The female dachshund who beat our Tuesday in the open bitch stake at DALI field trial was Callie (G2's Callalilly American Express) owned by Jeffrey Koller. She is a miniature longhaired dachshund who is out of wirehaired wild boar parents and she is wild boar. I have never seen a longhaired dachshund out of wirehaired parents before. All I can say she is an excellent hunter and now an AKC field champion.
Tracking dogs for finding wounded big game. Also dachshunds for blood tracking, field trials, their breeding, training and more.
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Monday, September 30, 2013
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Huge bucks mark a great beginning of Kasey and Boomer's tracking season
Kasey Morgan is a United Blood Trackers member from Elderon Wisconsin and he operates under the name Bloodhound Deer Tracking Services. He has had a great beginning of this tracking season with a number of very impressive bucks.
By Kasey Morgan
After another 200 yards the terrain
had changed from marsh grass and creek bottoms to tag alders and a foot of
water. Boomer pressed on through the
water but soon appeared to have lost the track.
He began a back track and I watched as his body language showed some
confusion. As he backtracked out of the
tags he soon hit the scent of the track and again progressed westward. I was out ahead of the hunter when Boomer turned
north and locked up completely along the edge of the creek. I circled around the creek bank and was
astounded at what I was looking at.
Boomer was baying like a fog horn on top of a fair chase, two hundred
plus inch, whitetail deer. I yelled back
to Matt that we had found his deer. He
excitedly made his way toward me. We exchanged
high fives and the celebration was on.
We snapped some great photos and awed over the sight of such a monarch.
By Kasey Morgan
The 2013 Wisconsin Archery Season was
upon us and the calls for tracks came in fast and furious. Boomer, my bloodhound, would get his first
action the night of opening day on a good buck hit high and slightly back from
perfect. We took up the track and Boomer
made short work of the 250 yard track.
The buck had fled the scene in a completely different direction than the
hunter had remembered. The amount of
sign along the track was minimal, but a fairly steady track of blood
droplets. We were on the deer in less
than a half hour and Boomer was on the
board with his first “fair chase” whitetail of the year.
The next call would come in shortly
after leaving our first track. Matt
Serwa of “Real Deal Mineral” had hit a deer he knew very well. He quickly sent me a picture of the deer from
one of his trail cameras, and I was amazed at the size. He described the chain of events that lead to
the shot and the shot location. He had stomach
hit the deer. The shot was back, but
looked to be center of the deer between spine and bottom of the belly. We were dealing with a number of variables on
this track. The first issue was the fact
that it had started to rain steadily and was predicted to continue throughout
the night. Being able to locate blood
throughout the track is not the most important thing, but it certainly helps
confirm that we are heading in the right direction. The second was the temperature. The temperature was predicted to stay above
the 70 degree mark which would cause a gut shot deer to spoil more
quickly. Matt and I agreed that waiting
until the following morning was still the best option. Pushing the deer that night would definitely
destroy our chances of a recovery.
Early the next morning Boomer took up
the track. It was still raining very
steadily, and there was no sign of blood.
We began the track and Boomer followed in a similar line as was
described by the hunter as the deer’s path of exit from its feeding area. We tracked off of a food plot down into a low
swamp area. The dog became very excited
and proceeded to make a right hand turn into an area full of marsh grass. There were several deer beds in the area,
none of which we were able to find blood in.
We trusted the hound as he led us on fairly straight path through the
marsh and down into a creek bottom. We
had now progressed somewhere in the neighborhood of 400 yards with no visible
blood. Boomer searched both sides of the
creek bank frantically looking for the scent.
He decided on a line heading westward deeper into the swamp.
It was not the longest track we have
ever run with a successful ending.
However, the 14 hours of continuous rain and the tough tracking terrain
made the near one thousand yard run, my proudest moment as a tracker. Although Boomer does not pay attention to the
Boon & Crocket Scoring System but, the record book whitetail at the end was
a great bonus.
Labels:
blood trailing dogs,
bloodhound,
no blood,
stomach shot,
trophy bucks,
United Blood Trackers,
water,
Wisconsin
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
A young wirehaired dachshund puppy is already helping hunters recover their deer
Moose (Uncas
von Moosbach-Zuzelek) was born on May 10 so he is not five months old yet. Thanks to his owner's dedication, Adam Hostetter from Pennsylvania, Moose is already tracking this season and has two recoveries under his belt. Since it is illegal to track in PA, Adam is lucky to live close to Maryland border, and this is where he does his tracking.
