Date of hunt: 11/3/2010
Location: Lowell, VT
Weather: Sunny/Frosty
Temperature: 22 °F (Start) 44°F (End)
Companions: Greg Abell
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey
Other dogs: Katy, Ginger, Chloe
# of Rabbits Ran: 5
# of Rabbits Shot: 1
My son Braydon was born on Saturday, October 30th. Everyone is healthy and doing well! I took a week and a half off from work to be home with the family. The timing lined up with my Uncle Greg's trip up to Vermont from Virginia for his annual hare hunt. He came up on Saturday and is staying at our family camp in Island Pond for the week. The plan was made to spend a morning on a hunt with him, but meet halfway in Lowell instead of a 2 hour drive for me up to Island Pond.
It was the heaviest frost of the year so far when I left Milton. It was 27 degrees at my house, and 22 degrees in Lowell where Uncle Greg was waiting. I pulled into the log landing at 7 am, with hopes that I wouldn't be wasting my Uncle's time by having him wake up early and drive and hour. I had printed out an aerial photo of the hunting ground and did a quick review with him to help him better understand the lay of the land. I geared up Bailey and headed down into the lower clearcut, where Logan and I had hunted a few weeks ago. Uncle Greg's dogs worked together and Bailey did her thing on her own. Bailey got the start, the same hare that Logan and I ran a few weeks before. She was alone and took it down by the stump where Allen, Beau, Logan, Carter and I had stood last month, and then out into the alders. Uncle Greg brought his dogs down to where Bailey was running. When we got there Bailey checked for the first time. A full loop by herself, I think we turned the hare when we got down in there. Katy started barking on old scent, which pulled Bailey off from her check to pack up with her. Katy has a really good nose, but will bark on really old scent, which throws the other dogs off. I suggested working into the softwoods where the hare was heading before Bailey lost it. We fanned out as we walked inside the softwood canopy and Uncle Greg bumped the hare. The hare bounded towards me, and then out into the alders again. I gave the "Weee Weeee" call and Bailey came in with a full out excited bark as she got on the trail that I was pointing to. She knows what it means when I give that call! All four dogs packed up and took the trail deep into the alders. Uncle Greg and I headed into the alders to an island of tall pines that provided a better chance of a shot if one would present itself. The dogs brought the hare down to us but just out of sight. They kept on it as the hare ran out and then turned back towards us. The dogs were getting closer and then the hare sprinted into softwoods about 10 yards from us. I waited to shoot knowing that a 10 yard sprinting shot from right to left was hard, but when I did shoot with the .410 it was behind it. I pumped and pulled the trigger again, click, a bad shell. The last shot was in desperation as it scooted under a log. Missed. The dogs kept on the trail and again followed the hare as it brought them out and back towards us again. This time it went above us without showing itself. As they brought the hare out the dogs split into two's. Bailey and Katy switched up and Ginger and Chloe were bringing the hare back to us. Bailey and Katy were taking a hare up towards the NC camp, and Ginger and Chloe were almost back to us when they checked and lost out. After waiting to see if Ginger and Chloe would pick up the check we picked up and headed up to Bailey and Katy. They ran the hare up along the side of the NC camp and were on their way back down to us when they checked. Katy kept barking on some older feeder trails, and Bailey would check in with her but the trails were to old for her to bark on.
We worked the dogs down along the side of the logging road with little luck. As we were heading out to make our way back in the direction of the truck Bailey began to bark on a feeder trail. I let her work since this was her first time barking in over a half hour. The other dogs joined in on the search. I hopped up onto a log with an overlook of the area that the dogs were working. The hare bounded out of the thick stuff, across the open softwoods and into the thicker softwoods. The dogs took off on the trail and were running well. They made the turn but checked when they were closing in on Uncle Greg and I. We waited for quite a while with hopes that they would pick it up again. We helped the dogs work the woods in the general direction that we believed the hare went. Chloe, Uncle Greg's 1 year old, picked up the scent first and the other dogs quickly packed. The hare bounded out of the thicker cover and presented a good shot. I hit the hare in the rear end and Katy quickly got on it and finished it. She picked up the hare and carried it back to him as he called her in. Uncle Greg's dogs played around with the hare for a bit before we put it in the game pouch, Bailey just kept looking for more scent.
We worked our way back through the pine island and towards the clear cut to get to the logging road that led back up to the truck. On the way back Bailey picked up a hot scent between the pine island and the clear cut. I had Ginger and Chloe with me as well, but they didn't pack. Ginger did go over to where Bailey started and she begand to run the line with Chloe packing up with her. Ginger and Chloe were running about 80 yards behind Bailey. Katy joined in the run with Ginger and Chloe as Bailey was still leading by a long ways and bringing the hare back to me. I caught a movement and readied, it was Ginger. She came back and found me, was shivering and tired. She must had turned the hare and Bailey missed the check. I got a phone call from home about 5 minutes into the check and my wife needed help with the kids at home. We gathered up the dogs and headed back up to the truck. We briefly talked and then hit the road. Overall a good hunt.
