DORNDORF LONGHAIRED DACHSHUNDS
  • Home
  • Intro
  • Dogs
    • My Dogs
    • Loved by Others
    • Extended Family
  • Puppies
  • Dorndorf A-T
  • Milestones
  • Articles
  • Contact

friday evening track by cliff shrader

12/8/2012

1 Comment

 
Tasha, 6.5 months, is Tranevang's MA Tashatax.
Picture
Red, Cliff with Tasha, and Samantha with her wonderful doe
Friday evening I received a text from one of my buddies asking if I want to make a track. One of his daughters had shot her first deer and there wasn't any trail. In fact, they had conflicting opinions on which way the deer ran after the shot. There were three deer feeding when Samantha shot and they split up after the shot. Her dad Red checked out the site and found some belly hair and a small amount of gut at the hit site. After we talked, Red and his son Matt backed out of the area where they had been searching for blood and waited for Tasha to arrive. It took about an hour and a half for us to get there.

The woods are thick piney woods with dense undergrowth. When I say dense I mean an abundance of briars and thorns that had never seen mankind before. There was a light mist in the air and the temperature was in the low 70s. Less than fifty yards from the hit site, we found blood drops. Red also found some additional gut as he trailed behind us. Tasha was tracking pretty good but she was having to work going through these woods. I was having to work even harder...a fat guy with a headlamp and backpack doesn't glide through briars and thorns easily. Along the way we would hit some blood and then it would stop. We would go 50 to 100 yards before we located blood again. The blood suggested that we had a muscle hit as it was always drops falling straight down. There never was a bed site although we found a couple of spots where the deer stood but never laid down. We never heard the deer jump during the track. Our track went for 1.37 miles and then we hit a particularly thick spot. I had to go to hands and knees at least a dozen times but here I had to go to elbows and knees. As I was clearing the briars I looked ahead and saw Tasha nose to nose with the doe, still very much alive. I yelled at Tasha and pulled back on her lead. After I got her away from the deer, the deer bounded up and away. I saw some gut hanging from a low hit as the deer ran. I was pretty exhausted and so was Tasha. We had tracked for 2 hours and 33 minutes in rough country. We decided to back out and attempt to pick up the track in the morning. As far as I was concerned, this was a successful track even though we didn't have venison.

Tasha and I arrived Saturday morning. Samantha and Red had biscuits and sausage cooked up so we ate a nice breakfast before we ventured into the woods. We went to the last blood that I had marked on the GPS and started tracking. The track was 17 hours old at this point. Tasha picked up the trail right away even though we saw no blood. After about 60 yards we found a single drop of blood at least letting me know that she was on the same deer. Tasha took us directly to the steep bank of a swift moving bayou. I knew that the deer had jumped into the bayou here but I didn't see a thing. When I got into a spot where I could look down the 15 foot embankment, I spotted the deer dead in the water and hung up on something. This was an outstanding track for Tasha and I learned several things from it. The recovery was particularly precarious. Red had to go back to his house and bring back the tractor where we could pull the deer from the bayou. With the dense undergrowth and downed trees, the tractor got stuck as Red was crossing some logs. This meant another trip back to his house to get the chainsaw. After he sawed himself out of this jam, he quickly found himself in another jam that required chain sawing a big pine tree out of the way. He finally arrived at the bayou and the recovery was made. The deer had only traveled a little over a hundred yards from where we jumped her. Tasha never voiced until Red was driving out with the deer on the tractor. She started raising Cain! The cool bayou water had chilled the deer down just like a cooler and the meat was perfect.

This was one of my favorite tracks so far. Tasha is only 6 1/2 months old and she makes this tracking stuff look easy. What a great feeling to be part of someone's first deer!  Congrats to Samantha, Red and Tasha. Thanks for letting me be part of it.

- Cliff Shrader
Sent somewhere from woods or water in South Louisiana
Awesome work! Congratulations to all of you!
1 Comment
Lise-Lotte (Tranevang's Kennel)
12/14/2012 01:31:57 am

Congrats to this great job!!

Reply

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.


Leave a Reply.

    A

    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    June 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    May 2011
    April 2011
    March 2011
    February 2011
    January 2011
    December 2010
    November 2010
    October 2010
    September 2010
    July 2010
    June 2010
    May 2010
    April 2010
    March 2010
    February 2010


    Categories

    All
    Agility
    American Kennel Club
    American Working Terrier Assoc
    Art
    Articles
    Asti
    Babe
    Badger D C
    Badger Dogs
    Barn Hunt
    Begleithund
    Books
    Bossa
    Calendars
    Clinics
    Commentary
    Conformation
    Cute
    Dachshund Size
    Deer Dogs
    Dockdogs
    Dorndorf Dachshunds
    Druci
    Earthdog
    F3 Hunting Workshop
    Family
    Field Trial Dachshunds
    Field Trials
    Finland
    Finnish Database
    Frankie
    Ginger
    Gretel
    Gunsteadiness
    Health
    Houndsmen
    Humanewatch
    Hunting Dachshunds
    Ilsa
    Karl
    Kasi
    Kiki
    Kurbis
    Longhaired Dachshunds
    Longhaired History
    Longhaired Puppies
    Luke
    Madison Area D C
    Marstax
    Marta
    Minx
    Nadja
    Nature
    Nexus
    Nick
    North American Teckel Club
    Northern Illinois Beagle Club
    Nutmeg
    Obedience
    Ochre
    Odin
    Olive
    Olive Video
    Oslo
    Outdoor Gear
    Owl
    Patricia Nance
    Pie
    Puppies
    Rally
    Sage
    Seiko
    Seminars
    Shows
    Svante
    Tasha
    Taya
    Teo
    Terra
    Thor Seymour
    Tracking
    Tracking Deer
    Training
    Vehicles
    Videos
    Viljo
    Visits
    Water Work
    Weather Conditions
    Websites
    Wolverine D C
    Workshops

FIELDWORTHY = FIT FOR USE IN THE FIELD
© 2008-2020 · Patricia Nance, Monroe, Ohio, USA ·  All Rights Reserved
No Photos or Text May Be Copied Without Written Permission