Labels:
blood tracking dogs,
Maryland,
precocious puppies,
tracking wounded deer,
wirehaired dachshunds,
youngsters
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Adventures of Kevin and Quenotte, a tracking team from the suburbs of Northern Virginia
Kevin Wilson hunts and tracks for BackyardBowPro which is a suburban hunter certifying organization (non-profit) in Northern Virginia. His tracking partner is Quenotte, a daughter of Joeri and Keena. He wrote a nice post about his tracking experience with Quenotte, who is just over three years old. Thank you Kevin!
17 September 2013:
Quenotte and I tracked two wounded deer this week in support of the Fairfax County Park Authority (FCPA) suburban bow hunts.
The first deer was gut shot around noon and the trail had been lost amidst a series of islands and creek channels. I started her at the shot sight and she re-traced the trail to the first water crossing. On the other side, the hunters had marked the blood trail and she regained it quickly. We were now on a smallish island where the hunters had lost the trail and then grid-searched causing a lot of human foot traffic.
In the middle of the island, Q's body language indicated that she was unsure and it was impossible to see blood on the trampled brush. We re-started once at the beginning of the small island unsuccessfully.
The island was not large and the deer was definitely not on it so we moved off the island and investigated the likely crossings leaving the island. On the first crossing site, Q made a circle then picked up the trail again and we advanced rapidly across a larger, un-trampled island with good visual blood sign accompanied by positive body language from her. At the end of the island, she went down over a steep bank and moved along a small mud flat. At first, I wasn't even sure how I was going to get down to her. However, she was positive and even tried to enter the water. After finding my way down to her, I discovered fresh tracks and deep purple blood flecks at the water's edge indicating that the deer had crossed the creek on an oblique angle. The water was too deep to cross on foot so we circled around to the opposite bank by climbing across a downed tree. Finally, I put her down and she moved along below the opposite bank and then tried to turn up the bank. It was so steep that I carried her over the edge but we were rewarded with the doe lying at the very top of the bank. The hunters were elated and impressed. This is one of our best successes ever.
20 September 2013:
The next call was two days later and involved another gut shot doe. The hunter had hit the doe during the previous evening and lost the trail after about 150 yds. His lab (named Moose) was on-scene and Moose had advanced the trail some before our arrival.
Moose weighed about 80 lbs and had a lot of energy. The hunter asked if Moose's presence would be a distraction for Quenotte and said I yes (definitely). Moose went back in the truck. We started the trail at a spot where the doe had crossed a road and then moved through about 100 yards of easy tracking with some blood. The doe then entered an elongated thicket running next to a split rail fence line bordering the neighborhood. Moose had lost the trail amidst this thicket and the hunter thought maybe the deer had turned to go under the fence and enter the adjoining neighborhood. Note: I have never seen a suburban deer seek the neighborhood environment when wounded. Quenotte went past the point of loss and worked through two turns inside the thicket. Blood was present and I caught a whiff of decaying flesh so I was beginning to think maybe the deer had died in this thicket somewhere. The trail straightened and we continued parallel to the fence along a major deer runway.
As the thicket tapered, we went past a final blood spot and then Q took the trail across an open area and entered into a denser thicket. She was pulling hard and I was on my hands and knees trying to keep up with her (and keep the leash untangled). We crawled through about 50 yds of ungodly mess and I could see no blood. In retrospect, I suppose the scent trail had widened and maybe the blood was off to one side. In the midst of the thicket, Quenotte broke into a slightly more open area and I could hear a man saying "Hello Little Fellow". I emerged from a rabbit run brush tunnel to find Quenotte greeting a hunter who had participated in the search earlier. He was a marking a trail through the center of the thicket (for some unknown reason). I asked if he had seen the dead deer and he said 'no'. Mistakenly, I assumed that Q had followed the hunter or blood scent from his boots.
There was no blood sign visible and I (mistakenly again) assumed that we had lost the trail. I picked her up and we returned to the last blood in the previous thicket. We started 4 more times from this spot, going in differing directions and investigating along the fence line without finding additional blood. We back-tracked into the original thicket and tried three more starts to see if we could identify a diverging trail. At this point, we were both exhausted and I told the hunter that we were done. He asked if he could bring Moose back out and I said 'yes' but I would hold Quenotte while Moose worked. The hunter returned with Moose and Moose bounded through the thickets while Q and I prepared to leave.
Just as we were leaving, Moose discovered the dead deer just 50 feet beyond where Quenotte had met the hunter in the thicket. If we had persisted with the original line, then we would have found it easily.
Certainly, the hunters would not have come close to finding the deer if we had not advanced the trail as far as we did; however, I was disappointed in myself for pulling her off the original line. I still have much to learn about when to trust Quenotte and when to re-start her.
Reported recovery rates in these suburban park hunts exceed 90% by ratio of reported shots taken to deer recovered (archery only). Historically, this is a very high, archery recovery rate and finding two extra deer can make a big difference at the 90% margin. This is the 5th year of the park hunts and my participation has shifted from hunting to tracking...although I still hunt private, suburban properties.