Friday, November 5, 2010
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
10/10/2010 - Lowell, VT
Date of hunt: 10/10/2010
Location: Lowell, VT
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 32 °F (Start) 53°F (End)
Companions: Logan Abell
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
Fall has arrived and so has the cooler weather. I woke up this morning to a brisk 32 degrees and put on the thermals for the first time this year. Dressing for this time of year is tricky, as the mornings are cold and it warms up quickly. I layered up thicker than other outings at this temperature, I was tired and I always feel colder when I am tired. I picked up Logan at 5:30 and began the hour drive Northeast. Things were quiet when we got there, perfect. Next weekend will not be so quiet in this spot as moose season will be open and then "new owners of the woods" will be out and about. Every time that I have come across a moose hunter while I am rabbit hunting they are disgusted that I am disturbing their hunt. This adds an extra degree of nervousness when you never know what the crazed hunter will do when a barking dog runs by them! Anyway, Logan (my 12 year old brother) and I geared up the dogs and I let him make the plans where to run for the day. He picked a log road that we have had good luck on and we headed down over the bank into the softwoods. Bailey picked up a scent within 5 minutes and picked at it for about 120 yards across a clear cut before it was hot enough for Snickers to start barking as well. They worked it for another 40 yards or so before the barking turned to a roll and the hot chase was on. The two of them headed out away from us and made a quick turn back up towards where Bailey began the run. The barking was hot! It sounded like there were three dogs running as came back up the bank towards us. The hare snuck by Logan and I and it crossed the main logging road while we were looking down a smaller log road road where Bailey made the start. We repositioned and separated to catch a glimpse of the hare on the way back by. The dogs were getting closer to me and the barking was still hot. It had been about 15 minutes of running already without a check, very nice. The way the dogs were coming towards me I expected to see the hare cross above me about 30 yards up. As the dogs got closer they made a sudden turn down along my left and towards Logan. He got a quick glimpse of the hare as it cross the log road again, but no shot. The dogs were only about 50 yards behind it and still running strong. They brought it out of hearing and Logan and I regrouped. I really wanted him to get his first hare so I stood behind him to help him spot it in the woods before it came out on the log road, hopefully give him a better chance to connect. I saw it coming, and Logan did too, as it approached the log road. He was ready, and there hare came up to the edge of the log road and hung up in a brush pile. I really wanted Logan to get a hare, but I really wanted to get a hare for the dogs too. I couldn't get a shot on the hare after Logan if he missed from where I was standing so I made the mistake of repositioning. The hare saw me and we saw the hare bound back off into the woods. No shot. I was so mad at myself and will probably kick myself for a while to come until Logan gets his first hare. The dogs kept on running and brought it back out on a deep circle. On the way back to us they checked, picked up the check and then checked again. They started to run really choppy as they made the 20 minute trip back up near us and then lost out for a long time. I called in the dogs to regroup. I was happy with their run, but really upset with myself. About a 45 minute run before the first check, very nice. I asked Logan where he wanted to go from there and he quickly picked another spot. As we made our way to the new spot I kicked up a Wookcock and Logan took pursuit. He flushed it once more along with a Partridge, but no luck. We made our way over to the side of the VAST trail where we ran our first hare on opening day. Bailey got the start in almost the same exact spot as opening day and I knew where the hare was heading. Logan and I set up for the return run in our direction. Of course nothing ever goes as planned and the hare crossed a log road while I was in the woods watching. The dogs were in running well and headed back down to where they started. They had their first check on the turn, and then the choppy running began again. This continued for about 15 minutes and then all was quiet. I gathered up the dogs after and headed for another spot, a new one. We crossed the powerlines to try and find a new spot. There were a few areas that were perfect areas, but no hare. Someone should tell the hare about these spots! After an hour of no luck we headed back to the truck and home. A successful hunt none the less.

Location: Lowell, VT
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 32 °F (Start) 53°F (End)
Companions: Logan Abell
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
Fall has arrived and so has the cooler weather. I woke up this morning to a brisk 32 degrees and put on the thermals for the first time this year. Dressing for this time of year is tricky, as the mornings are cold and it warms up quickly. I layered up thicker than other outings at this temperature, I was tired and I always feel colder when I am tired. I picked up Logan at 5:30 and began the hour drive Northeast. Things were quiet when we got there, perfect. Next weekend will not be so quiet in this spot as moose season will be open and then "new owners of the woods" will be out and about. Every time that I have come across a moose hunter while I am rabbit hunting they are disgusted that I am disturbing their hunt. This adds an extra degree of nervousness when you never know what the crazed hunter will do when a barking dog runs by them! Anyway, Logan (my 12 year old brother) and I geared up the dogs and I let him make the plans where to run for the day. He picked a log road that we have had good luck on and we headed down over the bank into the softwoods. Bailey picked up a scent within 5 minutes and picked at it for about 120 yards across a clear cut before it was hot enough for Snickers to start barking as well. They worked it for another 40 yards or so before the barking turned to a roll and the hot chase was on. The two of them headed out away from us and made a quick turn back up towards where Bailey began the run. The barking was hot! It sounded like there were three dogs running as came back up the bank towards us. The hare snuck by Logan and I and it crossed the main logging road while we were looking down a smaller log road road where Bailey made the start. We repositioned and separated to catch a glimpse of the hare on the way back by. The dogs were getting closer to me and the barking was still hot. It had been about 15 minutes of running already without a check, very nice. The way the dogs were coming towards me I expected to see the hare cross above me about 30 yards up. As the dogs got closer they made a sudden turn down along my left and towards Logan. He got a quick glimpse of the hare as it cross the log road again, but no shot. The dogs were only about 50 yards behind it and still running strong. They brought it out of hearing and Logan and I regrouped. I really wanted him to get his first hare so I stood behind him to help him spot it in the woods before it came out on the log road, hopefully give him a better chance to connect. I saw it coming, and Logan did too, as it approached the log road. He was ready, and there hare came up to the edge of the log road and hung up in a brush pile. I really wanted Logan to get a hare, but I really wanted to get a hare for the dogs too. I couldn't get a shot on the hare after Logan if he missed from where I was standing so I made the mistake of repositioning. The hare saw me and we saw the hare bound back off into the woods. No shot. I was so mad at myself and will probably kick myself for a while to come until Logan gets his first hare. The dogs kept on running and brought it back out on a deep circle. On the way back to us they checked, picked up the check and then checked again. They started to run really choppy as they made the 20 minute trip back up near us and then lost out for a long time. I called in the dogs to regroup. I was happy with their run, but really upset with myself. About a 45 minute run before the first check, very nice. I asked Logan where he wanted to go from there and he quickly picked another spot. As we made our way to the new spot I kicked up a Wookcock and Logan took pursuit. He flushed it once more along with a Partridge, but no luck. We made our way over to the side of the VAST trail where we ran our first hare on opening day. Bailey got the start in almost the same exact spot as opening day and I knew where the hare was heading. Logan and I set up for the return run in our direction. Of course nothing ever goes as planned and the hare crossed a log road while I was in the woods watching. The dogs were in running well and headed back down to where they started. They had their first check on the turn, and then the choppy running began again. This continued for about 15 minutes and then all was quiet. I gathered up the dogs after and headed for another spot, a new one. We crossed the powerlines to try and find a new spot. There were a few areas that were perfect areas, but no hare. Someone should tell the hare about these spots! After an hour of no luck we headed back to the truck and home. A successful hunt none the less.
Saturday, October 9, 2010
Ironic picture
Sunday, September 26, 2010
9/25/2010 - Lowell, VT
Date of hunt: 9/25/2010
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 71 °F (Start) 62°F (End)
Companions: Allen Cushing, Beau Cushing, Logan Abell, Carter Abell
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
# of Rabbits Ran: 3
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
Today was opening day of rabbit season in Vermont. I kicked myself last year for not getting some family together to take advantage of opening weekend. Deer season doesn't start until next weekend so this weekend works about best for the rest of my family. I had my father-in-law Allen, my brother-in-law Beau, my 12 year old brother Logan and my 5 year old son Carter with me. We were up early and managed to leave Milton on time, 5:30. We pulled into our spot by 6:30 and geared up the dogs. I haven't had many chances to get out this summer, the dogs are out of shape, and I was nervous that I was going to let the family down on this outing. I brought the dogs down to a known spot that I have ran hare in before with hopes to get a quick start. It took a lot of looking, but Bailey got the first start. She ran the hare that I got nervous with on opening day (Bailey was sounding funny, and the hare ran into unfamiliar territory). I let the dogs go and just prayed that they would take the turn and head back my way. It wasn't long and the dogs were coming back our way. Beau was new to this and wasn't quite sure where to stand, or what he was looking for. He was on a logging road, and ready. Carter was with Allen and they found a spot to stand as well. I was with Logan with the video camera rolling with hopes of getting some good footage. The dogs came down the edge of the road towards all of us. They stay inside the wood line about 40 yards and Logan and I didn't get a sighting. They came out along the edge of the road and Beau saw the dogs, but had missed seeing the rabbit. It changed directions before making it back to Allen and Carter and swung back up away from us and ran a lot of circles above us. We tried to move in closer, but by the time we were in position the dogs checked. During their check the dogs made their way out to us. I called them in to try and pick up a different hare in a different spot.
