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Author Topic: Pit cur mixes  (Read 8059 times)
chestonmcdowell
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« on: October 05, 2019, 07:58:21 pm »

I bred my cold nosed long legged cur when I thought I was about to lose him to my 40 pound pit catch dog. Beautiful black and brindle pups. I wish I would of had a female strike dog I thought was worthy enough but I’ve been wanting some rougher style dogs anyways though. Any opinions on this Cross and experience?
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t-dog
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« Reply #1 on: October 05, 2019, 08:08:43 pm »

Depends on his background a bunch. If he comes from real stand off dogs you will probably get some rougher type but if his background already has a lot of bite you may well get straight catch types. OR, you might get some of all 3 types catch, rough, or not so much. The gene pool you start with will have a lot to do with it. JMO

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chestonmcdowell
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« Reply #2 on: October 05, 2019, 08:15:33 pm »

He wasn’t rough at all. I’m going to take my time with these pups and weed through them one by one.
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« Reply #3 on: October 05, 2019, 10:07:25 pm »

I have some myself and like tdog said  you can almost make a whole pack out of 1 breading... meaning tight nose to nose bay and strike dog to straight catch. Mine will all find there own hog and try to catch it ,but most the time they pile on 1. Haven't had the bay busters guys talk about cause there is no baying. I hunt them close which I prefer, sometimes able to see the hog first. I like em but sometimes I  wish I had a loose baying strike dog and 1 catch dog. Keep us posted
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Reuben
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« Reply #4 on: October 06, 2019, 03:47:48 am »

Years ago we ran some Pitbull x Mt cur and almost all those we kept hunted hard and no bark...it was quite a bit before Garmin...the biggest problem was they hunted too far and we didn’t know when they caught a big boar and sometimes not even when close...I think the contributing problems were breeding to gritty long range mt curs...I have and a few crosses I liked pretty good that weren’t straight catch that had some sense to them but needed running vest...and Garmin really helps...

Like Tdog and Rough Curs already said you will get a mixture from loose to straight catch and it is up to you to select they type you want...if picking rough I would use running vests on them...
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chestonmcdowell
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« Reply #5 on: October 06, 2019, 09:08:09 am »

Like Friday night we got on a runner and the dogs got over a mile away on the other side of the lake and I was on foot lost in a thicket looking for the damn leavy lmao all because I took a right instead of a left. They had originally bayed up maybe 3 or 400 yards away. I only hunt with one tight dog right now my redbone will hardly gum a piglet but his son will put teeth on one. Long night didn’t get home until five. Weird thing is when we finally got back to the truck to drive around the lake to get them I looked at my garmin and it said they were at the truck. Get to it they’re in the dog box with the tailgate shut. So hopefully this litter will help stop the foot chase if they’re catching or not. Cause lately I’ve been wanting to get brave and send my catchdogs from a hundred yards away or more. Which in my case I usually always send them when I can see what they’re baying or wait to know if it’s going to break or not. I’ve only hunted with a rcd once and they didn’t find a pig until they were a mile away after they busted a deer defiantly tough especially if your walking.
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chestonmcdowell
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« Reply #6 on: October 22, 2019, 09:25:45 am »

Most of them are kind mopey but two I already know I’m keeping they’re not afraid to leave the huddle and look around or search. There’s also two that think they’re big bad bull dogs they are thick. Which is weird because both of the parents weren’t fighters or aggressive. Even with my girlfriends red heeler they act like the shot callers at 5 weeks old. Time will tell
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t-dog
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« Reply #7 on: October 22, 2019, 09:50:24 am »

Cheston, a buddy of mine raised a litter like this once. He had a pup like those two you're talking about. They thought it was cute when he was little and even named him grumpy. Problem was he almost ruined a really nice pup of mine once. He was fine with my buddies dogs but not new dogs. He was jumping on my pup at the bay, well actually caught hogs. He would get possessive and jumped on the pup and give him a good thrashing before we got there and the pup would meet us coming out and bleeding. They weren't big hogs so it wouldn't take long to wreck them and instead of going on like he knew to do, he'd keep my pup off "his" hog. He was too rough. He was gonna try every hog. Outside of that he was a decent dog but I couldn't ever like him personally because of the puppy incident. That pup was more valuable and had way more potential than grumpy ever did. It took over a year to get that pup back to where he was. I don't think he ever made the dog he was on track to be. If it had happened once I may have been able to forgive it, but it happened more than once on more than one hunt which is partly my fault.

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chestonmcdowell
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« Reply #8 on: October 22, 2019, 10:38:05 am »

Yeah I didn’t really like that about them. First time I’ve gotten to watch them close I just laid on the floor and let them do their thing. Every time the heeler and my pat would start playing rough those two would stumble out and try to get them and they would just stumble around the huddle growling and snapping. I bred them for personal use because I thought I was going to loose the cur and she was the only female on my yard I thought highly of. Only 2 or 3 of the 9 will be given away the rest I will keep and sort through looking for imperfections like this. Nothing I hate more than a dog that rather fight or pick at another dog on the yard or hunting.
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« Reply #9 on: November 07, 2019, 04:35:13 pm »

I have two, they’re both littermates. Father is a Ladner BMC that is open, soft baying, cold nosed, and won’t stop until he has a hog. Way more bottom than most people would ever want in a dog. Chasing a dog for 24 hours through the swamp gets old. But he’s one of those dogs that will find the only pig on the property, just a superstar. The mother was a black, game bred pit, that was a bad to the bone RCD. Every single puppy out of the 3 litters turned out to be a decent or really good dog, they all came out straight black, silent, and straight catch. They looked like clones. The male I have is my lead dog. He hunts 200-300yds and will go a little over a mile before he will come back which is fine since my dogs are straight catch.


