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Author Topic: Some of my past catch dogs.  (Read 2880 times)
Cajun
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« on: December 05, 2018, 09:03:48 am »

I have been bored to death waiting on deer season to get over with so thought I would post some of these bulldog pics. Ketch, 85# father of Lucy and Bonny, my present catch dog.chocolate dog is Hooch, 90#.Rambo off of Ketch, 78#, red dog is Red, 70#, best catch dog I have had.Brindle w/white is Tank, 70#.hammer, 85# my kids favorite, brindle. Billy, 65# black brindle. All hard hitting ear dogs except for Hammer, he was a nose dog.

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« Reply #1 on: December 05, 2018, 07:00:39 pm »

That’s some good lookin’ bulldogs... it won’t be long till everyone is turning some dogs loose.
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NLAhunter
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« Reply #2 on: December 05, 2018, 07:48:08 pm »

Good looking bulldogs

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Cajun
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« Reply #3 on: December 05, 2018, 08:32:38 pm »

Thanks Guys, something I have often thought about, all these dogs were typical catchdogs as far as charging in full bore to catch the hog. If they made contact, it was normally a caught hog. No dog catches them all but the good ones do have a high percentage. I think sometimes, especiially if you only have one or two loose baying dogs that sometimes a hard charging dog makes a hog break before he gets there(he hears the dog coming) A friend of mine had a bulldog about 10 years or so ago & when he would turn him loose, the dog would kind of just trot on in there & when he got about 10" from the hog, then slammed him. I never saw this dog miss if he made contact. I guess he went in in stealth mode. lol  Anybody else see bulldogs take their time going into a bay.
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Bayou Cajun Plotts
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« Reply #4 on: December 05, 2018, 08:58:25 pm »

Nice looking bulldogs.


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WayOutWest
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« Reply #5 on: December 05, 2018, 11:51:44 pm »

Cajun, the mother of my Gus dog was that way. The older she got the more she just picked her way in without crashing any brush. She rarely missed and never got cut after she turned 2.
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Reuben
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« Reply #6 on: December 06, 2018, 05:23:32 am »

Good looking catch dogs...
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« Reply #7 on: December 06, 2018, 05:31:22 am »

Yes sir I had a black dog just like that pick his way go around but accurate as I have ever saw. He got killed on a big Barr. The next few weeks of hunting after that we could catch a hog on first bay for crap!! I told the boys our catch dog is gone.


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t-dog
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« Reply #8 on: December 06, 2018, 06:26:13 pm »

Cajun a large percentage of our family of dogs are that way. I literally watched my Vegas dog circle a mess of briars that we had a boat bayed kn. They were about 3 feet high and 10 or 12 feet in diameter. He evidently just climbed I. There for over protection because there wasn't a trail in or out. After making a circle all the way around and not finding a trail, he stepped back and jumped over and came down with a mouth full of ear. It's hard to beat and my preference on style.
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Goose87
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« Reply #9 on: December 06, 2018, 07:24:54 pm »

I've owned one out of all the catch dogs I've had that I'd just about bet everything I had that he was going to catch the first time every time, he was slow going to a bay and would get so low to the ground just be fore he caught that it looked like he was almost army crawling, he also the only catch dog I've ever had that lived out his entire life and I eventually had to put him down for his own quality of life sake at 11 years old,

I caught a lot more bigger hogs with him by himself than with a higher dog I've owned, my best friend and hunting partner currently has one that is the only thing I've personally seen or used that was as good if not better than my old Max dog, if can lay his eyes on him you just as well consider it a caught hog, the only time I've ever seen either dog miss is when they were sent with another dog, this is the main reason I like using one bulldog to this day, I've seen way to many bays broke bc of multiple catch dogs trying to race each other in there that they make all kinda racket or flat out miss...

I actually bought Max from a guy I met on here when this thing was brand new, he was 3 when I bought him and I didn't have a hand in making him the dog he was other than taking care of him and giving him a ride to the woods, and I only ever got one litter off him and raised a male that was as good quality of a catch dog as his sire was but didn't have enough bite on him to pop the juice out of a grape, as soon as I saw what kinda catch dog Billy's dog Red was I stuck him to an old game gyp I still got and currently have 4 pups out of him...
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Aussie Dogger
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« Reply #10 on: December 07, 2018, 04:47:29 pm »

Very nice Bulldogs Cajun. Is it standard to have these dogs on really thick gauged chains ??

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Dom
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Cajun
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« Reply #11 on: December 07, 2018, 05:37:29 pm »

Thanks again for the compliments. Aussie Dogger For me it is the very best and safest way to keep a bulldog. Not all of mine have been on chains quite as heavy as what is on that brindle bulldog tho. He would work a chain and stayed super fit. All my male dogs (Plotts stay on a chain) my females stay in a kennel. Years ago I had a big brindle male pit that chewed threw two heavy duty chain link panels to get to a female Lab of mine in heat. After that, all bulldogs go on a chain. A lot of my dogs are on runners about 60 yards long & some are on 12-15' ft. chains. The dogs on chains tend to exorcise themselves way more then my females who stay in 4 x 10" kennels.
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« Reply #12 on: December 07, 2018, 10:57:16 pm »

Makes plenty of sense Cajun, do you have any problems with chain knotting up ??
Thanks for your reply.

