C.green 3,229 Posted January 18 Report Share Posted January 18 (edited) Not sure if i was lucky enough to have a real good lurcher id want to put it on boar too much seems lads in that game suffer alot of losses Edited January 18 by C.green 1 Quote Link to post
chartpolski 22,920 Posted January 18 Report Share Posted January 18 8 minutes ago, C.green said: A friend of mine goes abroad now and then aperently hes dog naturally would catch boar on the bridge of there nose behind the snout and alot of pigs couldnt do much when he had them there and was a desired trait in that type of dog. I would think unless there a big dog grabbing ears and hocks puts them in a dangerous position Cheers. 4 Quote Link to post
Blackmag 6,035 Posted January 18 Report Share Posted January 18 6 minutes ago, joe ox said: They also seem to instinctively sense if the dog behind them means business or is half hearted about its job. Oh yeah I remember a big lad at sliverdale at first he jogged on but then turned flight in to fight so yes joe they know it's one thing a dog running a roe it's another running something that size that wants to front it 1 Quote Link to post
joe ox 2,574 Posted January 18 Author Report Share Posted January 18 2 minutes ago, Blackmag said: Oh yeah I remember a big lad at sliverdale at first he jogged on but then turned flight in to fight so yes joe they know it's one thing a dog running a roe it's another running something that size that wants to front it Ran a buck with Maurice once which decided to about turn then try and drive him into the deck, he was so close the only thing he could do was keep running towards it only just missed, he brought it under control pretty quick though. Very aggressive and well up for it that buck was. 1 Quote Link to post
Penda 3,341 Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 11 hours ago, Deerhunter1 said: For what it’s worth & just my opinion, I think technique on deer is definitely genetic. If you breed from 2 dogs that are natural throat dogs then it’s fairly likely that’s the style the pups will have, and the same applies if you breed from 2 arse grabbers. I’ve heard a lot of people saying about pulling dogs off the back end and putting them on the throat but I think that’s I used to own a real clever dog on the deer he weren't the fastest of dogs but hell he could kill a deer with out making a mark on the carcass, he used to sneak up on the feckers with a pillow and smother them to death I never seen feck all like but he put a few to rest boar were abit harder used to use the whole duvet 1 1 Quote Link to post
Penda 3,341 Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 7 hours ago, C.green said: Not sure if i was lucky enough to have a real good lurcher id want to put it on boar too much seems lads in that game suffer alot of losses I've got a young mental dog here I'd stick on them but I know what will happen he's 1 of the gamest hardest dogs I've ever had and I know how it will go down Quote Link to post
Deerhunter1 771 Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 (edited) 8 hours ago, jackthelad said: The more they do the more they learn do them regular the dog soon learns the business end ….. Some dogs just handle deer badly and there’s nothing you can do about it, you could catch over 100 deer with dogs like that they still won’t change their hold Edited January 19 by Deerhunter1 Quote Link to post
saluki bouy 681 Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 10 hours ago, Havelightforcewilltravel said: A think when starting a dog off if he keeps grabbing arse end taking them off and putting them on throat helps, but once they had few they need to work it out themselves and arse grabbers going to get towed if taking Roe upwards. My old bitch was only little she’d grab hock and pull anchors on then go for the throat hold and if the little cocker patterdale got there before you did the bitch would sit five foot away and at little one would be on the throat Quote Link to post
Daniel cain 44,905 Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 1 hour ago, Penda said: I've got a young mental dog here I'd stick on them but I know what will happen he's 1 of the gamest hardest dogs I've ever had and I know how it will go down If your doing them regular....invest in a protective Quote Link to post
Daniel cain 44,905 Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 42 minutes ago, saluki bouy said: My old bitch was only little she’d grab hock and pull anchors on then go for the throat hold and if the little cocker patterdale got there before you did the bitch would sit five foot away and at little one would be on the throat Had a bitch that would deck roe,then swap from a throat hold,and clamp the snout..and literally suck the last breath out of em.... 2 Quote Link to post
Deerhunter1 771 Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 8 hours ago, joe ox said: Ran a buck with Maurice once which decided to about turn then try and drive him into the deck, he was so close the only thing he could do was keep running towards it only just missed, he brought it under control pretty quick though. Very aggressive and well up for it that buck was. Most aggressive deer I’ve come across was a fallow buck just as the rut was kicking off, certainly no fear of dogs or humans 1 Quote Link to post
Penda 3,341 Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 16 minutes ago, Daniel cain said: If your doing them regular....invest in a protective Yeah I doubt I would be doing them regular mate us brummies don't fair well across the border the Welsh mafia see us off 1 1 Quote Link to post
FUJI 17,082 Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 Good reading,some cracking animals & beasts too..top stuff 1 Quote Link to post
FUJI 17,082 Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 Just my tuppence worth regarding the big beasts & how my dog's dealt with them,It wasn't always possible for a dog to get one over & just hold it steady in a throat hold,some of them big boys have necks much wider than what you could wrap your arm around & a dog would be pretty ineffective attached to it in most cases or at least that's how I found things with my curs,I found that my dog's were extremely hard on them wherever they grabbed them,once they had 'disabled' them & prevented them from going anywhere then they proceeded to move to the head end,this was daytime & the dog may have had to stop,hold & deal with one for upto 30-40 mins before I got there, perhaps that's why they were so hard on them thereafter such an experience? My dog's weren't specialists by no means but they caught a few,being perfectly honest some of what they caught you'd be lucky to get a meal from so rough were they. On smaller species it was a different ball game though. 4 Quote Link to post
Bakerboy 4,501 Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 5 hours ago, Penda said: I used to own a real clever dog on the deer he weren't the fastest of dogs but hell he could kill a deer with out making a mark on the carcass, he used to sneak up on the feckers with a pillow and smother them to death I never seen feck all like but he put a few to rest boar were abit harder used to use the whole duvet More plausible than some of the shit written on here over the years 1 1 Quote Link to post
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