bird 10,004 Posted February 17, 2018 Report Share Posted February 17, 2018 11 hours ago, Minkenry said: LOL Mink are totally illegal to keep in France, and yet there are more pet mink in France than any other country I'm aware of! They take their mink out in public, and go to a regular vet, and everything. They just tell everyone that it's a ferret, and no one questions it. I think if you got an albino mink, it would be especially difficult for anyone to tell. I had an albino mink for a while, and I once had some chap from the UK get online and argue with me for quite sometime, claiming that the animal in my video was really a white ferret, and I was just trying to get attention claiming it was a mink! LOL This is the video he was commenting on........ yeh its tail different to a ferret, longer and thicker , but maybe because of its colour (white) it could have ferret in it genes, in other words they crossed the mink to a ferret to get that colour, as mink in natural colour are dark, black,brown , dark red , but never white .? Quote Link to post
Gilbey 1,478 Posted February 17, 2018 Report Share Posted February 17, 2018 your forgetting fur farmers have bred mink and foxes all colours from mutations 2 Quote Link to post
sandymere 8,263 Posted February 17, 2018 Report Share Posted February 17, 2018 How's the dog bred? Looks a quick type. Quote Link to post
robertb123 372 Posted February 18, 2018 Report Share Posted February 18, 2018 Always enjoy your videos, have you tried your dog on jackrabbits or anything similar? Would like to see that, cheers 1 Quote Link to post
longers01 2,398 Posted February 18, 2018 Report Share Posted February 18, 2018 Great video's of yours mate uve done a brilliant job with them mink keep um coming atb longers01 Quote Link to post
Minkenry 1,044 Posted February 21, 2018 Author Report Share Posted February 21, 2018 On 2/17/2018 at 03:33, bird said: yeh its tail different to a ferret, longer and thicker , but maybe because of its colour (white) it could have ferret in it genes, in other words they crossed the mink to a ferret to get that colour, as mink in natural colour are dark, black,brown , dark red , but never white .? It's just an albino mink. Almost all animals have the potential to be albino. American mink aren't capable of producing offspring with any other member of the weasel family. Also, domestic ranch mink come in just about any color you can imagine. White, black, red, grey, yellow, spotted, stripes down their backs, grizzled colors, all kinds of stuff! Quote Link to post
Minkenry 1,044 Posted February 21, 2018 Author Report Share Posted February 21, 2018 On 2/17/2018 at 14:07, sandymere said: How's the dog bred? Looks a quick type. My dog Onsa is 41% staghound (a breed similar to a greyhound that is bred for hunting coyotes), 37% racing greyhound, 13% English pointer, and 9% Saluki. Quote Link to post
Minkenry 1,044 Posted February 21, 2018 Author Report Share Posted February 21, 2018 (edited) On 2/17/2018 at 18:03, robertb123 said: Always enjoy your videos, have you tried your dog on jackrabbits or anything similar? Would like to see that, cheers Yes, she's caught a few jack rabbits (our local hare species) and cottontail rabbits both. Unfortunately our local rabbit and hare populations both crashed the very next season after getting my dog. The year she was a pup there were jackrabbits and cottontails EVERYWHERE, and now that she is old enough to run them they are few and far between. So all the close spots have close to no rabbits, making it so I have to drive for about an hour to get to anywhere with a decent number of rabbits to run, and even in the "good spots" the numbers aren't near as good as they used to be. So now I've got this running dog who catches mostly rats and raccoons and rarely gets to run a rabbit, let along catch one! LOL Edited February 21, 2018 by Minkenry 1 Quote Link to post
bird 10,004 Posted February 21, 2018 Report Share Posted February 21, 2018 8 hours ago, Minkenry said: Yes, she's caught a few jack rabbits (our local hare species) and cottontail rabbits both. Unfortunately our local rabbit and hare populations both crashed the very next season after getting my dog. The year she was a pup there were jackrabbits and cottontails EVERYWHERE, and now that she is old enough to run them they are few and far between. So all the close spots have close to no rabbits, making it so I have to drive for about an hour to get to anywhere with a decent number of rabbits to run, and even in the "good spots" the numbers aren't near as good as they used to be. So now I've got this running dog who catches mostly rats and raccoons and rarely gets to run a rabbit, let along catch one! LOL would you run her on a yote now she older, and would she have a go or just bark at it, Dan on here said a yote tough aimal , and norm run couple staghounds on them, just wonder if she ever seen any up close , as your out alot and bound to have seen a few. Quote Link to post
Minkenry 1,044 Posted February 21, 2018 Author Report Share Posted February 21, 2018 5 hours ago, bird said: would you run her on a yote now she older, and would she have a go or just bark at it, Dan on here said a yote tough aimal , and norm run couple staghounds on them, just wonder if she ever seen any up close , as your out alot and bound to have seen a few. Unfortunately, coyotes are also hard to find around here. Too many people shooting and trapping them keeps their numbers down, and more importantly keeps the coyotes smart. It's hard to even see a coyote around here, let alone get a chance at catching one. I'd like to try her on a coyote if we get the chance. Also I'd like to try her on foxes. She's ran a couple foxes, but only once was it in an area where she had any real chance at catching it. Hopefully we'll get one soon, if we can find the fox in an area open enough to give Onsa a real chance at running it before it disappears in the brush. 1 Quote Link to post
robertb123 372 Posted February 21, 2018 Report Share Posted February 21, 2018 5 hours ago, Minkenry said: Unfortunately, coyotes are also hard to find around here. Too many people shooting and trapping them keeps their numbers down, and more importantly keeps the coyotes smart. It's hard to even see a coyote around here, let alone get a chance at catching one. I'd like to try her on a coyote if we get the chance. Also I'd like to try her on foxes. She's ran a couple foxes, but only once was it in an area where she had any real chance at catching it. Hopefully we'll get one soon, if we can find the fox in an area open enough to give Onsa a real chance at running it before it disappears in the brush. 19 hours ago, Minkenry said: Yes, she's caught a few jack rabbits (our local hare species) and cottontail rabbits both. Unfortunately our local rabbit and hare populations both crashed the very next season after getting my dog. The year she was a pup there were jackrabbits and cottontails EVERYWHERE, and now that she is old enough to run them they are few and far between. So all the close spots have close to no rabbits, making it so I have to drive for about an hour to get to anywhere with a decent number of rabbits to run, and even in the "good spots" the numbers aren't near as good as they used to be. So now I've got this running dog who catches mostly rats and raccoons and rarely gets to run a rabbit, let along catch one! LOL Always the way, the dogs ready and the game disappears! when you get to give her a run, don't forget your camera! Quote Link to post
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