hunting dogs Guide

Queen Elizabeth I Hunting Dogs Section


 

Queen Elizabeth I Hunting Dogs Navigation


|

Hunting Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Hunting Foxes With Dogs |
Dogs Hunting Secretion |
Bird Hunting Dogs |
Dogs Hunting Lions |
Viking Hunting Dogs |
Catahoula Hunting Dogs |
Plotts Hunting Dogs |
Hunting Dogs Kansas |
Hunting Dogs Spaniels |
Great Dane Hunting Dogs |
Hunting Dogs Photos |
Quail Hunting Dogs |
Hunting Dogs Setters |
Raccoon Hunting Dogs |
Portuguese Hunting Dogs |

List of hunting-dogs Articles


Queen Elizabeth I Hunting Dogs Best seller

Buy it Now!



Other Guide 2 Sites

Guide 2 Boating

Guide 2 Golfing

Guide 2 Camping

Guide 2 Fishing

Guide 2 Cooking

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on hunting-dogs
Email:
First Name:



Main Queen Elizabeth I Hunting Dogs sponsors

Bass Pro Shops


 

Latest Queen Elizabeth I Hunting Dogs link added

...

Submit your link on Queen Elizabeth I Hunting Dogs!



 

Welcome to hunting dogs Guide

 

Queen Elizabeth I Hunting Dogs Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

The Historical Capers of Squirrel Hunting Dogs

from:

Hunting dogs and their owners have stronger bonds than most owners and dogs, with the hunting the added adhesive—with squirrel hunting dogs better than most. Breeds that are best for squirrel hunting tend to favor the curs and feists, with some terriers good at it also. The best squirrel dog that is able to track the scent of the squirrel to where it is located, and then notify the remaining pack and hunters, is considered an excellent one at "treeing the squirrel." The squirrel hunters feel if a dog is good with squirrel hunting traits, it really doesn't matter the breed, even though once they find one they stay with it.

Squirrel hunting dogs demonstrate an abundant energy and stamina, an excellent sense of smell, and are able to maintain a highly alert hunt with their eyes and ears. Excellent companions to their owners, they are part of the family, due to their high responsive behavior to commands and their ability to require less discipline than most other breeds. Squirrel hunting dogs are part of a hunting field all its own, with little in common with the other hunting types.

The rule of thumb is hunting dogs that hunt game well, other than squirrel, are usually not as good at squirrel hunting. Once this dog is found, squirrel hunters will breed this dog down for generations to maintain this natural squirrel hunting instinct. The physical characteristics of a feists, one of the best squirrel hunting dog, is a small dog that weighs less than 30 pounds, and stands 10-18 inches at the shoulder. The feists breed is a short-haired type with a variation of solid or mixed and makes a top-notch favorite for squirrel hunting dogs success story.

Another favorite breed for squirrel hunting dogs is the cur, which many non-hunters refer to as a low-class mutt due to their lack of knowledge of hunting dogs. This breed was developed during the medieval times in Europe, and was known as a favorite of the peasant farmer and herders. The dog came to the New World with our settlers, with squirrel hunting as one of its best functions. They have a high sense of smell allowing them to hunt with their head up, and are powerful and courageous fighters, having developed an instinct for family protection. Weighing 40-60 pounds, and standing 17-24 inches at the withers, they are considered a short-haired strong muscular dog in an assortment of colors. This dog also is known as an excellent hunter for bear and wild hogs, but their intelligence is best used for squirrel hunting, instead of brute strength.

Squirrel hunting dogs lasts about two to three hours tops, with an estimate of more than a dozen to two dozen squirrels hunted during that time. But if the squirrels are denned in the trees, the dogs cannot get a scent so the hunt will not be as productive as if they are done. Known as being highly unpredictable, a hunt is always a wild guess. It is one of the few sports when the noise of the hunters and dogs do not deter the hunting of the squirrel.




Other Queen Elizabeth I Hunting Dogs related Articles

Bear Hunting Dogs Part 1
Dogs Hunting
Duck Hunting Dogs Part 1
Dove Hunting Dogs
Coon Hunting Dogs

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


Queen Elizabeth I Hunting Dogs Specific links

Queen Elizabeth I Hunting Dogs News

What's On: Weekday Planner - Toronto Star


What's On: Weekday Planner
Toronto Star,  Canada - Nov 20, 2008
Queen Elizabeth Theatre, Exhibition Place. Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir is joined by the strings of the Tallinn Chamber Orchestra for a mixed program ...

Read more...


Now Playing - South Bend Tribune (subscription)


Now Playing
South Bend Tribune (subscription), IN - 14 hours ago
Drew Barrymore, Andy Garcia, George Lopez and Edward James Olmos provide the voices for the dogs in this tale of a canine from the wrong side of the tracks ...

Read more...


Holiday movie preview - Daily Camera


Holiday movie preview
Daily Camera, CO - 17 hours ago
Wendy and Lucy Michelle Williams plays a woman traveling cross-country with her dog to Alaska for work at a fish cannery. The seemingly insurmountable ...

Read more...


Muscle bound - San Diego CityBEAT


San Diego CityBEAT

Muscle bound
San Diego CityBEAT, CA - Nov 18, 2008
John Travolta is a TV-star dog who takes a fantastic journey outside the studio, where he learns he doesn’t have the powers he thinks he does. ...

Read more...


Local bestsellers - Minneapolis Star Tribune


Local bestsellers
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN - Nov 4, 2008
The captivity of Mary, Queen of Scots, at the hands of Queen Elizabeth. 1. The Snowball, by Alice Schroeder. (Bantam, $35.) The life of Warren Buffett. 2. ...

Read more...