On the walk past the truck we stopped and had some snacks and drinks and added some layers as the temperature was dropping. We headed down to the lower clear cut and Bailey was working hard to find a hare. Snickers was working hard to find Bailey, and had no interest in finding the hare herself. I lost Snickers for a bit and soon realized that she was hanging out with Bruce and his bird dogs. They were swinging by in their search for some opening day Partridge. I hollared for a while, but Snickers wouldn't come. Bailey opened on a new hare and Snickers came by me like a rocket to cherry pick Bailey's hare. The race was on again with Bailey in the lead. I could hear that Bailey was always ahead of Snickers. They checked for a short time, and when Bailey got the check it must had been a sight chase. She barked really hot for about 30 or 40 yards and then it calmed down as she kept on the trail and Snickers caught up to join in. The brought the hare down behind me, but towards Allen and I heard a shot from his .410. He missed, and before I knew the dogs ran right behind me and Carter. I missed seeing the hare while filming the hunt. Carter and I went over to talk with Allen and waited for a second sighting. The hare came back by Allen and I in a full gallop. I shot, and missed to the shot from about 4 feet away. Allen's follow-up shot missed as well and the race continued. The dogs were about 30 yards behind the rabbit and running very well. They ran a lot of small circles up above us and the hare didn't want to come back down to us. Once more it came down in our direction, but didn't give us a sighting. After running for about 2 1/2 hours the dogs checked for their last time and lost out. I was extremely happy with their run.
We headed back up towards the truck and I let the dogs work the woods on the way. Bailey got the third start on a rabbit the we must have spooked out the brush as we were walking through. The two of them were run very hot and fast out across the clearcut and into the pines. We fanned out and hoped to get it on the way back up. It started to turn back up towards us and I was ready. They took a turn out away from me and started to go out of hearing. I wasn't sure what was going on, but decided to take chase to be sure. They managed to make it out deep into the alders and were running a choppy run. I called to them and finally caught up to them after a long walk through the thick stuff. It was faster to continue through the alders instead of back tracking from where I came. Once I hit the logging road I was once again in familiar territory and headed comfortably back to the truck. Everyone was waiting in the truck ready to go when I got there. We left at 12:30.
We had an excellent hunt and I was very proud of the dogs. Allen can't wait to go back out, and I hope our calendars can align again to allow for it. I wish I knew when the next outing will be, but I will have to play it by ear.

Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 71 °F (Start) 62°F (End)
Companions: Allen Cushing, Beau Cushing, Logan Abell, Carter Abell
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
# of Rabbits Ran: 3
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
Today was opening day of rabbit season in Vermont. I kicked myself last year for not getting some family together to take advantage of opening weekend. Deer season doesn't start until next weekend so this weekend works about best for the rest of my family. I had my father-in-law Allen, my brother-in-law Beau, my 12 year old brother Logan and my 5 year old son Carter with me. We were up early and managed to leave Milton on time, 5:30. We pulled into our spot by 6:30 and geared up the dogs. I haven't had many chances to get out this summer, the dogs are out of shape, and I was nervous that I was going to let the family down on this outing. I brought the dogs down to a known spot that I have ran hare in before with hopes to get a quick start. It took a lot of looking, but Bailey got the first start. She ran the hare that I got nervous with on opening day (Bailey was sounding funny, and the hare ran into unfamiliar territory). I let the dogs go and just prayed that they would take the turn and head back my way. It wasn't long and the dogs were coming back our way. Beau was new to this and wasn't quite sure where to stand, or what he was looking for. He was on a logging road, and ready. Carter was with Allen and they found a spot to stand as well. I was with Logan with the video camera rolling with hopes of getting some good footage. The dogs came down the edge of the road towards all of us. They stay inside the wood line about 40 yards and Logan and I didn't get a sighting. They came out along the edge of the road and Beau saw the dogs, but had missed seeing the rabbit. It changed directions before making it back to Allen and Carter and swung back up away from us and ran a lot of circles above us. We tried to move in closer, but by the time we were in position the dogs checked. During their check the dogs made their way out to us. I called them in to try and pick up a different hare in a different spot.
On the walk past the truck we stopped and had some snacks and drinks and added some layers as the temperature was dropping. We headed down to the lower clear cut and Bailey was working hard to find a hare. Snickers was working hard to find Bailey, and had no interest in finding the hare herself. I lost Snickers for a bit and soon realized that she was hanging out with Bruce and his bird dogs. They were swinging by in their search for some opening day Partridge. I hollared for a while, but Snickers wouldn't come. Bailey opened on a new hare and Snickers came by me like a rocket to cherry pick Bailey's hare. The race was on again with Bailey in the lead. I could hear that Bailey was always ahead of Snickers. They checked for a short time, and when Bailey got the check it must had been a sight chase. She barked really hot for about 30 or 40 yards and then it calmed down as she kept on the trail and Snickers caught up to join in. The brought the hare down behind me, but towards Allen and I heard a shot from his .410. He missed, and before I knew the dogs ran right behind me and Carter. I missed seeing the hare while filming the hunt. Carter and I went over to talk with Allen and waited for a second sighting. The hare came back by Allen and I in a full gallop. I shot, and missed to the shot from about 4 feet away. Allen's follow-up shot missed as well and the race continued. The dogs were about 30 yards behind the rabbit and running very well. They ran a lot of small circles up above us and the hare didn't want to come back down to us. Once more it came down in our direction, but didn't give us a sighting. After running for about 2 1/2 hours the dogs checked for their last time and lost out. I was extremely happy with their run.
We headed back up towards the truck and I let the dogs work the woods on the way. Bailey got the third start on a rabbit the we must have spooked out the brush as we were walking through. The two of them were run very hot and fast out across the clearcut and into the pines. We fanned out and hoped to get it on the way back up. It started to turn back up towards us and I was ready. They took a turn out away from me and started to go out of hearing. I wasn't sure what was going on, but decided to take chase to be sure. They managed to make it out deep into the alders and were running a choppy run. I called to them and finally caught up to them after a long walk through the thick stuff. It was faster to continue through the alders instead of back tracking from where I came. Once I hit the logging road I was once again in familiar territory and headed comfortably back to the truck. Everyone was waiting in the truck ready to go when I got there. We left at 12:30.