A while back, Jolanta asked for stories of unsuccessful tracks...
February 2012:
Quenotte and I could probably write a book of lessons learned the hard way. This is a story with an unexpected outcome from last winter. Q and I were called out to track a doe hit in the shoulder by a very reliable crossbow hunter on a private property. The deer had been with a group of four deer and the hunter claimed to have hit the deer in the crease 'right behind the shoulder'. The shot site was on the bottom of a long hill and the hunter claimed that the deer had gone downhill and crossed a road into a nearby stream valley park. Reportedly, the other (un-injured) deer in the group had gone uphill.
The shot site was amidst a pile of old trash (washing machine, sewer pipe etc) and it was a difficult place to begin the trail normally and safely. I put Q down near the hit site and she immediately turned uphill. She went about 50 yards with no blood and I presumed that she was following an un-injured deer. The hunter said that it was the wrong direction but she was so sure that I let her go. We went another 200 yards uphill in the direction of massive honeysuckle thicket bordering the client's yard. She entered the thicket with increasing certainty and I followed discovering blood in the thicket. Although it was winter, the honeysuckle vines were dense and intertwined with various trees. I had to relinquish the leash several times to take a different route. On the third evolution, I returned to the leash just in time to see the tag end disappear into the thicket (to my horror).
Despite my best efforts, I was unable to catch up with the leash or the dog. It was impossible to even tell what direction Quenotte might have gone and I was afraid that the deer would emerge from the far side of the thicket and head towards the street. I crashed through the thicket and into the neighboring yard but the dog wasn't there and the blood trail did not emerge from the thicket. I could not hear Quenotte in the thicket but I suspected that she was still in there so I re-entered. To compound my troubles, the neighboring property is owned by a rabid anti-hunter so I was unable to use my larger light (he wears a blaze orange vest while gardening if we are hunting neighboring lots).
There were a lot of terrible thoughts going through my mind and I just wanted my dog back at this point. Almost immediately, she sounded off about 20 yards into the thicket so I headed towards the sound. To my surprise, I emerged into a small open spot with the deer lying at my feet showing only a nasty but obviously non-lethal shoulder wound. Quenotte was on the opposite side of the deer raising hell and the deer just looked confused (but not for long). I didn't know whether to be thrilled that I had not lost my dog or concerned that the deer was going to go ballistic after being cornered.
The deer settled the issue by regaining its feet and rocketing out of the thicket in a manner that convinced me that it would survive. Gratefully, I picked up Quenotte and we called it a night.
The evening was a success because we located the deer cooperatively but a painful lesson learned for me on leash management.
17 September 2013:
Quenotte and I tracked two wounded deer this week in support of the Fairfax County Park Authority (FCPA) suburban bow hunts.
The first deer was gut shot around noon and the trail had been lost amidst a series of islands and creek channels. I started her at the shot sight and she re-traced the trail to the first water crossing. On the other side, the hunters had marked the blood trail and she regained it quickly. We were now on a smallish island where the hunters had lost the trail and then grid-searched causing a lot of human foot traffic.
In the middle of the island, Q's body language indicated that she was unsure and it was impossible to see blood on the trampled brush. We re-started once at the beginning of the small island unsuccessfully.
The island was not large and the deer was definitely not on it so we moved off the island and investigated the likely crossings leaving the island. On the first crossing site, Q made a circle then picked up the trail again and we advanced rapidly across a larger, un-trampled island with good visual blood sign accompanied by positive body language from her. At the end of the island, she went down over a steep bank and moved along a small mud flat. At first, I wasn't even sure how I was going to get down to her. However, she was positive and even tried to enter the water. After finding my way down to her, I discovered fresh tracks and deep purple blood flecks at the water's edge indicating that the deer had crossed the creek on an oblique angle. The water was too deep to cross on foot so we circled around to the opposite bank by climbing across a downed tree. Finally, I put her down and she moved along below the opposite bank and then tried to turn up the bank. It was so steep that I carried her over the edge but we were rewarded with the doe lying at the very top of the bank. The hunters were elated and impressed. This is one of our best successes ever.
20 September 2013:
The next call was two days later and involved another gut shot doe. The hunter had hit the doe during the previous evening and lost the trail after about 150 yds. His lab (named Moose) was on-scene and Moose had advanced the trail some before our arrival.
