Gary, Diesel, you two are great inspiration. My 7 month old bloodhound and I will be a rookie team this year. Learning a ton from your videos. Thank you!
@@TheNormalOutdoors Awesome and good luck to you both! You’re level of success will be directly tied to the amount of energy and effort you out into the entire process. Enjoy every step of the way and keep grinding.
I was excited to see you posted another video. Didn't expect it to be of such a badass track. So much valuable information on this video thank you for taking the time to edit and post. Would love to hear about the training to sit at fences at the next symposium. The experience and team work is exceptional
Thank you for the kind words. I’d be glad to walk you through how I got him to sit at fences. In a nutshell, it’s working in the off season and constantly crossing fences over and over. Same way with door ways. He’s never allowed to blast through an open door way without me saying it’s ok. - reward the behavior you want to see. 👍
Dog was wind checking deer from time he was out over fence he could smell deer but was not on track whole way thru as dog running with head up over running track but it will get you there but he had issues after going over fence
You can also see him start to pick up his head as the scent gets stronger as it’s held in by brush etc that is not what a hunter wants running game by is what a tracker wants to track animals your not actively running deer just tracking its last path
If you think that dog is tracking everywhere people walked exactly then your crazy the dog has lost the scent and knows if he circles out wider and wider he will pick up where the buck exited the field in a line beagles with less nose do this a lot to try keep the track going and they will even start cheating by what we call reaching to keep it going that’s all this dog is doing is widening his circle til he hits a stronger line going out
I suppose that’s why we see the same behavior every time there is a known grid search or at last blood most of the time. I have hundreds of hours of video to back it up. It’s not opinion, it’s just the way it is. You can disagree all you want. I know my dog and get to watch him track 100’s of times a year as well as watch many other dogs that have the same tendencies. I appreciate the feedback, but not the sarcastic attitude. If you don’t like what you are seeing or think I’m “crazy” choose to move on and watch something else.
Eric any experienced tracker can see you’re clueless from your comments. You have absolutely no idea whatsoever what you’re talking about. This is an awesome track in very difficult conditions by a talented tracking dog. You should probably work on not running your mouth in the presence of people who know what they’re seeing and can tell right away you’re just a clueless troll.
Gary, Diesel, you two are great inspiration. My 7 month old bloodhound and I will be a rookie team this year. Learning a ton from your videos. Thank you!
@@TheNormalOutdoors Awesome and good luck to you both! You’re level of success will be directly tied to the amount of energy and effort you out into the entire process. Enjoy every step of the way and keep grinding.
That Diesel is an amazing dog. Awesome tracking job.
Thanks 👍
You weren't lying, what a masterpiece of a video. Sorry i had to put you guys through all of that! Masters of your craft for sure
I had the pleasure of watching Diesel work a track this past fall in IL too, and my goodness is that dog amazing.
Diesel is the best! No way I would've found him without you both! Thanks again!
Our pleasure, Matt. We love what we do. Be glad to help you again anytime.
Atta boy diesel!!! Man this sure reminds me to hit the gym and diet before the season starts. Keep posting my friend!
DIESEL TRAIN COMING THROUGH. This was incredible he was trying to tell you at the end he knew he was close
Thanks for watching!
Love it! Very nice work. It doesn’t get much tougher than that. Well done. 👍
Thanks 👍
I was excited to see you posted another video. Didn't expect it to be of such a badass track. So much valuable information on this video thank you for taking the time to edit and post.
Would love to hear about the training to sit at fences at the next symposium.
The experience and team work is exceptional
Thank you for the kind words. I’d be glad to walk you through how I got him to sit at fences. In a nutshell, it’s working in the off season and constantly crossing fences over and over. Same way with door ways. He’s never allowed to blast through an open door way without me saying it’s ok. - reward the behavior you want to see. 👍
You have an amazing Dog!!
Thank you
Loved watching this!
Thanks for watching, Matt.
Man U got a hell of a fine dog
Thanks for watching, Shane. We have done a lot of work together.
How do you track so far without dealing with property boundary issues?
I asked the hunter several times if we were good to go where we were headed. The farmer who owned the 500 acres was also following along. No concerns.
Dog was wind checking deer from time he was out over fence he could smell deer but was not on track whole way thru as dog running with head up over running track but it will get you there but he had issues after going over fence
You can also see him start to pick up his head as the scent gets stronger as it’s held in by brush etc that is not what a hunter wants running game by is what a tracker wants to track animals your not actively running deer just tracking its last path
If you think that dog is tracking everywhere people walked exactly then your crazy the dog has lost the scent and knows if he circles out wider and wider he will pick up where the buck exited the field in a line beagles with less nose do this a lot to try keep the track going and they will even start cheating by what we call reaching to keep it going that’s all this dog is doing is widening his circle til he hits a stronger line going out
I suppose that’s why we see the same behavior every time there is a known grid search or at last blood most of the time. I have hundreds of hours of video to back it up. It’s not opinion, it’s just the way it is. You can disagree all you want. I know my dog and get to watch him track 100’s of times a year as well as watch many other dogs that have the same tendencies. I appreciate the feedback, but not the sarcastic attitude. If you don’t like what you are seeing or think I’m “crazy” choose to move on and watch something else.
Eric any experienced tracker can see you’re clueless from your comments. You have absolutely no idea whatsoever what you’re talking about. This is an awesome track in very difficult conditions by a talented tracking dog. You should probably work on not running your mouth in the presence of people who know what they’re seeing and can tell right away you’re just a clueless troll.