoula's. I use the Plott crosses only on truly wild cattle that are not dog broke and are being caught/roped and shipped. The Plott crosses have a better nose, more bottom, and are louder. Their down fall as a straight cow dog is that they don't handle well, don't have as much circle, and don't lead out.
My straight Catahoula's have far better style with a lot of circle, lead out well, and handle. I use them to work/pen cattle as opposed to just catching the wild ones.
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Circle C
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« Reply #25 on: September 29, 2010, 01:05:56 pm » |
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That makes sense...I can see where the range and lungs would really help in big country. On a different subject: Are you using your Border Collie in the pens with the cats too? I had the pleasure of watching an awesome collie dog work last night. She is a cow dog by trade, but she was put on sheep last night to help turn on a BC pup. She was bred by a man named Travis Smith, from a town called Arnett in the panhandle of Oklahoma. I'm trying like heck to buy her, but I just don't think I can afford what it would take to own her. 
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Never get too busy making a living that you forget to make a life.
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Silverton Boar Dogs
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« Reply #26 on: September 29, 2010, 01:18:23 pm » |
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I am using my BC quite a bit. He is from cowdog stock (double bred Turk) with a lot of bite bred by Mike Eslick in SW Oklahoma. I use him as a pair with another BC one of my hands has, or use him with my Catahoula's depending on the situation. He also loves to work a hog, stock is stock to him. When you are in the cow business it pays to have several different weapons at your disposal, so to speak.
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W-tate
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« Reply #27 on: September 29, 2010, 02:54:01 pm » |
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i was lucky to end up with one of pauls plott cat crosses and i couldnt help it when i got him i had to seee what he would do on some catte most the cattel we raise are gentel and feed sack broke most never seen a dog and i think it was just boring to him they just bunched up to protect there babies now on hog different done a good bunch of staged hunts with him and once he lines the track out his track speed is as good as any cur i have ever hunted with i have a cur that hardley ever puts her nose down just winds and he will finish a track faster then her 5 out of ten times its a fun race to watch that being said his handle likes alot but me and the dog are working that out but theres no doubt there are lots of little thing i have picked up about this dog that honestly make me think less of mine i have raised paul breed working machines when he bred them i never meet paul but just from owning this dog i know what he expects and it is more then just finding pigs and barking at them thanks again paul for floyd
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Well, the devil made me do it the first time The second time I done it on my own Lord, put a handle on a simple headed man And help me leave that black rose alone
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Outback Catahoulas Austra
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« Reply #28 on: September 29, 2010, 04:11:31 pm » |
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Cward I agree with you 100%. It's just like I know some breeders that if they get a def dog or blind they still sell it. I'm sorry that dog should be put dog that a mess up on the breeding. And like you said I know of two guys that will take a dog back if it does work and 50/50 change it was the hunter fault on why the dog not working. And if you can't cull the dog then atleast fix it so you can't breed it.
I agree. We sell all our pups with a "Hunting/Working Guarantee" if by 18 mths they do not perform to the customers needs, I state, i will take the dog back, work it with my team..If it STILL shows no drive/hunt then it's either spayed & given away (or kept by owner) or terminated. Then i supply the customer with another. If it does work with my pack then the customer has some handling issues..IMO. To date it hasn't been needed! I have somelines from some camp-a-while x's and some conch's lines amongst some other less popular lines. The camp-a-while mix seem to work the air (scenting) better & the conch's lines are better finders on the ground. I'm currently researching a new gyp to import to Oz next year! So this topic is of great interest to me! 
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TCB-Vince
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« Reply #29 on: September 29, 2010, 04:49:40 pm » |
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Outback I had gotta a gyp from Johnny wager and he wanted me to try her out. She was 2 years old and never was hunted many once or twice. She had been a chain all her life basically. So he sent her down I try for months to get her to work in the wood. She just won't go to bay or anything. I throw her on the bay pen look like she had work hogs all her life! But in the woods different story. So in stead of sending her back I got her fix and gave her to my parents since there dog had just died. So I can say he stay behind his dogs and his guarantee cause he sending me a new pup in the next couple months.
What new line are you gonna use if you don'timd asking?
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BigAinaBuilt
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« Reply #30 on: September 29, 2010, 05:00:03 pm » |
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Here's a Salty Dog that my uncle is working with right now. 
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Competition is not the domination of others, But rather the pursuit of excellence within each of us.
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warrent423
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« Reply #31 on: September 29, 2010, 06:36:41 pm » |
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Where I'm from, If money or property is exchanged between two men for a dog, and that dog doesn't make a hand, payment in full is returned and breeder is given option to reclaim the dog before it is culled, unless of course, the dog attacks or bites someone. This would result in the immediate cull of the dog.