Moose weighed about 80 lbs and had a lot of energy. The hunter asked if Moose's presence would be a distraction for Quenotte and said I yes (definitely). Moose went back in the truck. We started the trail at a spot where the doe had crossed a road and then moved through about 100 yards of easy tracking with some blood. The doe then entered an elongated thicket running next to a split rail fence line bordering the neighborhood. Moose had lost the trail amidst this thicket and the hunter thought maybe the deer had turned to go under the fence and enter the adjoining neighborhood. Note: I have never seen a suburban deer seek the neighborhood environment when wounded. Quenotte went past the point of loss and worked through two turns inside the thicket. Blood was present and I caught a whiff of decaying flesh so I was beginning to think maybe the deer had died in this thicket somewhere. The trail straightened and we continued parallel to the fence along a major deer runway.
As the thicket tapered, we went past a final blood spot and then Q took the trail across an open area and entered into a denser thicket. She was pulling hard and I was on my hands and knees trying to keep up with her (and keep the leash untangled). We crawled through about 50 yds of ungodly mess and I could see no blood. In retrospect, I suppose the scent trail had widened and maybe the blood was off to one side. In the midst of the thicket, Quenotte broke into a slightly more open area and I could hear a man saying "Hello Little Fellow". I emerged from a rabbit run brush tunnel to find Quenotte greeting a hunter who had participated in the search earlier. He was a marking a trail through the center of the thicket (for some unknown reason). I asked if he had seen the dead deer and he said 'no'. Mistakenly, I assumed that Q had followed the hunter or blood scent from his boots.
There was no blood sign visible and I (mistakenly again) assumed that we had lost the trail. I picked her up and we returned to the last blood in the previous thicket. We started 4 more times from this spot, going in differing directions and investigating along the fence line without finding additional blood. We back-tracked into the original thicket and tried three more starts to see if we could identify a diverging trail. At this point, we were both exhausted and I told the hunter that we were done. He asked if he could bring Moose back out and I said 'yes' but I would hold Quenotte while Moose worked. The hunter returned with Moose and Moose bounded through the thickets while Q and I prepared to leave.
Just as we were leaving, Moose discovered the dead deer just 50 feet beyond where Quenotte had met the hunter in the thicket. If we had persisted with the original line, then we would have found it easily.
Certainly, the hunters would not have come close to finding the deer if we had not advanced the trail as far as we did; however, I was disappointed in myself for pulling her off the original line. I still have much to learn about when to trust Quenotte and when to re-start her.
Reported recovery rates in these suburban park hunts exceed 90% by ratio of reported shots taken to deer recovered (archery only). Historically, this is a very high, archery recovery rate and finding two extra deer can make a big difference at the 90% margin. This is the 5th year of the park hunts and my participation has shifted from hunting to tracking...although I still hunt private, suburban properties.
A while back, Jolanta asked for stories of unsuccessful tracks...
February 2012:
Quenotte and I could probably write a book of lessons learned the hard way. This is a story with an unexpected outcome from last winter. Q and I were called out to track a doe hit in the shoulder by a very reliable crossbow hunter on a private property. The deer had been with a group of four deer and the hunter claimed to have hit the deer in the crease 'right behind the shoulder'. The shot site was on the bottom of a long hill and the hunter claimed that the deer had gone downhill and crossed a road into a nearby stream valley park. Reportedly, the other (un-injured) deer in the group had gone uphill.
The shot site was amidst a pile of old trash (washing machine, sewer pipe etc) and it was a difficult place to begin the trail normally and safely. I put Q down near the hit site and she immediately turned uphill. She went about 50 yards with no blood and I presumed that she was following an un-injured deer. The hunter said that it was the wrong direction but she was so sure that I let her go. We went another 200 yards uphill in the direction of massive honeysuckle thicket bordering the client's yard. She entered the thicket with increasing certainty and I followed discovering blood in the thicket. Although it was winter, the honeysuckle vines were dense and intertwined with various trees. I had to relinquish the leash several times to take a different route. On the third evolution, I returned to the leash just in time to see the tag end disappear into the thicket (to my horror).
Despite my best efforts, I was unable to catch up with the leash or the dog. It was impossible to even tell what direction Quenotte might have gone and I was afraid that the deer would emerge from the far side of the thicket and head towards the street. I crashed through the thicket and into the neighboring yard but the dog wasn't there and the blood trail did not emerge from the thicket. I could not hear Quenotte in the thicket but I suspected that she was still in there so I re-entered. To compound my troubles, the neighboring property is owned by a rabid anti-hunter so I was unable to use my larger light (he wears a blaze orange vest while gardening if we are hunting neighboring lots).
There were a lot of terrible thoughts going through my mind and I just wanted my dog back at this point. Almost immediately, she sounded off about 20 yards into the thicket so I headed towards the sound. To my surprise, I emerged into a small open spot with the deer lying at my feet showing only a nasty but obviously non-lethal shoulder wound. Quenotte was on the opposite side of the deer raising hell and the deer just looked confused (but not for long). I didn't know whether to be thrilled that I had not lost my dog or concerned that the deer was going to go ballistic after being cornered.