We had an excellent hunt and I was very proud of the dogs. Allen can't wait to go back out, and I hope our calendars can align again to allow for it. I wish I knew when the next outing will be, but I will have to play it by ear.
Sunday, August 22, 2010
8/1/2010 - Norton, VT
Date of hunt: 8/1/2010
Location: Norton, VT
Weather: Sunny/Dry
Temperature: 81 °F (Start) 81°F (End)
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
# of Rabbits Ran: 1
It has been a while since I went out on this run, but I have been busy with college classes, work and home improvements. I cannot find the time to run the dogs yet alone type up a hunting log for this past hunt. Hopefully things will setttle down soon and I can get out again.
The family and I went up to my uncles camp in Norton for a long camping weekend. I brought the dogs with hopes of finding some time to go for a couple of runs. We got up to camp on Thursday and I was able to go running on Saturday and Sunday. The thousands of acres to run were on the other side of the river. The water was low enough this year that we could hop from rock to rock with the dogs to get across. Snickers came across easy, but Bailey was scared. She managed to get across with some coaxing, and by the end of the weekend I worked with her enough and she was wading in the water.
Bailey got the start after a long 45 minute search and Snickers joined in shortly after. They took the rabbit out of hearing and then brought it back. The rabbit was getting closer to Logan and I when the dogs lost out on it. It was hot and dry and we called it a day after about 2 hours. The only time I could break away from the family was about 12:30 and the temperature was warm and the ground was dry.
I went out alone the next day, and this time I managed to sneak out a little earlier; 10:30. It wasn't exactly morning dew quality but it was a bit damper then yesterday. I headed to the spot where to dogs got the start the day before. Bailey picked up the start again, this time in only 10 minutes. Snickers must have been right on Baileys tail because she joined in right after Bailey started. They took the hare on the same out of hearing circle as the day before and started to bring it back to me. I found a nice little opening to hang out in and a blown down log that was perfect to lay down on. I had my feet up and was laid back nice and comfortably just relaxing with my eyes closed listening to the music the dogs were making. The dogs were getting closer and I was really enjoying my time out in the woods. Everything was perfect, the dogs were running, they were running well, and I was nice and relaxed. I could hear the thumping of the rabbits feet as it came closer. By the time I realized what was going in the rabbit had ran under the log, directly under my shoulders and out the other side. I was able to open my eyes and turn my head without being seen. The hare ran a straight line for about 15 yards. It stopped for a second, brushed its ear with its back foot and came running back towards me, on the same line it went out on. He back tracked about 10 yards and then turned and took off again. At this point the dogs were right by my side and came up to the side of the log I was on. I coaxed them on and helped point them in the right direction and the race continued. They took the hare out of hearing again and of course that is where they checked. With all the woods around me, and nothing to the north of me except the Canadian border clear cut I started to head in their direction to find them as soon as possible. They didn't have telemetry on, as I don't have any. I walked towards them for about 10 minutes while calling and then waited for another 10 while calling, nothing. A quick bump with the collars and I could hear Bailey almost out of hearing. I kept calling and they came in. We had a good run and I wasn't going to push my luck. It was hot and dry again and we had a good 2 hour run.
Location: Norton, VT
Weather: Sunny/Dry
Temperature: 81 °F (Start) 81°F (End)
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
# of Rabbits Ran: 1
It has been a while since I went out on this run, but I have been busy with college classes, work and home improvements. I cannot find the time to run the dogs yet alone type up a hunting log for this past hunt. Hopefully things will setttle down soon and I can get out again.
The family and I went up to my uncles camp in Norton for a long camping weekend. I brought the dogs with hopes of finding some time to go for a couple of runs. We got up to camp on Thursday and I was able to go running on Saturday and Sunday. The thousands of acres to run were on the other side of the river. The water was low enough this year that we could hop from rock to rock with the dogs to get across. Snickers came across easy, but Bailey was scared. She managed to get across with some coaxing, and by the end of the weekend I worked with her enough and she was wading in the water.
Bailey got the start after a long 45 minute search and Snickers joined in shortly after. They took the rabbit out of hearing and then brought it back. The rabbit was getting closer to Logan and I when the dogs lost out on it. It was hot and dry and we called it a day after about 2 hours. The only time I could break away from the family was about 12:30 and the temperature was warm and the ground was dry.
I went out alone the next day, and this time I managed to sneak out a little earlier; 10:30. It wasn't exactly morning dew quality but it was a bit damper then yesterday. I headed to the spot where to dogs got the start the day before. Bailey picked up the start again, this time in only 10 minutes. Snickers must have been right on Baileys tail because she joined in right after Bailey started. They took the hare on the same out of hearing circle as the day before and started to bring it back to me. I found a nice little opening to hang out in and a blown down log that was perfect to lay down on. I had my feet up and was laid back nice and comfortably just relaxing with my eyes closed listening to the music the dogs were making. The dogs were getting closer and I was really enjoying my time out in the woods. Everything was perfect, the dogs were running, they were running well, and I was nice and relaxed. I could hear the thumping of the rabbits feet as it came closer. By the time I realized what was going in the rabbit had ran under the log, directly under my shoulders and out the other side. I was able to open my eyes and turn my head without being seen. The hare ran a straight line for about 15 yards. It stopped for a second, brushed its ear with its back foot and came running back towards me, on the same line it went out on. He back tracked about 10 yards and then turned and took off again. At this point the dogs were right by my side and came up to the side of the log I was on. I coaxed them on and helped point them in the right direction and the race continued. They took the hare out of hearing again and of course that is where they checked. With all the woods around me, and nothing to the north of me except the Canadian border clear cut I started to head in their direction to find them as soon as possible. They didn't have telemetry on, as I don't have any. I walked towards them for about 10 minutes while calling and then waited for another 10 while calling, nothing. A quick bump with the collars and I could hear Bailey almost out of hearing. I kept calling and they came in. We had a good run and I wasn't going to push my luck. It was hot and dry again and we had a good 2 hour run.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
6/26/2010 - Milton, VT
Date of hunt: 6/26/2010
Location: Devino Farm
Weather: Wet
Temperature: 67 °F (Start) 67°F (End)
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
# of Rabbits Ran: 1
I should have just stayed home. I couldn't get the dogs to hunt for anything. When I say "hunt" I mean have the dogs find the rabbits themselves, not me. They would not leave my side and kept coming back to make sure I was still there. Shouldn't a good dog hunt on their own! Bailey was the only one that would do a little work. Snickers just stood around waiting for Bailey to start barking.
Bailey did get a start, but I think it was a baby cottontail by the way she ran it. It zig zagged around inside a thicket that was about a 20 yard circle. She kept loosing it, it never busted out onto roads, and Snickers only barked on it once. I've found that Bailey has the stronger nose. She picked at it for about 20 minutes before loosing out on it.