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Catchin hogs cracker style
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Reuben
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« Reply #32 on: September 29, 2010, 06:44:29 pm » |
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Outback I had gotta a gyp from Johnny wager and he wanted me to try her out. She was 2 years old and never was hunted many once or twice. She had been a chain all her life basically. So he sent her down I try for months to get her to work in the wood. She just won't go to bay or anything. I throw her on the bay pen look like she had work hogs all her life! But in the woods different story. So in stead of sending her back I got her fix and gave her to my parents since there dog had just died. So I can say he stay behind his dogs and his guarantee cause he sending me a new pup in the next couple months.
What new line are you gonna use if you don'timd asking?
A few hog dog breeders that I know including myself have a theory as to why there used to be so many catahoulas and black mouth curs that wouldn't hunt very well in the past. We believed that most dogs in those days that were used as cow dogs, worked cattle close at hand and a dog that ranged very far was undesireable in most cases because it was hard to handle and also there was a possibility that it could be shot at the neighboring ranch for running cows.. In just saying that that says a lot about those cow dogs. If the dogs were used to windmill/work cattle including driving them that is great and when a cow breaks the dogs put enough pressure on it to bring her back is even better. However, some of the desireable traits for a cow dog are not so for a hog dog. For instance what I just mentioned about some cow dogs does not prove if the dog has a good nose or if it has the inclination to run a track very far or if it will range. If these dogs didn't need these traits to be a cow dog then these traits were passed on to the pups. This doesn't mean that some of the pups wouldn't make a hog dog but I think the percentage of getting good hog dogs from these dogs are a lot lower than getting hog dogs from proven hunting lines. A big game hunting dog on the other hand is bred to hunt and produce game so we believe that those differences come in to play. It just makes sense that proven hunting dogs will reproduce a higher percentage of hunting dogs. Nowadays there are a higher percentage of BMC's and catahoulas that hunt because they have been bred primarily for that purpose. JMO
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Training dogs is not about quantity, it's more about timing, the right situations, and proper guidance...After that it's up to the dog... A hunting dog is born not made...
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Outback Catahoulas Austra
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« Reply #33 on: September 29, 2010, 08:06:31 pm » |
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Outback
What new line are you gonna use if you don'timd asking?
I haven't yet decided TCB-Vince. I have been talking, emailing & facebooking various breeders & owners for a few months now. Trying to get some continuity in names etc. A few names are starting appear more often than others.....ie- Doug Mason, Tuskahomma, Wager, Wises, SwampPop & Facahatchee to name a few atm. Some of these people are easier than others to get a hold of. But i'll keep trying. I want this import to be spot on! Camp-a-while comes up a bit (some of my dogs have some camp-a-while blood pretty close) but there is a couple of recently imported dogs from that line. I would prefer to be able to broaden the availabilty in OZ not suffocate it with lines already here! I would happily take any further suggestions....I guess that's were this thread is heading any way...... 
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Dexter
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« Reply #34 on: September 30, 2010, 06:54:16 am » |
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What line of Catahoulas ------ Well thats a no brainer MINE of course All BS aside we hunted hogs for the last 10 yrs with these Lee bred dogs and yes they find bay and catch and never owned a catch dog til last year when we bought a dogo /ab pup from Bar - M and a dogo gyp from USHOG and the only reason for that is so we can hunt my old dogs Trippz and Queen and send in a lil help if they need it We will normally hunt 2-4 grown dogs and about that many young dogs ages from 10-11 months to 18 months old depending on the dog. our dogs are the bigger bred catahoulas with Trippz being around a 100 pounds and Queen and the gyps going around 60 -75 pounds and these dogs learn to work as a team and all will honor a bay and are like a mob of gators when time comes and its all in.. and yes we lost dogs and yes they get some pokes and and rips thats just part of the world we are in. All of our dogs are part of the family and are very loyal. and dont think for a moment they wont double back and bail my butt out of a bind. they will in a heart beat and have
Now we have had black mouth curs that would do the same and in my eyes was just as good as any catahoula on our yard and we have had some hound cur crosses that would burn up the country but they were used for more open country and as cowdogs as Silverton boars stated
I do beleive that a catahoula and most cur dogs need that bonding with thier owners and have to trust in thier owners to get the best bang for your money and have proven this time and time again, That dog wont hunt if he dont like his owner its like us we dont work as good if we dont like our boss and Yes we still back our dogs up with your money back if the dog isnt working out for you at 18 months my ramblings and my words Dexter
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chainrated
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« Reply #35 on: September 30, 2010, 08:41:55 am » |
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I agree with Silverton on his opinion about the cow dog lines. Although none of the dogs I hunt have been bred for cows in over 12 years it seems the good ones always take to cows right off the bat.. The first thing I do with my pups is take them down the road to a buddy of mines house and let them see his cows. I can tell a lot about them by how they react to the cows.. 95% of the time if they like them cows they will like a hog.. I went huntin about 2 weeks ago on a place where they have 200 or 300 cows on about 2000 acres and the cows just roam the whole place . My Rain dog bayed and I went to her and she had about 100 cows bunched up. When I got to her and she saw me she got all excited and started circling the whole herd and lookin at me like HEY look at what I did, you could tell she was proud of herself lol.. In my opinion it's not so much the "line" of dogs that makes a good "line" , it's the person breeding that line.. If that makes any sense..
