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Hobbies & Interests
Hunting & Fishing
Hunting Dogs In The Off Season
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<blockquote data-quote="dennishoddy" data-source="post: 3368565" data-attributes="member: 5412"><p>My first hunting dogs were beagles when rabbits were thick. Penny was a beast on the trail never quitting until the bunny was killed and then she retrieved it to hand. Her reward and the first method of field dressing was to step on the head and remove it by pulling on the back legs. Three or four chomps and it was in the belly.</p><p>One good day south of town she couldn't eat anymore. Started taking the heads off the side and burying them.</p><p>Almost a month later we hunted the same place. She started finding the heads where they had been buried several yards off the trail. One would think that she smelled them, but the wind was not in her favor to get a scent.</p><p>Wife was attending a dog obedience class at the same time with her lap rug and told me that the instructors told her that dogs don't have memories.</p><p>I think this thread disproves that theory.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dennishoddy, post: 3368565, member: 5412"] My first hunting dogs were beagles when rabbits were thick. Penny was a beast on the trail never quitting until the bunny was killed and then she retrieved it to hand. Her reward and the first method of field dressing was to step on the head and remove it by pulling on the back legs. Three or four chomps and it was in the belly. One good day south of town she couldn't eat anymore. Started taking the heads off the side and burying them. Almost a month later we hunted the same place. She started finding the heads where they had been buried several yards off the trail. One would think that she smelled them, but the wind was not in her favor to get a scent. Wife was attending a dog obedience class at the same time with her lap rug and told me that the instructors told her that dogs don't have memories. I think this thread disproves that theory. [/QUOTE]
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