Dan Edwards 1,134 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 Next thing ya know yall gonna be on about how greyhounds arent intense enough either and that you need to add beddy to them to give them that extra bit of fire in their belly. HAHA! Let a beddy and a greyhound get into a fight on the yard over a deer carcus and tell me just how f****n intense Mr. Beddy is layin their with his throat and his guts tore out while bleeding intensely from a large gaping wound over his loins. 2 Quote Link to post
Dan Edwards 1,134 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 You want to see power, intensity, and an explosive psychotic behavior in a dog then look no further than a greyhound. The sumbitches are so crazy they will chase a damn stuffed bunny round a track. 3 Quote Link to post
robwelsh 354 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 Next thing ya know yall gonna be on about how greyhounds arent intense enough either and that you need to add beddy to them to give them that extra bit of fire in their belly. HAHA! Let a beddy and a greyhound get into a fight on the yard over a deer carcus and tell me just how f****n intense Mr. Beddy is layin their with his throat and his guts tore out while bleeding intensely from a large gaping wound over his loins. most people here think whippets and greyhounds ain't game enough, so add terrier types to add gameness. Then in next breath say their too injury prone due to gameness...lol Quote Link to post
Dan Edwards 1,134 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 I dont think greyhounds are game at all. I think they are intense and crazy and will go to the fight right now. How long they stay is another matter but if they are winning they are gonna finish what they started and in very quick order. The terrier blood and all that other shit makes them slower which is a good thing cuz nothing no matter the breed can hold up when hittin something at 45 to 50 mph. You slow em down to 35 to 40 and now you got yourself a lurcher that can actually go out there and hunt with ya without as high a chance of gettin kilt. Plus the reason that a good foot greyhounds feet wont hold up is the same as above. They are just goin to damn fast to hold up. Its not that their feet aint tough. Run that terrier or whatever cross at 45 mph and his f****n feet wont hold up either. 3 Quote Link to post
Dan Edwards 1,134 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 I really do believe that you can condition a greyhound to make him slower, tougher and more long winded than they do on the track but the problem is you can only make him just a bit slower through alot of trotting type work and long long long very slow runs. I mean miles and miles. This will slow him down some and it will make him tougher but the sumbitches are still in most cases gonna be too damn fast to hold up. That kinda training will also take some of the intensity from him but not enough to save his life 99% of the time. Quote Link to post
paulsmithy83 567 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 Next thing ya know yall gonna be on about how greyhounds arent intense enough either and that you need to add beddy to them to give them that extra bit of fire in their belly. HAHA! Let a beddy and a greyhound get into a fight on the yard over a deer carcus and tell me just how f****n intense Mr. Beddy is layin their with his throat and his guts tore out while bleeding intensely from a large gaping wound over his loins. Put that same greyhound against same weight as himself see how he fair........, grey have huge prey drive that [BANNED TEXT] n yea you [BANNED TEXT] you can slow em down my muka got a good un bought at 8 week old Ireland for bout £2000 good dog can run all nite n day take rab hare deer good dog but on stuff like deer we have stronger better dogs that do better on em so he dnt run em that often [BANNED TEXT] him anymore he always had grey about him for 35yrs but he wise enough to use him what suit them to add his Bruv to the grey he got now died on stag. I think they great dogs but when u see powerful type u can't say grey come in that cat Quote Link to post
nothernlite 18,080 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 Next thing ya know yall gonna be on about how greyhounds arent intense enough either and that you need to add beddy to them to give them that extra bit of fire in their belly. HAHA! Let a beddy and a greyhound get into a fight on the yard over a deer carcus and tell me just how f****n intense Mr. Beddy is layin their with his throat and his guts tore out while bleeding intensely from a large gaping wound over his loins. Dan theres a we tiny bit of a difference between a greyhound and a beddy pound for pound aye agree greyhounds can be mad dogs think thats why you see alot of trainers with muzzles on them while they walk there dogs in public Quote Link to post
Dan Edwards 1,134 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 All I'm trying to say as they are very heavily muscled dense powerful dogs and when they kick off its damn serious business. My good buddy who knows a fair share bout dogs kickin off one time told me that he'd 10x rather handle a bulldog than a greyhound in a bad situation. There's alot of truth in them words and he knows way the heck more than most bout all that stuff. And I still stand by what I said. No terrier is gonna put fire into greyhound blood. Make them stay longer yes but not wind them up anymore than they already are. Quote Link to post
aaron the coursing man 144 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 very nice bitches grea grand dam of dog above,,,deer/gre x pure saluki dam of fuji's swif,,,gand daugher of faw bich above . pics for folk who waned 2 see big biches Quote Link to post
paulsmithy83 567 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 Well that sorted turn up to a dog fight with a greyhound in cage haha most dangerous dog act will need to be change as if grey kick off watch out Quote Link to post
robwelsh 354 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 f****n hell, people just take it the totally opposite to what's being said. Paul u said you worked with greyhounds for years. You should know more than anyone , that a greyhound is like a flick of a switch, and as Dan says they are very cagey. We not on about a dog that could pull a train, and look all beefy. Just a dog, pure muscle, very little fat, extremely fast with a short fuse. Is going to be powerful. 3 Quote Link to post
robwelsh 354 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 f****n hell, people just take it the totally opposite to what's being said. Paul u said you worked with greyhounds for years. You should know more than anyone , that a greyhound is like a flick of a switch, and as Dan says they are very cagey. We not on about a dog that could pull a train, and look all beefy. Just a dog, pure muscle, very little fat, extremely fast with a short fuse. Is going to be powerful. especially 80lb of the f****r Quote Link to post
paulsmithy83 567 Posted March 28, 2013 Report Share Posted March 28, 2013 f****n hell, people just take it the totally opposite to what's being said. Paul u said you worked with greyhounds for years. You should know more than anyone , that a greyhound is like a flick of a switch, and as Dan says they are very cagey. We not on about a dog that could pull a train, and look all beefy. Just a dog, pure muscle, very little fat, extremely fast with a short fuse. Is going to be powerful. sorry shud make clear when I say work I mean hunted I aint worked [BANNED TEXT] em on tracks all the grey I been round hav been well socialised and 99% I forget I'm out [BANNED TEXT] a grey unless sone1 ask wat he is if we bump into [NO TEXT TALK] so I havnt seen this cagey aspect . All hav been reared as lurcher from 8-12 week old normally weighed in from Ireland. Quote Link to post
shaaark 10,746 Posted March 29, 2013 Report Share Posted March 29, 2013 f****n hell, people just take it the totally opposite to what's being said. Paul u said you worked with greyhounds for years. You should know more than anyone , that a greyhound is like a flick of a switch, and as Dan says they are very cagey. We not on about a dog that could pull a train, and look all beefy. Just a dog, pure muscle, very little fat, extremely fast with a short fuse. Is going to be powerful. sorry shud make clear when I say work I mean hunted I aint worked [bANNED TEXT] em on tracks all the grey I been round hav been well socialised and 99% I forget I'm out [bANNED TEXT] a grey unless sone1 ask wat he is if we bump into [NO TEXT TALK] so I havnt seen this cagey aspect . All hav been reared as lurcher from 8-12 week old normally weighed in from Ireland. If you're that clued up on greyhounds, how do you reckon they aren't powerful? Even well socialised greyhounds are very powerful, thought you would've known that. Or are the greyhounds you've had experience of 'well past it' underconditioned ex trackers? Quote Link to post
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