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Our houses are protected by the good lord and a gun, you might meet em both if you show up here unwelcome son..
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BarrNinja
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« Reply #36 on: September 30, 2010, 10:56:53 am » |
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I agree with Silverton on his opinion about the cow dog lines. Although none of the dogs I hunt have been bred for cows in over 12 years it seems the good ones always take to cows right off the bat.. The first thing I do with my pups is take them down the road to a buddy of mines house and let them see his cows. I can tell a lot about them by how they react to the cows.. 95% of the time if they like them cows they will like a hog.. I went huntin about 2 weeks ago on a place where they have 200 or 300 cows on about 2000 acres and the cows just roam the whole place . My Rain dog bayed and I went to her and she had about 100 cows bunched up. When I got to her and she saw me she got all excited and started circling the whole herd and lookin at me like HEY look at what I did, you could tell she was proud of herself lol.. In my opinion it's not so much the "line" of dogs that makes a good "line" , it's the person breeding that line.. If that makes any sense..
It makes perfect sense to me!
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"No man should be allowed to be President who does not understand hogs." - President Harry Truman
“I like hogs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Hogs treat us as equals” - Sir Winston Churchill
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Reuben
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« Reply #37 on: September 30, 2010, 08:43:07 pm » |
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I agree with Silverton on his opinion about the cow dog lines. Although none of the dogs I hunt have been bred for cows in over 12 years it seems the good ones always take to cows right off the bat.. The first thing I do with my pups is take them down the road to a buddy of mines house and let them see his cows. I can tell a lot about them by how they react to the cows.. 95% of the time if they like them cows they will like a hog.. I went huntin about 2 weeks ago on a place where they have 200 or 300 cows on about 2000 acres and the cows just roam the whole place . My Rain dog bayed and I went to her and she had about 100 cows bunched up. When I got to her and she saw me she got all excited and started circling the whole herd and lookin at me like HEY look at what I did, you could tell she was proud of herself lol.. In my opinion it's not so much the "line" of dogs that makes a good "line" , it's the person breeding that line.. If that makes any sense..
It makes perfect sense to me! I have also seen the same thing with the well bred mtn cur pups, they will bay cows at a young age. They might not have the natural ability for cow work as a well bred cow dog pup but they will bay tight. I read a story in full cry where a professional big game hunter said that if his hound pups didn't bay a cow that he would cull them because he had learned that his bloodline of hounds, the ones that showed a high interest in cows were usually real gamey toward any game he trained them to hunt, and he also said that they made the best hunting dogs.
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Training dogs is not about quantity, it's more about timing, the right situations, and proper guidance...After that it's up to the dog... A hunting dog is born not made...
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TCB-Vince
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« Reply #38 on: October 03, 2010, 08:29:53 pm » |
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Here's a Salty Dog that my uncle is working with right now.  My buddy got a gyp out of salty and she his top dog Outback
What new line are you gonna use if you don'timd asking?
I haven't yet decided TCB-Vince. I have been talking, emailing & facebooking various breeders & owners for a few months now. Trying to get some continuity in names etc. A few names are starting appear more often than others.....ie- Doug Mason, Tuskahomma, Wager, Wises, SwampPop & Facahatchee to name a few atm. Some of these people are easier than others to get a hold of. But i'll keep trying. I want this import to be spot on! Camp-a-while comes up a bit (some of my dogs have some camp-a-while blood pretty close) but there is a couple of recently imported dogs from that line. I would prefer to be able to broaden the availabilty in OZ not suffocate it with lines already here! I would happily take any further suggestions....I guess that's were this thread is heading any way......  Your right about it's hard to get a hold of a lot of these people. If you want Johnny Wager number pm me and I'll give it to you.
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uglydog
Jelk's & Brick House Catahoulas
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« Reply #39 on: October 11, 2010, 09:40:36 pm » |
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You already have some good info, alot of the registerd Cats are bred for Bay trial competition and loosing the drive to hunt, they will bay the hair off a hog, but take them out of that element and they do okay, but don't have what it takes to make the complete package of a dog.
I am not a breeder have only raised one litter of registerd stock for myself but have been hunting with other peoples for over a decade now. I finally found some that I liked enough to raise some for myself. I have been starting and hunting dogs for other people for a little over two years now, and have found some solid bloodlines from getting to work with those dogs from the start and see what they have as a natural instinct and not what has been conditioned.
what I have and like for their intellegence, and level headed workability has a mixture of TxMason, Sam Mason, Facahatchee one one side the other side is Riverbottom/Cowhouse, that includes Wager/Sam Mason stock. I really like working the RiverBottom bred dogs because they are quick & eager to catch on and want to work.
I have also seen several pups that came from Dexter (confetti cathoulas) that were hard workers with good noses.
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