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« Reply #10 on: November 12, 2019, 04:48:12 pm »

Do you mind posting a few pics of them
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Austesus
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« Reply #11 on: November 12, 2019, 06:40:37 pm »



These are a few pics of my male Dum Dum, and a picture of him and his sister, Mine. I have a young dog that’s off of the female, bred to my catch dogs brother. That female, Punk, is a great dog. So far she hasn’t found her own pig, but she’s often right there at the front of a race and is nasty on a pig. Most pictures I have of her I can’t really post on here. They’re on my Facebook but I know they don’t like real graphic stuff on here. She has literally ripped a pigs face off before in the 15 minutes it took me to get to her and Dum Dum. She’s the brown dog that’s in front of me holding Dum Dum and Mine.


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« Reply #12 on: November 12, 2019, 06:44:54 pm »

Those two are hard dogs. I’ve watched Dum Dum hold a 250lb boar by himself, and his sister Mine tried to hang a 450lb pig that had killed the catch dog before we got there and the only other dog there was a loose bay dog. I normally run all rough dogs. The loose dog and a RCD stopped the pig after a long race. It took us 4 hours to get to the pig. The catch dog was dead, bay dog was still there. Mine ran in and tried to hang him and got cart wheeled 10ft in the air, she tried it again with the same results and then the guy I was hunting with shot the pig before she could try a 3rd time


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chestonmcdowell
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« Reply #13 on: November 13, 2019, 01:17:40 am »

Damn he sure is good looking. I can’t wait till they get some size to them and I can introduce them to the woods. I usually run a loose pack of two adults a young dog and two lead in cd but lately with me walking everywhere and where I hunt if they got any size to them they’re gonna run with or without pressure I know this liter ain’t gonna answer all my problems but if I had some attitude and theyd grab a root and hold I’d send all the cavalry they need. I plan on posting up a few of the females when I get time this week but the rest I’m keeping just too see how they pan out. If any of them are still around I’d like o cross one to my dogo and one to another hound or cur.
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« Reply #14 on: November 13, 2019, 06:17:38 am »

Just some advice, if you’re running a dog that’s straight catch, run several at a time. I run 4 dogs at a time plus any dogs that a friend brings. A lot of my dogs siblings have been killed by people running them with the wrong dogs. There’s been 3 litters, they all made dogs. Not many of them are left, probably 15-20 of them have been killed. The only time I’ve ever heard them bark was once when my male ran up on a sounder of big pigs and after a few barks he hung a 250lb boar. I thought he was hurt when he started barking so I ran in and about got ran over by some huge pigs. The second time was when he tried to catch a boar in some real nasty briars. He got a little tiny nick and backed up and barked until he saw another dog and then caught. That’s the only time he’s done that, regardless of being cut. I’m hoping that as he is getting older he is just being intelligent. The pig had the biggest teeth I’ve caught. He would wrecked Dum Dum if he tried to hold him in that briar bed.


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chestonmcdowell
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« Reply #15 on: November 13, 2019, 06:35:07 am »

Oh yeah for sure. That’s how I always got my dogs in a bind was running different kinds of dogs that mixed like oil and water. It would make me feel a lot better with more than two hanging off of oneself
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« Reply #16 on: November 13, 2019, 09:58:28 am »

I’ve seen people run all kinds of different dogs and catch pigs but personally I like them rough. I think a lot of the people that don’t like rough dogs due to injuries is because they only run one or two. I run a whole pack of dogs that are straight catch. And my dogs tend to stay together pretty well so I have been fortunate to not have any serious injuries. Of course dogs will eventually get hurt or killed, that comes with that style of hunting. But I think you can drastically reduce the chances of that by having more dogs on the ground. Depends on what your goal is also, some people love a good bay. I’ve never had the opportunity to witness one because the pigs around me run so bad, I haven’t seen anyone with looser dogs stop them. But, I’m hunting for farmers, they just want every pig dead so my style of dog works well for that, especially in corn fields.


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« Reply #17 on: November 13, 2019, 07:18:42 pm »

Oh yeah for sure. That’s what I’m hoping to do when I hunt them is running three or four of them with one dog that will not put teeth on one hell while my little pat holds on hopefully some nuts
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chestonmcdowell
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« Reply #18 on: November 13, 2019, 08:24:36 pm »

One last question this is my first litter I’ve ever bred did you just pick one out of the pile or did they have certain characteristics
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« Reply #19 on: November 14, 2019, 03:52:04 pm »

I didn’t breed them. The guy that started me and mentored me bred them. He hunts and trains dogs 7 days a week for a living. He kept 100% of the first litter. Every single dog turned out. Obviously some better than others, but no culls. He started selling a few of them after they were very heavy started and hunting. The second and third litter he sold a few as puppies and then sold the others after getting them going good. He doesn’t keep many dogs, he likes to sell dogs once they’re hunting good. Not a dog peddler, he’s very good at what he does and he enjoys making dogs. This line is fairly well known around this area, they’re Bo Betty’s. There are no more being made and they made a name for themselves and you will be hard pressed to find somebody selling any off those original litters. As far as I know, I’m the only person that has a male and female. They were purposely placed where people wouldn’t have the means to continue the line to keep it fairly exclusive. Now I’m hoping to fine tune it a little more.

As far as picking pups, your guess is as good as mine. I typically like the ones that are off by themselves exploring, or one that is intelligent, for example always figuring out how to escape the pen.


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