Hunting with Dogs

I love to hunt deer with dogs. Nothing like hearing a pack of Walkers hit first thing in the morning.


I second this. Its a shame so many people who haven't tried it want to knock it.

I am training my german short hair to run deer. She doesn't bark yet but she definately can jump them. For the kind of places i hunt she is perfect she jumps them runs them for 100 yards or so then comes back to me and we start over. The best part is she is in the truck ready to roll whenever I am no tracking dogs into the middle of the night.
 
I would dearly love to have a lab again that I could hunt ducks with. Unfortunately, here in Florida you would never even attempt to use a dog to retrieve waterfowl. The chances of them surviving even one season without getting eaten by a gator would be slim at best.
 
I have had labs for almost 20 years now. Thay are almost as essential for me as a shotgun. Waterfowl, doves, quail, pheasant, chukkar, huns ....even bunnies. Nothing like seeing a long retrieve of a duck from out of the snake river or finding a quail that dropped in a nasty patch of brush.
 
TX Hunter

Hello Mr. TX Hunter,

thank you very much for your kind words and the information, I can very well imagine these dogs are quite "the right breed" for this kind of hunting.
Always good shooting
Waidmannsheil and
best regards from Germany

Wisent
 
For Pheasant, grouse and Woodcock I think I would have flushed 1 for every 10 my dog flushed when I was a kid. Upland game birds hold tight and wait for you to walk by. I had a Irish Setter, very hyper, that found them. Highly recommend a dog if you bird hunt.

A retrieving dog makes life a lot easier for sure. Having to trudge out in the creek/marsh and hoping you don't have to chase a duck. Send the dog while you keep calling and looking for Ducks.
 
Is a dog really required for waterfowl hunting?
I quit hunting waterfoul when my Lab died. IMHO, you need either a dog or a boat to hunt waterfoul or you won't get all the ones you knock down.
 
I know the original poster was speaking of bird dogs, but I have to chime in about my beagles. Noone could ever imagine how much I enjoy running them. I don't mean just hunting over them... but I love just going out and letting them do their thing. I guess you couldn't understand unless you hunted dogs. i love it!!!

Joe
 
SC 928 Porshe

I have hunted without a dog, and with a dog.
And what I have come up with, hunting without a dog, kind of sucks.
I know dogs are not legal everywhere, like here in Texas, we cant hunt deer with dogs, but its the law, so we have to shoot the deer over food.
I know its not sporting, but its the law.
 
When I lived out West, you COULD hunt without a dog................BUT, you would be successful WITH a good pointer breed.....trying to find wild quail, and especially chukar, without a dog would be like trying to find a gold nugget in a stream - you might, but then again............

A well-trained dog is worth it's weight in birds - less miles to traverse, less missed or lost birds - in short, a better experience. Even without bagging birds, watching a good dog do its work is something wonderful
 
I heard you can use dogs to find antlers from white tail after they shed them.
Do you have to train the dogs for this any differently from how you would train "deer dogs"?
 
Turtle-Dogs

Awhile back, I read an article about Turtle-Dogs. These dogs are trained to track and retrieve an endangered species of Turtles. That's what I said; Turtles. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eF809re2vyU
Do you have to train the dogs for this any differently from how you would train "deer dogs"?
I believe you could train a dog to track and hunt just about anything. They hunt for cadavers, drugs and in this case, Turtles.


Be Safe !!!
 
I heard you can use dogs to find antlers from white tail after they shed them.

I gave my son a German Shorthair pup 3 years ago, yesturday the boy came into my work shop with an antler. He told me the dog found it, he went on point, then slowly crept up to it and picked it up in his mouth. (the dog)

He must have scented the deer but they shed awhile ago. My boy looked around but didnt find the other side. I told him the deer probably lost it somewhere else, doubt if they drop at the same time. He was OK with that.

I bet a person could train a dog to find them.

I would get a pup to fetch using a tennis ball, then switch to deer antler till he fetches it a lot. I would then "hide" it letting him "find" it as I do with live birds to teach hunting skills. Might give it a try.
 
dawgs

I don't hunt any more, but still love to watch dogs, of any sort, work game. Just recently, I took my two housedogs out with a friend and his pack of high priced beagles. My two girls ( an American Staffordshire Terrier and a Whippet/Manchester terrier mix) thoroughly humiliated the beagles in jumps, flushes and circles. My friend got all pissy after about an hour, loaded his dogs and went home.
 
I might have to look into something a little more sporting.

Well my girl out of the 2000 National Field Trial champ is pregnant :) A lot are spoken for but I might have one left if she has a large litter as she does.
 
I have experienced nothing more rewarding than watching a dog that I raised froma pup and trained. When they get it right for the first time and for years after that, it is awesome. Nothing quite like it.
GAR
 
Louisiana Leopard a.k.a Catahoula

I'm working with my Blue merle Catahoula to hunt upland birds. He's young(18 mos.) & needs to be "seasoned" up around the hunt.He's a great swimmer too- webbed feet.From what I've researched they're kind of a universal hunting dog with a very interesting history-lined alot.When I got him as a rescue- I thought I had too much DOG. Energy like the Energizer Rabbit. I hope things work-out,he's a handfull.
 
The guide I use to hunt pigs on the coastal hills of Central California has a couple of Catahoulas. The one we used was a pup(18 months) and I thought he was a little goofy. At first. Then he busted a 275 pound boar out of the Chaparral and ran him down... Love that dog...
 
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