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Do You Run You Dogs On Ploughed Fields


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been reading a post on here about ploughed fields and not running dog on them i have been out with lads that wont slip on ploughing but i have and never had a problem i wood rather not but it there some thing in the beam then i do what your forts on this do you slip on plough or not

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Run on heavy plough regular. I'd have thought the rabbits hares and deer will feed on the roots exposed by the turning over. You often see foxes sat out on plough too. If game can run on it...so can a

Some hares run crap on a plough and some seem to fly over it, just the same with dogs some run well on it some don't

There is some dogs that handle plough as easy as running on grass, the Hare is easier done on plough, ((( for some dogs )) seed is next, the short grass land, the Hare can run the dog can run, and

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iv run plough few times over the years,i wouldn't purposely walk plough fields all night lamping but if i put me head through a hedge and there's something worth running il slip the dog but as said only if its nice and soft and never had any problems.

 

i put this question up few year ago,some would say it depends on the type of dog you have and its style of running which may well make it more suitable and less injury prone than others,maybe

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There is some dogs that handle plough as easy as running on grass, the Hare is easier done on plough, ((( for some dogs )) seed is next, the short grass land, the Hare can run the dog can run, and if your dog can stop them in the middle of grass ((( short that is ))) he will stop them any were, now dont take my word for it, I am too young, :D according to some coursing only started in the 80s :whistling:

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Does anyone know why you often get rabbits right out in the middle of ploughed fields? as there cant be any food there for them

I've sometimes wondered that myself. My guess is that they're exploring and establishing new runs. To an animal as small as a rabbit it must be a devastating change when a field is ploughed, like a mile square bomb blast to us. All their familiar paths and scenting/pissing places gone.

I'm only guessing here but what else can anyone do. :huh:

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Does anyone know why you often get rabbits right out in the middle of ploughed fields? as there cant be any food there for them

I've sometimes wondered that myself. My guess is that they're exploring and establishing new runs. To an animal as small as a rabbit it must be a devastating change when a field is ploughed, like a mile square bomb blast to us. All their familiar paths and scenting/pissing places gone.

I'm only guessing here but what else can anyone do. :huh:

 

I think if the burrow is there anyway , they will go out to feed looking for grass etc , but after time once they know nout on there they norm go to fields with grass etc. you do get odd rabbit out on ploughed fields for this reason, they will travel or move out if no food. where I live it piss poor not many rabbits, used be few but they never came back, rabbits are strange animals :yes:

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A lot of alledged coursintg lads will scout out plough to slip on :hmm: some of the slower stronger dogs like to get out on the claggy stuff then the stamina kicks in more than the speed especially for the dogs , if the long eared ones get on top they can still get their ears back and make a race of it.Not into lampintg so cant really comment wouldnt fancy runnintg on a heavy plough on the lamp especially with a sharpish dog but could be wrong

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A lot of alledged coursintg lads will scout out plough to slip on :hmm: some of the slower stronger dogs like to get out on the claggy stuff then the stamina kicks in more than the speed especially for the dogs , if the long eared ones get on top they can still get their ears back and make a race of it.Not into lampintg so cant really comment wouldnt fancy runnintg on a heavy plough on the lamp especially with a sharpish dog but could be wrong

I only ran day time hares with mine, well first couple of hours of day light and the last hour or so, hares run across the top of plough hardly seem to touch it, great to watch, i didnt bother lamping hares then, always thought it was for inferior dogs if iam honest, i can see the point these days though with mobile phones and helicoptors.

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Does anyone know why you often get rabbits right out in the middle of ploughed fields? as there cant be any food there for them

good point that and your right i have seen many in ploughed fields i wonder if thers any old seeds they find ?
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