x2. Heard nothing but great things if ya need a driven dog in a small package. Really considered getting one myself. Would still like too somedayjarbo03 wrote:Have heard nothing but great things about them. Small size for boat hunting, lots of drive, should work well in your area.
gila-river wrote:Great, now the cops want to install dishwashers to. Just do your job Red and stop encroaching on our rights to replace appliances. That is not the responsibility of police.:lol:
Redbeard wrote:x2. Heard nothing but great things if ya need a driven dog in a small package. Really considered getting one myself. Would still like too somedayjarbo03 wrote:Have heard nothing but great things about them. Small size for boat hunting, lots of drive, should work well in your area.
rebelp74 wrote:Yeah I have a yacht, suck it bitches!
you got one of them canoe labs huhNuffDaddy wrote:My dog isn't a spaniel, but she weighs 38 pounds and doesn't let a thing stop her.
gila-river wrote:Great, now the cops want to install dishwashers to. Just do your job Red and stop encroaching on our rights to replace appliances. That is not the responsibility of police.:lol:
hudson wrote:live in south Louisiana on gulf coast,it doesn't get cold here
jarbo03 wrote:Have heard nothing but great things about them. Small size for boat hunting, lots of drive, should work well in your area.
so Rick would you recommend a Hippo if hunting round the stuff?Rick wrote:An FYI for our northern friends, this is maidencane, the predominant vegetation in much or most of the freshwater coastal marsh (depending on how recently it's been salted by hurricane surge):
Much more dense and interwoven at dog level than canary or switch grasses, and it may be floating and only offering waterbed-like footing.
If Hudson is hunting the brackish portion of the marsh, there may be salt grass of similar height but denser more springy nature. Not interwoven like a brillo pad, but that's the reference that comes to mind when I think of it. Have seen it stop a buck deer running from our airboat and seem to actually throw him back. Like maiden cane, not much of a problem if he's hunting mostly open water with a little of it around, but a whole 'nother animal if he's hunting small potholes surrounded by it.
gila-river wrote:Great, now the cops want to install dishwashers to. Just do your job Red and stop encroaching on our rights to replace appliances. That is not the responsibility of police.:lol:
hudson wrote:Hunt broken marsh with bullwhips roseau cane joint grass and salt grass.my pond is usually between 8 to 20 inches deep depending on rain and is pretty hard bottom and is choked with wigeon grass duckweed and scattered wild rice
Redbeard wrote:so Rick would you recommend a Hippo if hunting round the stuff?Rick wrote:An FYI for our northern friends, this is maidencane, the predominant vegetation in much or most of the freshwater coastal marsh (depending on how recently it's been salted by hurricane surge):
Much more dense and interwoven at dog level than canary or switch grasses, and it may be floating and only offering waterbed-like footing.
If Hudson is hunting the brackish portion of the marsh, there may be salt grass of similar height but denser more springy nature. Not interwoven like a brillo pad, but that's the reference that comes to mind when I think of it. Have seen it stop a buck deer running from our airboat and seem to actually throw him back. Like maiden cane, not much of a problem if he's hunting mostly open water with a little of it around, but a whole 'nother animal if he's hunting small potholes surrounded by it.
Redbeard wrote:you got one of them canoe labs huhNuffDaddy wrote:My dog isn't a spaniel, but she weighs 38 pounds and doesn't let a thing stop her.
NuffDaddy wrote:Redbeard wrote:you got one of them canoe labs huhNuffDaddy wrote:My dog isn't a spaniel, but she weighs 38 pounds and doesn't let a thing stop her.
English setter
my goodness. How do y'all even find birds?!Rick wrote:Redbeard wrote:so Rick would you recommend a Hippo if hunting round the stuff?Rick wrote:An FYI for our northern friends, this is maidencane, the predominant vegetation in much or most of the freshwater coastal marsh (depending on how recently it's been salted by hurricane surge):
Much more dense and interwoven at dog level than canary or switch grasses, and it may be floating and only offering waterbed-like footing.
If Hudson is hunting the brackish portion of the marsh, there may be salt grass of similar height but denser more springy nature. Not interwoven like a brillo pad, but that's the reference that comes to mind when I think of it. Have seen it stop a buck deer running from our airboat and seem to actually throw him back. Like maiden cane, not much of a problem if he's hunting mostly open water with a little of it around, but a whole 'nother animal if he's hunting small potholes surrounded by it.
That's actually the clean farm raised version on poorly drained ground that was plowed for rice but left fallow. The marsh version, unless it's been recently burned has a couple or three feet of old thatch below the tops that way too regularly stops our Chevy 350 powered airboat. Hippo would be just the ticket where it grows on hard bottom and interesting to watch where it's deep water flotant.
gila-river wrote:Great, now the cops want to install dishwashers to. Just do your job Red and stop encroaching on our rights to replace appliances. That is not the responsibility of police.:lol:
yea I've always wondered the same bout those deep in the tules marks. Our tules get thick but decent sized dogs learn how to crash through and how to stamped em down flatRick wrote:That's why God made dogs and gave them noses that smell more than farts. It's a mystery how the good ones know how far to go for their marks once they're in such stuff, but they generally do. Would think it's much the same hunting your tule marsh.
gila-river wrote:Great, now the cops want to install dishwashers to. Just do your job Red and stop encroaching on our rights to replace appliances. That is not the responsibility of police.:lol:
Rick wrote:Most use Labs. Some of which are eaten by gators each September teal season, but I don't know of a certain such case during the regular season when water temps are colder. Suspect most all lost then were just that.
Bootlipkiller wrote: all the mallards I killed today had boners do to my epic calling.
Rick wrote:NuffDaddy wrote:Redbeard wrote:you got one of them canoe labs huhNuffDaddy wrote:My dog isn't a spaniel, but she weighs 38 pounds and doesn't let a thing stop her.
English setter
Fwiw, I'd done my Northern waterfowling over a Brittany and setters, and recall the 60lb setter I brought down here with me handling marsh navigation well enough, except for the part about letting nutrias live. And the current old Brittany also saw a season and a half in our current marsh. Was trial bred, so a long, lean 38lbs, perhaps like your setter. He did better on most flotant than the 96lb Chessie I then had. by virtue of staying atop most of it, but got ground down pretty quickly in areas with maiden cane. His MO there was trying to bound over what he couldn't push through like the bigger dogs could, and that, too, took its toll. Definitely did best after Hurricane Ike cleared most flotant of all but scabby vegetation.
Rick wrote:If a gator wants your dog, the odds are very slim you'll know it before the damage is done, as they hunt from below. Almost surreal to see one blow up "out of nowhere" taking a shot at one.
Doubt anyone would go out of their way to pursue the law when a gator is killed for taking a dog - unless the owner was foolish enough to tell the world about it and leave enforcement little choice to save face. "SSS" is the Golden Rule of the marsh.
jarbo03 wrote:Experience teaches them how to handle marks.
Rick wrote:jarbo03 wrote:Experience teaches them how to handle marks.
Can't help but think the really good markers have more than experience going for them, because contrary to popular retriever "wisdom," they needn't maintain anything remotely like a straight line through cover they can't see the area of fall through to end up in the right place on new turf. As if they've their own form of GPS.
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