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Every Thing Else Board
Timber Rattlers
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<blockquote data-quote="dcara" data-source="post: 672795" data-attributes="member: 473"><p>Back when I was doing a lot more duck hunting than I am these days, I would always be sure to attend the annual snake proofing clinic our hunt club hosted. A guy would come out with a few cottonmouths, rattlers, and copperheads which had all been defanged. We would cast the dog to retrieve a euthanized duck near the snake. If the dog did not avoid the snake he/she got a full power correction. After that, if they saw or caught wind of a snake they wouldn't go within 20 feet of it; and, being reasonably good retrievers they could wind just about anything within 10-20ft.</p><p></p><p>However, I did see a dog at one of these clinics actually sit on the snake. The snake even struck the dog's butt and this dog ( a large Lab) just looked at it and continued to sit there. The guy's training collar or transmitter apparently had dead batteries.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dcara, post: 672795, member: 473"] Back when I was doing a lot more duck hunting than I am these days, I would always be sure to attend the annual snake proofing clinic our hunt club hosted. A guy would come out with a few cottonmouths, rattlers, and copperheads which had all been defanged. We would cast the dog to retrieve a euthanized duck near the snake. If the dog did not avoid the snake he/she got a full power correction. After that, if they saw or caught wind of a snake they wouldn't go within 20 feet of it; and, being reasonably good retrievers they could wind just about anything within 10-20ft. However, I did see a dog at one of these clinics actually sit on the snake. The snake even struck the dog's butt and this dog ( a large Lab) just looked at it and continued to sit there. The guy's training collar or transmitter apparently had dead batteries. [/QUOTE]
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