Got a piece of 2x6 sittin' next to me to knock on as I type this... LOL... but, now that I got Whaler on the mend I been thinkin' a lot on how I want to train him over this next year...
First off, he's got a lot of old rough Florida Curs in his ancestry... most of those rough dogs were hunted alone because of this. Put two of 'em down and it's a caught hog, no matter what...
Although I breed his momma Shiner to a fine dog with no head-catch.. I guess I forgot to tell Whaler that...
He's a tuff bird... not afraid to take a lickin', that's for damn sure
He is my pick of the litter if you haven't figured it out yet.. alot of thought, effort, and money brought him to this point... I've been careful not to hunt him much and really want to make sure I keep his ass alive to see what he'll become... hopin' he'll make me a breeding dog...
So now that you got the 411 on what I'm workin' with... I'll tell ya about a conversation I had with an old Florida hunter that been huntin' these dogs a long time... When talkin' about this very subject I asked him about a recent litter of his... how he planned on starting them... Specifically, I asked if he was plannin' on puttin' the pups down with his best male(Whaler's daddy) to show them the ropes...
"Hell no" is what I believe he said... Caught me by suprise at first to tell you the truth... this male dog wasn't in the least bit head-catchy, even with other dogs, so it took me a while to understand what he was thinking...
"He'd just put them in a spot they're not ready for"... thought about this next statement for a good spell, and this is how I view it now...
Basically, runnin' a young dog with a finished dog that consistently bays up bad hogs is just setting the young dog up for catastrophe...
... now this dude doesn't start his dogs till they're over a yr old, when he does, he runs each dog BY ITSELF. He turns out trap hogs, one after another, after another, whether the dog can stop them or not... eventually, the dog either learns to do it or it doesn't...
The main problem I see with this method is that, without a "teacher dog", it takes a dog sometimes much, much longer to start producing than those dogs that are "jump started" right off by an experienced dog...
Learned this the hard way with my Spinner dog... her and my lead dog Shine(Spinn's momma) clicked early off, neither dog is head catchy... but Shine has a real bad habit of bayin' bad hogs up... so it should of been no suprise to me that Spinn got whacked... but I was just not patient enough to let the dog learn on it's own... now I've got a tremendous young dog with a hell of a limp...
I believe when you let a dog develope on it's own, it for the most part, is only able to bay hogs comparable to it's own skill level... i.e. the dog probably won't bay dangerous hogs up till it's been educated by lesser hogs along the way...
... Goes without saying, this method makes for a LOT of empty runs... but the end outcome, I believe, is a better dog that has (hopefully) not been caught in a bad spot to that point because of a more advanced dog...
This is my understanding of this technique anyways... forcing myself to stick to the plan will be the hard part...