Hunts like this really make me question whether or not I want to waste my time anymore. Maybe I should get rid of them and start over in a few years when my kids are older and I might have some extra time.
Location: Devino Farm
Weather: Wet
Temperature: 67 °F (Start) 67°F (End)
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
# of Rabbits Ran: 1
I should have just stayed home. I couldn't get the dogs to hunt for anything. When I say "hunt" I mean have the dogs find the rabbits themselves, not me. They would not leave my side and kept coming back to make sure I was still there. Shouldn't a good dog hunt on their own! Bailey was the only one that would do a little work. Snickers just stood around waiting for Bailey to start barking.
Bailey did get a start, but I think it was a baby cottontail by the way she ran it. It zig zagged around inside a thicket that was about a 20 yard circle. She kept loosing it, it never busted out onto roads, and Snickers only barked on it once. I've found that Bailey has the stronger nose. She picked at it for about 20 minutes before loosing out on it.
Hunts like this really make me question whether or not I want to waste my time anymore. Maybe I should get rid of them and start over in a few years when my kids are older and I might have some extra time.
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
6/1/2010 - Lowell, VT
Date of hunt: 6/1/2010
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Sunny/Wet
Temperature: 68 °F (Start) 65°F (End)
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
Today was opening day of training season. The dogs hadn't been out since the last day of rabbit season in March. I got out of work at 3:30 and hit the road around 4:30 for the hour drive North East. On the way in to the log landing I stopped and talked with Bruce for a few minutes. He is up for a couple of months working on their camp. Once the dogs were geared up we headed down the VAST trail towards the power lines in search of our first hare. Bailey got the start and the race was on. It went well for the first half of the run, but then started to sound weird. Bailey didn't sound like she used to. I was missing her nice rolling bark. I thought maybe another year older might be changing her voice, or worse, off game. Haven't had the problem before but acted quickly in case it was. I caught up to the dogs rather quickly as they were swinging back down to me. The rabbit crossed the logging road in front of me as the came closer, satisfies the off game theory, and then I started to get worried. Bailey sounded like a snorting pig as she was trying to breathe. I began to worry about a possible stick in her throat. After looking her over I didn’t find anything. I took off a collar in case it was choking her. As she took off again she kept it up. It then hit me, they are out of shape! Bailey did put some weight on during the off season and she was out of breath. They ran for a bit longer and they checked at one point for close to 20 minutes. I called in the dogs with hopes that one of them would pick up the scent on the way through.
Snickers was the first to show up. I've noticed that she likes to cherry pick. She relies on Bailey to find the rabbit and then she is right there to run it. I kept trying to point into the brush to get her in to look. She had no interest in finding the hare herself, but kept trying to listen for Bailey. I could get her in the brush for about 30 seconds before she would come back out on the easy walking trail that I would be on. When I got in the brush with her I could keep her attention for about a minute, but then she would go back out on the trail and listen for Bailey.
Bailey got the next start and Snickers was off like a rocket to catch up. Bailey cold trailed the hare in a small patch of softwoods that was bordered on all sides by logging roads. She cold trailed for about 5 minutes before finally kicking it up. Bailey's cold bark turned to a deep excited roll , and Snicker's joined in. That made the trip worth while. The two of them took the hare up along the side of the power lines and back up across the VAST trail. Must have been the same hare we ran on the last day of the season. It ran the same pattern, so I knew where to go. The hare crossed where I thought it would and the dogs were struggling to keep up. Again, gasping for air. They ran for about a half hour before they were checking a lot. My guess is they were too tired to keep up. After a long check I called in the dogs, with a lot of coaxing, and made our way to the truck.
An informative first time out for the season, and I can't wait to keep running them more to get them back in shape!
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Sunny/Wet
Temperature: 68 °F (Start) 65°F (End)
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
Today was opening day of training season. The dogs hadn't been out since the last day of rabbit season in March. I got out of work at 3:30 and hit the road around 4:30 for the hour drive North East. On the way in to the log landing I stopped and talked with Bruce for a few minutes. He is up for a couple of months working on their camp. Once the dogs were geared up we headed down the VAST trail towards the power lines in search of our first hare. Bailey got the start and the race was on. It went well for the first half of the run, but then started to sound weird. Bailey didn't sound like she used to. I was missing her nice rolling bark. I thought maybe another year older might be changing her voice, or worse, off game. Haven't had the problem before but acted quickly in case it was. I caught up to the dogs rather quickly as they were swinging back down to me. The rabbit crossed the logging road in front of me as the came closer, satisfies the off game theory, and then I started to get worried. Bailey sounded like a snorting pig as she was trying to breathe. I began to worry about a possible stick in her throat. After looking her over I didn’t find anything. I took off a collar in case it was choking her. As she took off again she kept it up. It then hit me, they are out of shape! Bailey did put some weight on during the off season and she was out of breath. They ran for a bit longer and they checked at one point for close to 20 minutes. I called in the dogs with hopes that one of them would pick up the scent on the way through.
Snickers was the first to show up. I've noticed that she likes to cherry pick. She relies on Bailey to find the rabbit and then she is right there to run it. I kept trying to point into the brush to get her in to look. She had no interest in finding the hare herself, but kept trying to listen for Bailey. I could get her in the brush for about 30 seconds before she would come back out on the easy walking trail that I would be on. When I got in the brush with her I could keep her attention for about a minute, but then she would go back out on the trail and listen for Bailey.
Bailey got the next start and Snickers was off like a rocket to catch up. Bailey cold trailed the hare in a small patch of softwoods that was bordered on all sides by logging roads. She cold trailed for about 5 minutes before finally kicking it up. Bailey's cold bark turned to a deep excited roll , and Snicker's joined in. That made the trip worth while. The two of them took the hare up along the side of the power lines and back up across the VAST trail. Must have been the same hare we ran on the last day of the season. It ran the same pattern, so I knew where to go. The hare crossed where I thought it would and the dogs were struggling to keep up. Again, gasping for air. They ran for about a half hour before they were checking a lot. My guess is they were too tired to keep up. After a long check I called in the dogs, with a lot of coaxing, and made our way to the truck.
An informative first time out for the season, and I can't wait to keep running them more to get them back in shape!
Saturday, April 17, 2010
3/14/2010 - Lowell, VT
Date of hunt: 3/14/2010
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Scattered Rain Showers
Temperature: 35 °F (Start) 45°F (End)
Companions: Adam Raymond, John Roberts, Henry Robare
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
Other Dogs: Casey & Chuck
# of Rabbits Ran: 5
# of Rabbits Shot: 2
We signed up for the 35th annual Orlean's Hare Hunt. It cost $17 for this last day of the season tournament. The object was to hunt anywhere you wanted to and then weigh in your rabbits at the end of the day. The legal limit is 3 daily so they have designed the tournament around that. We had to be in Orleans by around 5 to be on time to weigh in before the prime rib dinner.
