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Heavy Lurchers


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23 inch tts. just under 60 pounds.   decent all round pesters dog. and just about unbreakable. made by tonka.       happy hunting.

Here are some of my dogs, the mother and father of NL's Tes and a half sister. All bred bedi whippet or 1st cross x 1st cross .Also the latest pup that I am bringing on, she is 51/2 months now and st

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I work nice wee bedi whippets over hear in Ireland and they are deadly at taking down foxes, why would you need a big heavy dog for a prey animal that is so light? The fox can fight back granted but if the dog is any good it hits it hard and despatches it with no big dramas.

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I work nice wee bedi whippets over hear in Ireland and they are deadly at taking down foxes, why would you need a big heavy dog for a prey animal that is so light? The fox can fight back granted but if the dog is any good it hits it hard and despatches it with no big dramas.

i love the beddy x's but a beddy wip won't to the job as quick as a digger dog can
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When you look at it the fox isn't that fast, he can't turn amazingly well like a hare ( unless it's one of them super supple cubs that are flying round at the moment!) and he certainly isn't big and heavy. All the dog needs is the speed to get up there quick before he hits cover and the technique of dispatching them rapidly. I have no qualms at all about using the lighter types like mine, they are hard as iron and strike whole heartedly with no fear.

 

After all a decent border x lakeland terrier can snuff a charlie in a hole on his tod so any half decent lurcher should be more than a match for one on the run.

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I think the most one dog has done for me is 5 in a night, it is not a numbers game for me anyway. I just do the job in hand. We cover a big area and a lot of it is rough mountain ground that takes a while to get round in a night so the dogs get a decent brake between runs.

 

I run them in daylight as well either slipping the lurchers when the hounds put 'em out or with my terriers working the cover. Like I say it's not a numbers game but on average the dogs do around 100 between them per year. We also shoot up around 100.

 

There are plenty of times when I get none as well either due to them not being about or the dogs don't get 'em, that's hunting!

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When you look at it the fox isn't that fast, he can't turn amazingly well like a hare ( unless it's one of them super supple cubs that are flying round at the moment!) and he certainly isn't big and heavy. All the dog needs is the speed to get up there quick before he hits cover and the technique of dispatching them rapidly. I have no qualms at all about using the lighter types like mine, they are hard as iron and strike whole heartedly with no fear.

 

After all a decent border x lakeland terrier can snuff a charlie in a hole on his tod so any half decent lurcher should be more than a match for one on the run.

so where does your dog take it by to kill it quick. what technique does a beddy/whippet use to "dispatch rapidly"

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