The deer settled the issue by regaining its feet and rocketing out of the thicket in a manner that convinced me that it would survive. Gratefully, I picked up Quenotte and we called it a night.
The evening was a success because we located the deer cooperatively but a painful lesson learned for me on leash management.
Labels:
2013 season,
gut shot deer,
no blood,
suburban hunt,
suburban tracking,
Virginia,
water
Sunday, September 22, 2013
A double-lung shot doe that went further than expected
By Andy Bensing
These lungs show how tough a deer can be and how far they can actually run on even a perfect shot. This doe was arrowed at 10 yards from a low tree stand with a crossbow. The deer was at full alert and had been grunted to a stop before the shot. With the loud crack of the crossbow and being at full alert before the shot the doe took off up hill like a bullet. There had been a very light rain during the evening hunt but immediately after the shot it began pouring and when the hunter was out of the tree there was no blood to be found except two small splashes at 60 yards down the trail the deer ran off on. A two hour body search in the ram at night did not turn up the deer.
I tracked the deer with my Eibe in the morning. We found the doe rather quickly even though the night's downpours washed all visible blood away. The scent was still there. Amazingly the doe had run very hard for 150 meters and would have gone even further. When we found her she was impaled on a box wire fence in the woods. It was quite clear she had hit the fence still going full speed 150 meters from the hit site. Look closely at the lungs and you will see it was a double lung shot and If you look real close between the lungs you will see the aorta was severed as well. Interestingly I was only able to collect barely 10 ounces of blood from the chest cavity. She must have bled out as she ran but the pouring rain washed it away very fast. The area she was in was very thick with vegetation and it would have very unlikely the hunter would have found her that far away just by grid searching even in the daylight. It is sometimes incredible how tough these animals are.
These lungs show how tough a deer can be and how far they can actually run on even a perfect shot. This doe was arrowed at 10 yards from a low tree stand with a crossbow. The deer was at full alert and had been grunted to a stop before the shot. With the loud crack of the crossbow and being at full alert before the shot the doe took off up hill like a bullet. There had been a very light rain during the evening hunt but immediately after the shot it began pouring and when the hunter was out of the tree there was no blood to be found except two small splashes at 60 yards down the trail the deer ran off on. A two hour body search in the ram at night did not turn up the deer.
I tracked the deer with my Eibe in the morning. We found the doe rather quickly even though the night's downpours washed all visible blood away. The scent was still there. Amazingly the doe had run very hard for 150 meters and would have gone even further. When we found her she was impaled on a box wire fence in the woods. It was quite clear she had hit the fence still going full speed 150 meters from the hit site. Look closely at the lungs and you will see it was a double lung shot and If you look real close between the lungs you will see the aorta was severed as well. Interestingly I was only able to collect barely 10 ounces of blood from the chest cavity. She must have bled out as she ran but the pouring rain washed it away very fast. The area she was in was very thick with vegetation and it would have very unlikely the hunter would have found her that far away just by grid searching even in the daylight. It is sometimes incredible how tough these animals are.
Labels:
Andy Bensing,
Eibe,
lung-shot deer,
United Blood Trackers
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
New Jersey handlers promote the use of blood tracking dogs
On September 14 and 15 The United Blood Trackers had a booth
at the New Jersey Outdoor Expo. This event is hosted by the Division of Fish and
wildlife and was held at Colliers Mills WMA. The event was attended by 8,400
visitors over the 2 days. This is a 17% increase in
visitor participation from the 2012 Expo. Together with exhibitors and
volunteers, a diverse crowd of more than 8,700 people participated in this
successful outreach event. The event is free and has a multitude of
outdoor activities that are geared towards adults and kids that don’t
necessarily have allot of knowledge about the outdoors.
The UBT booth was manned by members of the New Jersey
tracking permit. Stan Kite and Rilla, Nola Wunderlich and I with Karl and Theo
were there on Saturday. Rich Stollery and Ember, John Drahos and his daughter
Rylee along with two new trackers Jeremy and Arthur Garey filled in on Sunday.
This was pretty good considering this was the opening weekend of our archery
season.
Blood tracking demos were held both days and were well
attended by spectators. The dogs were a real magnet to kids and adults alike and
we were able explain a tracking dogs function to people that had no idea what we
did. This type of positive exposure to the general public will pay off
later.
On a side note:
Over the last three years the UBT has been a member of The
New Jersey Outdoor Alliance and has a seat on the Conservation Foundation. The
NJOA has been assisting the tracking dog legalization effort here in NJ. At a
recent meeting with the Governor’s office, the NJOA discussed the legalization
of a leashed tracking dog. A bill is being crafted and is being backed by
Governor Christi. Our next step will be finalizing the language and getting a
Republican and Democratic sponsor. Over the last five years our tracking permit
has been issued, we have slowly won over Fish and Wildlife, the Law Enforcement
component, and finally the Politicians. This has been hard work and the amount
of paper work our trackers have had to submit is cumbersome. I would like to
thank them all for their commitment to the cause.