John wanted to go to Peacham to get away from everyone and run in a spot that is loaded with hare. Adam met me at 4:30am at the house and then we left to pick up John for 5. I had my 6 dog dog box with the intent on keeping Bailey, Remi and Snickers on one side with John's 3 dogs on the other; Chuck, Casey and Buster. John knew it might be an issue between Chuck and Buster and that it was. We ended up strapping John's box on top of mine to transport his dogs to Richmond. We transferred John's box over to Henry's truck and headed south to Peacham.
Once there we found a really nice softwood forest with remnants of a fresh logging operation. The snow was deep, soft and grainy. The dogs were sinking in up to there belly on every step, and we were struggling on snowshoes just the same. We worked the woods for a good 2 hours with nothing at all. John lost Chuck and went looking for him. I headed down off the mountain to Calais to hopefully find some honey holes without snow and with rabbits. John met us down at the first potential spot and Adam and I scoped it out real quick. Nothing. We decided to travel a half hour towards Hardwick to a spot that John found earlier in the year. Once there we searched for any sign. John found a track and thought there might be more down closer to the swamp. I let out Bailey and Snickers and we searched for about an hour. Nothing. We finally decided to head to Lowell as we knew for sure that there were hare there.
Another 45 minutes later we were ready to go in Lowell. It was now noon and the sky was getting darker threatening with rain. We cast Bailey, Snickers, Chuck and Casey and headed down the logging road to my first honey hole. Bailey got the start and Chuck joined in. Soon all 4 dogs were pushing hard through the tough running snow and managed to bring the hare back to John. He got the hare on the 4th shot but was skeptical if it was a stray or the one they were running. It was a good 4 or 5 hundred yards in front of the dogs. The dogs came right up on the track to John, the snow sure was slowing the dogs down drastically.
We worked our way over to the cutout with the popular tree in it. We got a lot of hits but didn't get any starts for the next 45 minutes, now 1:30. Henry radio'd from the truck and said he was leaving. He took Buster home with him and left all of John's stuff on the empty side of my dog box, except John's change of pants which he left out in the rain.
John radio'd and asked me to find another honey hole to get things started. Adam and I worked off the edge of clear cut towards the 4 wheeler trail and I got a stray jump. Adam got to see it and got off a shot, gun was empty. I saw where the rabbit stopped and I quickly loaded Dad's single shot 20 gauge. Adam told me that the shot was too far but I took it anyway. The rabbit fell over just as the dogs picked up on the trail it had just left. Bailey got the start first and to the downed rabbit first. As Adam and I talked Bailey got into a blow down and started to bark. Adam and I set up around the blow down waiting for a hare to bust out. Snickers picked up the trail about 20 yards down and the chase was on. The rabbit crossed the 4 wheeler trail and went down towards the powerline. It turned up towards the bend and I thought it would cross in front of Adam at any time. They switched up on another hare that turned them out across the powerline. They ran a couple of circles on the other side of the powerline and then lost it. I called in the dogs to the last set of tracks that I saw where they switched up. Bailey picked up the scent but couldn't run with it. Casey picked up the start and the dogs were off. They took the hare up across the 4 wheeler trail and tried to bring it back down to us. Either the hare ran a bunch of small circles up high or they switched up again, but the hare never came back down. After a while they lost out and we gathered up the dogs. It was 4:30.
The dinner was great, and it was a fun day. The winning hare was 4.25 pounds, second was 4.00 pounds and third was 3.99 pounds. My hare was 3.87 pounds and John's was 3.67 pounds.
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Scattered Rain Showers
Temperature: 35 °F (Start) 45°F (End)
Companions: Adam Raymond, John Roberts, Henry Robare
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
Other Dogs: Casey & Chuck
# of Rabbits Ran: 5
# of Rabbits Shot: 2
We signed up for the 35th annual Orlean's Hare Hunt. It cost $17 for this last day of the season tournament. The object was to hunt anywhere you wanted to and then weigh in your rabbits at the end of the day. The legal limit is 3 daily so they have designed the tournament around that. We had to be in Orleans by around 5 to be on time to weigh in before the prime rib dinner.
John wanted to go to Peacham to get away from everyone and run in a spot that is loaded with hare. Adam met me at 4:30am at the house and then we left to pick up John for 5. I had my 6 dog dog box with the intent on keeping Bailey, Remi and Snickers on one side with John's 3 dogs on the other; Chuck, Casey and Buster. John knew it might be an issue between Chuck and Buster and that it was. We ended up strapping John's box on top of mine to transport his dogs to Richmond. We transferred John's box over to Henry's truck and headed south to Peacham.
Once there we found a really nice softwood forest with remnants of a fresh logging operation. The snow was deep, soft and grainy. The dogs were sinking in up to there belly on every step, and we were struggling on snowshoes just the same. We worked the woods for a good 2 hours with nothing at all. John lost Chuck and went looking for him. I headed down off the mountain to Calais to hopefully find some honey holes without snow and with rabbits. John met us down at the first potential spot and Adam and I scoped it out real quick. Nothing. We decided to travel a half hour towards Hardwick to a spot that John found earlier in the year. Once there we searched for any sign. John found a track and thought there might be more down closer to the swamp. I let out Bailey and Snickers and we searched for about an hour. Nothing. We finally decided to head to Lowell as we knew for sure that there were hare there.
Another 45 minutes later we were ready to go in Lowell. It was now noon and the sky was getting darker threatening with rain. We cast Bailey, Snickers, Chuck and Casey and headed down the logging road to my first honey hole. Bailey got the start and Chuck joined in. Soon all 4 dogs were pushing hard through the tough running snow and managed to bring the hare back to John. He got the hare on the 4th shot but was skeptical if it was a stray or the one they were running. It was a good 4 or 5 hundred yards in front of the dogs. The dogs came right up on the track to John, the snow sure was slowing the dogs down drastically.
We worked our way over to the cutout with the popular tree in it. We got a lot of hits but didn't get any starts for the next 45 minutes, now 1:30. Henry radio'd from the truck and said he was leaving. He took Buster home with him and left all of John's stuff on the empty side of my dog box, except John's change of pants which he left out in the rain.
John radio'd and asked me to find another honey hole to get things started. Adam and I worked off the edge of clear cut towards the 4 wheeler trail and I got a stray jump. Adam got to see it and got off a shot, gun was empty. I saw where the rabbit stopped and I quickly loaded Dad's single shot 20 gauge. Adam told me that the shot was too far but I took it anyway. The rabbit fell over just as the dogs picked up on the trail it had just left. Bailey got the start first and to the downed rabbit first. As Adam and I talked Bailey got into a blow down and started to bark. Adam and I set up around the blow down waiting for a hare to bust out. Snickers picked up the trail about 20 yards down and the chase was on. The rabbit crossed the 4 wheeler trail and went down towards the powerline. It turned up towards the bend and I thought it would cross in front of Adam at any time. They switched up on another hare that turned them out across the powerline. They ran a couple of circles on the other side of the powerline and then lost it. I called in the dogs to the last set of tracks that I saw where they switched up. Bailey picked up the scent but couldn't run with it. Casey picked up the start and the dogs were off. They took the hare up across the 4 wheeler trail and tried to bring it back down to us. Either the hare ran a bunch of small circles up high or they switched up again, but the hare never came back down. After a while they lost out and we gathered up the dogs. It was 4:30.
