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<blockquote data-quote="justin_h635" data-source="post: 2387416" data-attributes="member: 24704"><p>Lots o truth here. I was young when we coon hunted. The coon hunting crowd is a rough bunch. I owned no dogs so we had to go with others. If I know now what I didn't know then I would never have gone with some of them. Also, the whole trespassing thing as far as dogs running coon onto others land is enough for me not to do it now. </p><p></p><p>One of my favorite stories is we turned out dogs (blueticks and walkers) one night somewhat close to town. Dogs were running track hard and baying along the way. Ice started to fall and we lost sound. Of course you just drive sections and burn fuel till you hear them and after a while we had a faint sound of them still running....-toward the city (there was an old landfill that was probably full of coon down there). Anyway, there was an area of town that lets say is a little more "urban" in nature and not the best for caucasion teens to be out in late on a weekend night (or at least so the local legends said so). To make a long story short we arrived at a lower income appartment complex about the same time as a coon crawled up a gutter and a blueticks feet hit someones front door full (baying treed).</p><p></p><p>Then there was the time of the badger chasing us, and then the one about treeing in a farmers bard at 2am and him coming in with a semi-auto, or the time where a leg was hit on a random tpost while on full run in a middle of a pasture , or .....</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="justin_h635, post: 2387416, member: 24704"] Lots o truth here. I was young when we coon hunted. The coon hunting crowd is a rough bunch. I owned no dogs so we had to go with others. If I know now what I didn't know then I would never have gone with some of them. Also, the whole trespassing thing as far as dogs running coon onto others land is enough for me not to do it now. One of my favorite stories is we turned out dogs (blueticks and walkers) one night somewhat close to town. Dogs were running track hard and baying along the way. Ice started to fall and we lost sound. Of course you just drive sections and burn fuel till you hear them and after a while we had a faint sound of them still running....-toward the city (there was an old landfill that was probably full of coon down there). Anyway, there was an area of town that lets say is a little more "urban" in nature and not the best for caucasion teens to be out in late on a weekend night (or at least so the local legends said so). To make a long story short we arrived at a lower income appartment complex about the same time as a coon crawled up a gutter and a blueticks feet hit someones front door full (baying treed). Then there was the time of the badger chasing us, and then the one about treeing in a farmers bard at 2am and him coming in with a semi-auto, or the time where a leg was hit on a random tpost while on full run in a middle of a pasture , or ..... [/QUOTE]
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