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Dom
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Cajun
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« Reply #13 on: December 08, 2018, 06:39:19 am »

No. On some of my chains in the past I had a heavy swivel attached to a heavy bullsnap and have never had a problem with the chains knotting up. I keep most of them under trees and once in a while a limb will fall & get caught up in a chain & it will get tangled. I have a Plott gyp about 10 months old & I swear she collects every stick that falls in reach and all the limbs and sticks end up in a pile where the stake is. lol
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Reuben
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« Reply #14 on: December 08, 2018, 10:11:55 am »

Makes plenty of sense Cajun, do you have any problems with chain knotting up ??
Thanks for your reply.

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Dom

at the hardware store you can buy 1 heavy duty swivel with 2 heavy duty quick links and you can attach that to the collar and chain...and you can use the same setup at the other end of the chain and it will not ball up or twist on you...
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« Reply #15 on: December 08, 2018, 05:35:41 pm »

No. On some of my chains in the past I had a heavy swivel attached to a heavy bullsnap and have never had a problem with the chains knotting up. I keep most of them under trees and once in a while a limb will fall & get caught up in a chain & it will get tangled. I have a Plott gyp about 10 months old & I swear she collects every stick that falls in reach and all the limbs and sticks end up in a pile where the stake is. lol
Thats cool Cajun, sounds like you have it sorted and it works for you.


[/quote]
at the hardware store you can buy 1 heavy duty swivel with 2 heavy duty quick links and you can attach that to the collar and chain...and you can use the same setup at the other end of the chain and it will not ball up or twist on you...
[/quote]
G'day Reuben,
A lot of fellas down here do have there dogs on chains, they just don't run them as heavy duty as in the States. Depending where your geographical location is some of us prefer to have dogs off the ground, this is to reduce attacks from pests ( fleas, ticks etc ) and from deadly snake bites.

Thanks for your reply's fellas.

Cheers
Dom
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Cajun
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« Reply #16 on: December 08, 2018, 08:24:38 pm »

Dom, I have seen a lot of hog hunters over there that wear shorts. Are the woods that open?  I would love to hunt in that kind of terrain. Our brush all has thorns or stickers on them. Ya'll really have a lot of deadly snakes over there. Do the dogs recover or usually die & I know it depends on the snake. Over here we get our dogs bit a lot by Cottonmouths & Copperheads(both pit vipers) but they usually survive. Not many will survive a rattlesnake bite tho.
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« Reply #17 on: December 11, 2018, 03:06:13 am »

Dom, I have seen a lot of hog hunters over there that wear shorts. Are the woods that open?  I would love to hunt in that kind of terrain. Our brush all has thorns or stickers on them. Ya'll really have a lot of deadly snakes over there. Do the dogs recover or usually die & I know it depends on the snake. Over here we get our dogs bit a lot by Cottonmouths & Copperheads(both pit vipers) but they usually survive. Not many will survive a rattlesnake bite tho.
Sorry for the late reply Cajun,
Look some of where people might hunt maybe open scrub but there are areas out west and far north Queensland and the Gulf were people and myself have hunted with just shorts on, No shoes and no shirt and that's mainly because of the extremely hot and humid temperature that's out there in the warmer months.
 We do have Blackberries which is probably 10 times worse than a rose bush only a patch could be as large as a massive car park, which is generally found to the south. We have stinging nettle which can affect dogs and people in a bad way. To the north we have Stinging needle which sends you crazy in pain and there's wait a while that grabs hold of you and don't let go because of the hooks it has sunk into your flesh. That's just to mention a few undesirables. Most of our snake bites to dogs would be from red belly black snake and our brown snake which is the most aggressive of the two. The brown is likely to chase you. Most of the bites will need anti-venom for dog survival.

Cheers
Dom       
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chestonmcdowell
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« Reply #18 on: December 29, 2018, 09:54:10 pm »

I spent an arm and a leg building chains at tractor supply this week, I should of known better and go to this little mom and pop store the chain was a dollar less a foot and even their swivels and quick connects were considerably lower. After loosing one bulldog to the chain getting knotted up all of mine now have atleast one swivel and if the dog is bigger heavy duty quick connects or false links they will strip the threads off the ones that my smaller dogs are on.   all of them are attached to an axle in the ground. It’s almost a weekly chore raking up the limbs in their area. It’s pretty thick in our area too does anyone have any problems sending Boggers cds?
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Mathews mission venture
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« Reply #19 on: December 30, 2018, 05:26:14 am »

Never really had a problem with chains. But when I was young I already knew the right way to do it. I ain’t had good luck with bigger cd.


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