Submitted by Darren Doran, NJ Tracking Permit Coordinator
Arthur Garey and Dennis |
Stan Kite with Rilla and Karl |
Jeremy Garey and Faline |
Daren Doran's tracking dachshunds: Karl and Theo |
Rylee Drahos with Theo and Karl |
Labels:
blood tracking dogs promotion,
Darren Doran,
legalization,
NJ,
politics,
ubt,
United Blood Trackers
Monday, September 16, 2013
Seven tracks in two days result in five deer recovered by Lightning Mountain Outfitters and Tucker
On Sunday I was in Batavia, NY to attend one day of field trials, and when I got back on Monday morning I found out out that Ray and Pam Maurier from New Hampshire have been very busy tracking. They did seven tracks in two days and recovered five deer (on Monday they tracked four deer and recovered all of them).
We are so proud of Tucker (Storm von Moosbach-Zuzelek), who is our Sky's littermate. We could not imagine a better home for Tucker, who is loved and cherished, but also given so many opportunities to track.
The first picture shows a bear that Trucker recovered a week ago so this is not part of the last two days' tally. Ray posted the summary of the last two days on Facebook and I might be able to repost it here. Anyway, huge congratulations to Pam and Ray and their tracking teckel Tucker!
We are so proud of Tucker (Storm von Moosbach-Zuzelek), who is our Sky's littermate. We could not imagine a better home for Tucker, who is loved and cherished, but also given so many opportunities to track.
The first picture shows a bear that Trucker recovered a week ago so this is not part of the last two days' tally. Ray posted the summary of the last two days on Facebook and I might be able to repost it here. Anyway, huge congratulations to Pam and Ray and their tracking teckel Tucker!
Labels:
New Hampshire,
tracking wounded deer,
Tucker,
United Blood Trackers,
wirehaired dachshunds,
wounded bear tracking
Friday, September 13, 2013
Another hazard for tracking dogs
by Andy Bensing
As an avid outdoorsman I usually love learning and
experiencing new things about nature but sometimes there is a limit. A recent blood tracking expedition taught me
something I really didn’t need to learn.
Last Tuesday night after a very routine blood tracking call
earlier that day in MD I found myself lying in bed in the dark scratching like
crazy on my legs. The itching and small
bumps immediately brought the thought to mind that I had again gotten into some
chiggers earlier in the day. Actually,
the itching and bumps were less than I had experienced in the past from
chiggers so I was pretty happy about that.
I found out a day and a half later it wasn’t chiggers that I had gotten
into but instead my dog Eibe and I had gotten into a nest of tick larvae! Tick larvae are very, very small and I had
not noticed them at first on myself or my dog but by Thursday morning they had
been feeding on Eibe for a while and had blown up to a size that I could now
easily see. Commonly called “seed ticks”
for their close resemblance to small seeds, Eibe was covered in them! Without exaggeration I would estimate there
were at least 1,000 or more engorged tick larvae all over her body! Upon close examination I could even see the
discarded exoskeletons from some of the larvae who had molted into the nymph
stage. The engorged ticks were so small
that I wasn’t even sure what they were until I used a magnifying glass and
could see their legs. A quick call to my
vet and a little internet research held the solution to the problem. Unlike adult ticks and just like chiggers,
these larvae don’t attach very securely when feeding. That’s why I easily rubbed them off my legs
unknowingly the first night and did not end up with any engorged ones on
me. All that was necessary to get them
off Eibe was a simple flea and tick shampoo and a flea comb through her hair
once dry.
Except for the fact that I can’t stop itching from just the
thought of all those creepy little critters all over my dog and some inevitably
crawling around my house the whole thing ended pretty easily. According to the research I have done, the
likelihood of tick borne diseases being transmitted by the nymph stage appears
low. Now the only big question left is
what will be my next dog disaster?
Engorged tick larvae on Eibe’s back and belly.
|
Shed larvae exoskeletons after molting to the nymph stage.
|
Engorged tick larvae on Eibe’s back and belly.
|
Just a few of the dead ticks collected from the drain after
Eibe’s tick bath.
|
This chart shows the comparative size of the larvae, nymph,
and adult tick.
|
Labels:
Andy Bensing,
blood tracking dogs,
blood trailing dogs,
Eibe,
field hazard,
ticks
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
First natural training line for Addi, a seven-month-old wirehaired dachshund puppy
Andy Bensing shared with us his recent experience with Addi, a puppy who is sired by Chuck Collier's Moose (FC Nurmi von Moosbach-Zuzelek). Moose is a talented and accomplished tracker in his own right, but over the last few years he has proved to be an exceptional producer.
