Jump to content

can whippets only be worked on easy ground


Recommended Posts

yer i supose mate i dont really know teh guy who told me it... imho though i like them i think there pretty good dogs....

 

Don't get me wrong FF; I love Salukis and have owned pure desert bred and crosses and would have one again, but intelligent, they're not !! LOL !!

Cheers.

Link to post

  • Replies 111
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

If the land my way was 90% rough ground, then i would not be working a pure whippet.

 

Have you taken into account what size fields, what quarry, can you afford the vet fee's? I

 

know you say hilly and wooded! There is your answer, is it not?

 

Mix the whippet blood, easy really. Dont just buy a "Whippet" beacause there are so many advertised near you and you like them. Yes if your going to keep it as a lap dog and show it!, but me i wouldn't work a whippet in those conditions.

 

:)

Link to post

well you made your mind up forget about saluks get the dogs from wales a hundred pound you can sse the parents mate fetch jump hunt ,and not got to much in its bloodlines m dont get dolli mixtures ,not for just rabbiting , chartploski i have saluki line bred clever dog ,but saw plenty not clever to much prey drive in the wrong hands etc , u can ferret with him course a hare catch a fox pull aroe , get birds hold other things but not many like that as ive had some who took to there third season who would work unleashed at nite no talking just lamp on and a quick word ,he is a natural you could teach him anything and pups the same but saw some that run away with hare rabbit dont heel up at nite fech of without being told , do [bANNED TEXT] tits in

Link to post
ooh right :laugh: better get back on to the topic and not high jack the thread anyway :)

whippets on rough ground... :victory:

Go for a collie whippet, bitch if you can, they are first class, for rabbits, great stamina, and looking ahead, if you wanted to bread from her to step up to larger, quarry, all you have to do is put her to a good greyhound, then you are into first class dogs, I am not a novice, at this game, and I do not wish to offend, any one, stay away from your sulakis, stick to your british breads, and you will not go wrong, thank you.
Link to post

Pennymeadow, those are shots of mainly rabbits ferreted to nets in areas with a large amount of rabbits, Or am I wrong? Are most of the rabbits caught in nets, not by the dog? To me the ferret does most of the work not the dog?

I am not knocking the shots or your dogs, there obviously doing a bit, but the question is how would a whippet fair where the rabbits are not so abundant and they were not caught in nets, they have to be found marked and caught in the rough of hedge bottoms and cover? Or lamping small dairy hillsides, with alot of barbwire and hedges?

I have lamped a few whippets and found them wanting on height, skin and robustness.

 

I guess the only way I will find out is to try one for a whole seasons work, and see how long it lasts??

Link to post

A few of my mates had racing whippets when I was a kid,seen them work around northern england,even took one lamping to Caithness once,they performed admirably otherwise they wouldnt have been kept,I have seen a few whippets take 20+ bunnies in a nights lamping,not a huge amount but decent enough for tiny dogs :)

post-1930-1227614316_thumb.jpg

Link to post
Pennymeadow, those are shots of mainly rabbits ferreted to nets in areas with a large amount of rabbits, Or am I wrong? Are most of the rabbits caught in nets, not by the dog? To me the ferret does most of the work not the dog?

I am not knocking the shots or your dogs, but the question is how would a dog fair where the rabbits are not so abundant and they were not caught in nets, they have to be found marked and caught? Or lamping small dairy hillsides, with alot of barbwire and hedges?

 

We net some warrens but leave open holes for the dogs to chace & catch bolters as we are there to catch rabbits the dogs work the open land flushing & catching freely we also lamp without problems on all terrains when i worked the whippets in cheshire/Derbyshire where numbers were low in comparison the dogs were good enough to hold their own & picked up less injuries than the bigger lurchers run with them even on the old quarries IMO due to body weight.

Link to post

Thanks for your reply, I guess the only way is to work one as you would a lurcher for a season or two, and see how it faired......I have not seen many pics of whippets retrieving also? do they struggle with a 4lb kicking rabbit? ;)

Link to post
My whippet is 6 months now and rough ground was my main concern; as i live on a dairy farm and obviously the ground is rough as rats! But to be honest its really not bothered him, and believe me hes been flying everwhere. Hes obviously not worked properly yet, but i really cant see it being a problem. The working bred whippets seem to have a bit more bone about them and my dog certainly has a good set of sure feet.

 

DG

 

post-19808-1227607908.jpg

 

post-19808-1227607972.jpg

 

 

Oh My God!!! Now this IS My dream dog!! that is what i am looking for!! do you still know the breeders that you got him off xx

 

He is stunning!!!

Edited by xxchrissixx
Link to post
A few of my mates had racing whippets when I was a kid,seen them work around northern england,even took one lamping to Caithness once,they performed admirably otherwise they wouldnt have been kept,I have seen a few whippets take 20+ bunnies in a nights lamping,not a huge amount but decent enough for tiny dogs :)

 

From looking at your photo, the whippet looks a very muscular type whippet. Looked like it could of taken its fair

share of knocks and bumps.

 

The whippets iv'e seen are much more boney, small, fragile looking, that would not stand a good season on rough ground, hunting not (ferreting with nets) etc.....

 

There was a chap here who owned a whippet, moved down from the north last year. His whippet ended up back up north due to the land here and the dog spending more time in the vets!! Lovely dog too.

 

I'm with Reload on this one. ;)

Link to post

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.


×
×
  • Create New...