The dinner was great, and it was a fun day. The winning hare was 4.25 pounds, second was 4.00 pounds and third was 3.99 pounds. My hare was 3.87 pounds and John's was 3.67 pounds.
Sunday, February 21, 2010
2/20/2010 - Lowell, VT
Date of hunt: 2/20/2010
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Partly Sunny/Fresh Snow
Temperature: 25 °F (Start) 28°F (End)
Companions: Logan
Dogs of mine: Flanders Remi & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
# of Rabbits Ran: 4
# of Rabbits Shot: 1
It has been quite the week. I went to see Bill Pettiruti in Montpelier to look at possibly buying a 15 month old dog from him. I didn't get a chance to really see his dog run on his own though. He had been running since 10:30 in the morning and I didn't get there until after work, around 4. He has a really nice setup and Paddy sure did look nice. Dean called me on Thursday to see how my visit with Bill went. During the discussion he mentioned that Pete Crowley was looking to get rid of Wildseasons Mountain Snickers. Well to make the story short I picked up Snickers on Friday night.
Logan and I got to Lowell around 8:20. There was about 5 inches of fresh snow. We geared up Remi and Snickers and headed down the logging road on the side of Bruce and Sue's. Remi got the first start and Snickers joined in. They weren't running anything yet, just working a fresh feeder trail. I caught a glimpse of the white hare cross the moose trail we were on and I called in the dogs. I put them on the wrong trail and they weren't running, I was beginning to wonder what was up. I had Logan head further down the trail to see if he could see any more tracks. Logan started calling in the dogs and he got both Remi and Snickers to start on the trail. They both ran it together for a little ways before checking. Remi came all the way back to me and I didn't hear anything from Snickers for a long time. I leashed up Remi and went looking for Snickers. About 45 minutes later I had both the dogs again. We headed down deeper and I let only Snickers go. Snickers wasn't being very independent. She was following Remi around and not searching on her own. It made it worse with Remi not being there. She was really looking for her harder now. I let Remi join back in on the search and she got the next start. Snickers took the lead and shortly after Remi was by my said again while Snickers was running well. We were in position to take the hare when the rabbit did an "S" run instead of a circle. With Remi on a leash we went up to where Snickers was running. I saw a glimpse of the hare again and moved in closer. When we were in position again the hare didn't come back, once again. While Snickers was running the hare in small circles above us we waited for it to drop back down towards us. Nothing. Snickers ran the hare for about an hour and a half total and Logan and I couldn't get in front of it.
We moved on towards the old downed Popular tree. The logging operation has really done a number and cleaned out our favorite spot. It still seems to be holding hare as Snickers got the start on a familiar running hare that we seemed to have ran before. Logan and I were in position but must have been looking the other way as the hare crossed up where the old Popular tree used to be. We moved down to where Snickers got the start and waited. The hare turned up instead of down and crossed back in the same spot that we missed seeing it earlier. I had Logan go back up there while I waited down low. The hare crossed up where Logan was twice more but he didn't see it. On a run out deep Snickers must have picked up another hare. It sounded like the same hare that we ran earlier in the morning, small circles in the same area as before. Meanwhile Remi picked up a hare behind us and pushed it out across the trail between Logan and I. I caught a glimpse of it as it went into the thick stuff and I settled in to wait for it to cross the logging road. Remi pushed on slowly and bumped the hare just enough to cross about 40 yards in front of me. Dad's 20 gauge single shot barked and the hunt was over. I hollared "Dead Bunny" in honor of Lanny and Snickers and Logan started celebrating. He came running over and we took pictures. He headed up the logging road with the hare and Remi and I went out after Snickers. She was still running the hare. After 2 hours of running she had to have been tired. I tried to set up on the hare once as she came closer but didn't pick the right spot. I cut off Snickers as she came through and headed for the truck. Logan was there at the truck as we came out on the Buckley's driveway.
Snickers has given me a new excitement towards rabbit hunting and I look forward to more hunts to come. Remi isn't packing with her yet but I am hoping that the summer running together will help with that. I have decided to give Remi a chance and only sell Bailey. We will see how that goes. I will have to determine a deadline for progression for Remi before enough is enough. Snickers is 8 years old now and I will need to utilize her the best that I can while she is healthy. If Remi won't work I need to get a pup under her soon to make sure she can help train it. Time will tell….



Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Partly Sunny/Fresh Snow
Temperature: 25 °F (Start) 28°F (End)
Companions: Logan
Dogs of mine: Flanders Remi & Wild Seasons Mountain Snickers
# of Rabbits Ran: 4
# of Rabbits Shot: 1
It has been quite the week. I went to see Bill Pettiruti in Montpelier to look at possibly buying a 15 month old dog from him. I didn't get a chance to really see his dog run on his own though. He had been running since 10:30 in the morning and I didn't get there until after work, around 4. He has a really nice setup and Paddy sure did look nice. Dean called me on Thursday to see how my visit with Bill went. During the discussion he mentioned that Pete Crowley was looking to get rid of Wildseasons Mountain Snickers. Well to make the story short I picked up Snickers on Friday night.
Logan and I got to Lowell around 8:20. There was about 5 inches of fresh snow. We geared up Remi and Snickers and headed down the logging road on the side of Bruce and Sue's. Remi got the first start and Snickers joined in. They weren't running anything yet, just working a fresh feeder trail. I caught a glimpse of the white hare cross the moose trail we were on and I called in the dogs. I put them on the wrong trail and they weren't running, I was beginning to wonder what was up. I had Logan head further down the trail to see if he could see any more tracks. Logan started calling in the dogs and he got both Remi and Snickers to start on the trail. They both ran it together for a little ways before checking. Remi came all the way back to me and I didn't hear anything from Snickers for a long time. I leashed up Remi and went looking for Snickers. About 45 minutes later I had both the dogs again. We headed down deeper and I let only Snickers go. Snickers wasn't being very independent. She was following Remi around and not searching on her own. It made it worse with Remi not being there. She was really looking for her harder now. I let Remi join back in on the search and she got the next start. Snickers took the lead and shortly after Remi was by my said again while Snickers was running well. We were in position to take the hare when the rabbit did an "S" run instead of a circle. With Remi on a leash we went up to where Snickers was running. I saw a glimpse of the hare again and moved in closer. When we were in position again the hare didn't come back, once again. While Snickers was running the hare in small circles above us we waited for it to drop back down towards us. Nothing. Snickers ran the hare for about an hour and a half total and Logan and I couldn't get in front of it.