Here's Addi, a 7-month-old granddaughter of my Eibe on her
first natural training line track. The deer had traveled 100 yards after the
double lung shot but left absolutely no blood trail. Unfortunately the hunters
were unaware of the availability of tracking dogs when this buck was shot and it
took well into the next day for the hunters to locate the buck in the thick
cover that it ran into. The deer was left lay due to spoilage after it was
found by grid searching the next day. I was on the property 2 days later with
my experienced dog, Eibe, for a different deer and when that track was over I
used the opportunity to try giving my young pup a little field experience.
Although Addi had previously been on about 20 training lines with tracking shoes
and blood, I doubted she would be able to do anything with a 40 hour old
bloodless line but I figured I had nothing to lose by giving it a shot. Well to
my wonderful surprise when I put her down on a bloodless start at the hit site
she figured it out very quickly. Very slowly and methodically she picked her
way down the bloodless 100 yards through thick cover right to the carcass.
Conditions were perfect for training; the uncleaned arrow was available to lie
on the ground at the exact known spot the deer was standing when shot, the wind
was at our back and the deer was still in the woods at a known location.
This is the kind of dog that is being bred here in the United
States on an ever increasing frequency. Not all dogs start out so well at such
a young age and many of those slower starters still turn out great later in life
but when you get a quick starter and combine it with some good initial young dog
training you can get results like this. If it sounds like I am bragging, I am!
I could not be happier today if I had hit the lottery!
Monday, September 9, 2013
Promotion of blood tracking dogs at its best: a big thank you to Ray and Joe
Ray Holohan, a United Blood Trackers member from Ashkum, Illinois, wrote:
Hi Jolanta, I thought I would send you a picture of
the outdoor show that Joe Walters and myself did this past weekend representing
the UBT. The show was a spinoff of the GOTCHA show that we have done the past
few years. This show was put on by the Kankakee Valley Park District and was
called 2013 Ultimate Outdoor Show; it was a two day event. The show wasn't
really put together well and wasn't well advertised, making the attendance
pretty low. We were still able to get the word out about the UBT and tracking
wounded deer with dogs. Everbody thought it was a great concept and were all
for it. We also got a chance to show off our new puppies Ruff and Maddy, they
were very well behaved and did a good job considering the temperature was in the
high 80s. Joe's tracking season will start this weekend, Indiana has a early
urban hunt, I have to wait till October 1st. Well that's all for now, good luck
this season
Ray, Claudia, Rosco, Razen, and Ruff
Labels:
blood tracking dogs,
blood tracking dogs promotion,
Illinois,
Indiana,
United Blood Trackers
Saturday, September 7, 2013
A four-moth-old dachshund "Mongo" (aka Urho) recovers his first "real" mule buck
Urho von Moosbach-Zuzelek, a puppy from our "U" litter that was born on May 10, is owned by John Sakelaris who works at
Vermejo Park Ranch in New Mexico. John has two sons and they call the pup "Mongo". On September 5 I received a very exciting message that Mongo was successful the first time out and recovered a very nice mule buck for the hunter in the picture. We could not be happier to hear the news. Congratulations to Mongo, Perry and John!
Perry with his pup Mongo. |
Labels:
2013 season,
first recovery,
mule deer,
NM
Friday, September 6, 2013
A memorable bear track for Buster and Susanne
This picture shows Susanne and Buster on one of the tracks they did in 2012. |
By Susanne Hamilton
The saying that things get better with age is true although for me it comes as a two edged sword.
My dog Buster is 11 years old and has many jobs of which all
of them he takes very seriously. He is my best friend, my constant companion,
my horse show dog, my field trialing dog, my agility dog and last but not least
my tracking dog. My friend Jolanta always says that there is no such thing as
the perfect dog, but to me this little
guy is the embodiment of perfection and all I wish is that I could make time stand
still to keep him just the way he is right now for ever and ever!
I want to tell the story of a recent track in which
although we did not end up with a find, everything went right...
It was at 11:30 at night and I was just ready to
get to bed when I got a Facebook message that someone was looking for a
tracking dog to find a wounded bear in Maine .
After a short conversation on the I couldn't resist going on this track even
though I realized this was two and a half hours away. It was our first call of
the season and both Buster and I were itching to go.
The man that called, Chris, is an experienced hunter and guide,
and he was devastated because a good shot turned into a bad one. The bear moved
the moment he pulled back the release of his bow, which resulted in the arrow
landing on the upper part of his
hindquarters. The bear had taken off with a loud roar, then crashed, then got
up again and crashed again, and after that there had been silence.
From the description of the shot, I did not think we had a
fatally wounded animal, however, there is always the question "what
if", and Chris, my hunter was really anxious. The arrow was a fixed blade,
and from the description, it was at
least ten inches in the bear. I pondered it for a short while, and decided to
take a chance.
There was no evidence of blood at the hit site, and Chris
had really never found any blood during his search for the bear he had shot at
6pm that evening, but Buster does not
need blood to follow a track. We knew the bear had been hit high, with no exit
wound. The people who usually need blood
evidence, are either a) the tracker, who would like to know that his/her dog is
persuing the right animal or b) the hunter, who feels awful, that he took a bad
shot, and made every effort to find a "bloodhound" and now doesn't
really trust that a little 20 pound dog
on short legs with a blonde chick at the end of a tether could in all actuality sniff out and recover his
wounded game.
When we arrived at the bait site at about 2:30 AM, my
eyes fell on all the bait scattered at the site... to me it stank, but to Buster, it must have
smelled like a feast. I wondered for a
split second, if Buster was going to show more interest in the food than in the
bear track, but I was mistaken, and he never even glanced at it. As always, he
was all business.
Chris showed me the
exact direction the bear had taken off after being hit, but Buster gingerly
chose an entirely different trail in front of the trail camera. I was puzzled, and trusting my dog, I let him lead the way
for a bit, but then chose to reset him
back onto the trail that the hunter showed me, and that he had been certain,
the bear had disappeared. Buster threw me a short glance, put his nose down,
and started tracking.
Off we went, and Chris who was searching for any evidence
behind me was excited. He felt that this was exactly the direction the bear had
taken, just before he heard him
crash. Buster confidently kept up on the
trail, swung slightly to the left after about 300 yards, and kept a good pull
on the lead. He felt very consistent to me but after a half a mile with
absolutely no blood evidence I made the decision to go back to the bait site to
see if Buster would take the same track again.
My general rule is, if Buster tracks it once, I may on
occasion be allowed to be a skeptic, especially if there is absolutely no
evidence or signs to prove we're on the right track, but if
he takes the same trail twice and he is committed to that track, I had BETTER
follow his lead.
I carried Buster back to the bait site, put him
on the same trail and asked him to "find that bear". He gave me a look that one would get from
someone who feels a bit sorry for you because you're a little slow on the
uptake, but then turned, and patiently took me along exactly the same trail we
had taken before.
I love tracking at night, there is something serene and
quiet about it. There aren't any of the
loud abstract colors and distractions
that appear in the daylight, my entire world exists in the low glow of
my headlamp and everything around us is dark. It gives you a feeling of being
almost encapsulated. The little world includes only myself, my dog and often my
hunter. One’s senses tend to sharpen to details of the trail.
We tracked to our half mile mark, and just when I told Chris
that we were now passing the spot where we had decided to reset Buster the last
time, I found the chewed off end of the arrow. Buster had stopped and
pointed it out to me.
From that arrow, we could now tell that it probably had only
penetrated about 4-5 inches, which made me suddenly realize, that this bear was
probably at the most just "pissed off".
The bear's picture caught on a trail camera |
What an AWESOME dog!!!
---------------------------------
BTW, this is a note Chris left on the United Blood Trackers Facebook: You folks offer a great service and being somewhat of a skeptic prior to this event, I can tell you that I am not a skeptic anymore. This is the first time I have ever relinquished control on a tracking job to anyone else and it taught me a good lesson... A good dog is worth a thousand men, maybe more. Buster is THE MAN!
Labels:
Buster,
Maine,
no blood,
no find,
tracking wounded bear,
ubt,
United Blood Trackers
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Remi's incredible track
In Justin's own words: "You would not believe the track Remi just pulled off. Is was the most amazing track. It was incredible. I cried when we finally harvested the buck. Thank you, thank you, thank you for this Remi."
We are dying to hear details.
Labels:
2013 season,
mule deer,
Remi,
UT,
wirehaired dachshunds
Monday, September 2, 2013
A new photoblog for my nature photography
http://naturecalendars.blogspot.com/ So if you'd like to experience the nature the way I see it, please visit the site from time to time. Also a lot of my pictures are posted on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/jolaphotography. Come and see us there!
Joeri and Gilda hanging out together and relaxing on a lazy Sunday afternoon
Labels:
Gilda,
Joeri,
our dogs,
wirehaired dachshunds
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Theo von Moosbach-Zuzelek, a young blood tracker with great potential
Theo von Moosbach-Zuzelek was born on April 6, 2012 so he is not a year and a half old yet. He is owned by Darren Doran from New Jersey. We can't wait to see how Theo does in the field this year as Darren's reports on his performance on artificial lines are quite extraordinary
Labels:
Darren Doran,
NJ,
Theo,
wirehaired dachshunds
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