We moved on towards the old downed Popular tree. The logging operation has really done a number and cleaned out our favorite spot. It still seems to be holding hare as Snickers got the start on a familiar running hare that we seemed to have ran before. Logan and I were in position but must have been looking the other way as the hare crossed up where the old Popular tree used to be. We moved down to where Snickers got the start and waited. The hare turned up instead of down and crossed back in the same spot that we missed seeing it earlier. I had Logan go back up there while I waited down low. The hare crossed up where Logan was twice more but he didn't see it. On a run out deep Snickers must have picked up another hare. It sounded like the same hare that we ran earlier in the morning, small circles in the same area as before. Meanwhile Remi picked up a hare behind us and pushed it out across the trail between Logan and I. I caught a glimpse of it as it went into the thick stuff and I settled in to wait for it to cross the logging road. Remi pushed on slowly and bumped the hare just enough to cross about 40 yards in front of me. Dad's 20 gauge single shot barked and the hunt was over. I hollared "Dead Bunny" in honor of Lanny and Snickers and Logan started celebrating. He came running over and we took pictures. He headed up the logging road with the hare and Remi and I went out after Snickers. She was still running the hare. After 2 hours of running she had to have been tired. I tried to set up on the hare once as she came closer but didn't pick the right spot. I cut off Snickers as she came through and headed for the truck. Logan was there at the truck as we came out on the Buckley's driveway.
Snickers has given me a new excitement towards rabbit hunting and I look forward to more hunts to come. Remi isn't packing with her yet but I am hoping that the summer running together will help with that. I have decided to give Remi a chance and only sell Bailey. We will see how that goes. I will have to determine a deadline for progression for Remi before enough is enough. Snickers is 8 years old now and I will need to utilize her the best that I can while she is healthy. If Remi won't work I need to get a pup under her soon to make sure she can help train it. Time will tell….
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
1/17/2010 - St. Albans, VT
Date of hunt: 1/17/2010
Location: Corey Cushing's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 38 °F (Start) 38°F (End)
Companions: Alone
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Flanders Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
What is 38 degrees supposed to be like for running conditions? I thought pretty good, but apparently one of two things was not right. Either the running conditions or my dogs. I'm leaning towards my dogs. The dogs couldn't run a rabbit for the life of them. It took about an hour to get the first start. Bailey got the jump but never saw it. The rabbit busted out of the thicket that Bailey was in and I watched it run straight up the hill and out of sight, about 80 yards. You would think that a straight line would be ideal for the dogs. Bailey doesn't know how to run a straight line! She would run about 10 yards straight and then turn left off the scent and then realize that she was off it and go back looking for it. Remi would pick up the scent and run with for a short time before Bailey came busting in from behind because she just has to be in front. But she can't handle the front! The lead dog plows through the snow enough to wipe out the scent for the dog in the back. It was one dog running and Bailey always had to be the one dog, and she can't hanlde it. Together they ran it about 100 yards before loosing it. After a long check I saw the rabbit come back to towards me and it held tight in a thicket just in front of me. I called in the dogs and Bailey was the first one to respond. She got the jump again. The rabbit busted out of the thicket straight up the hill again. Again, Bailey zig zagged it right out of sight, about 40 yards, and then Remi joined in. They ran it together for a couple hundred yards before loosing it all together. The running conditions weren't optimal for the dogs as the punched thru the crust and sunk in about 4 inches every step, but come on! Run a rabbit! AGH!
I made my way across the clearing with hope of kicking up another rabbit on the other side. After searching for about a half hour Remi got the jump and a short sight chase. The rabbit quickly pulled away from Remi as she sunk in too much when she was trying to run. They didn't run the rabbit 40 yards before loosing it and then played a long game of short runs and check for another 45 minutes. I finally called off the dogs and headed home. Quite disappointed.
Location: Corey Cushing's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 38 °F (Start) 38°F (End)
Companions: Alone
Dogs of mine: Belvidere Bailey & Flanders Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
What is 38 degrees supposed to be like for running conditions? I thought pretty good, but apparently one of two things was not right. Either the running conditions or my dogs. I'm leaning towards my dogs. The dogs couldn't run a rabbit for the life of them. It took about an hour to get the first start. Bailey got the jump but never saw it. The rabbit busted out of the thicket that Bailey was in and I watched it run straight up the hill and out of sight, about 80 yards. You would think that a straight line would be ideal for the dogs. Bailey doesn't know how to run a straight line! She would run about 10 yards straight and then turn left off the scent and then realize that she was off it and go back looking for it. Remi would pick up the scent and run with for a short time before Bailey came busting in from behind because she just has to be in front. But she can't handle the front! The lead dog plows through the snow enough to wipe out the scent for the dog in the back. It was one dog running and Bailey always had to be the one dog, and she can't hanlde it. Together they ran it about 100 yards before loosing it. After a long check I saw the rabbit come back to towards me and it held tight in a thicket just in front of me. I called in the dogs and Bailey was the first one to respond. She got the jump again. The rabbit busted out of the thicket straight up the hill again. Again, Bailey zig zagged it right out of sight, about 40 yards, and then Remi joined in. They ran it together for a couple hundred yards before loosing it all together. The running conditions weren't optimal for the dogs as the punched thru the crust and sunk in about 4 inches every step, but come on! Run a rabbit! AGH!
I made my way across the clearing with hope of kicking up another rabbit on the other side. After searching for about a half hour Remi got the jump and a short sight chase. The rabbit quickly pulled away from Remi as she sunk in too much when she was trying to run. They didn't run the rabbit 40 yards before loosing it and then played a long game of short runs and check for another 45 minutes. I finally called off the dogs and headed home. Quite disappointed.
1/10/2010 - Lowell, VT
Date of hunt: 1/10/2010
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 1 °F (Start) 9 °F (End)
Companions: Logan Abell
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 0
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
Logan and I left Milton by 8am and got to Lowell at around 9. There was a lot of powder and I figured the hunting would be hard. We geared up the dogs with their collars and us with our snowshoes. We parked inside the gate to the Buckley's camp. Wayne, the care taker of the camp, let us inside the gate after he plowed. We were to put the cable up, but leave the lock unlocked for the fuel truck. As we went down the old logging road we were sinking in about 12 inches each step and the dogs were sinking about 8. There were a lot of hare tracks crossing the road and Bailey got the first start. Together they worked the feeder trail about a hundred yards before loosing it. The dogs were struggling to keep on the track as they could barely keep their head above the snow. All morning long they were barking on feeder trails, but never got anything moving. There were feeder tracks everywhere! I wish the conditions were better. Our feet were starting to get cold around 11 and we decided to head up towards the truck. I gathered up the dogs and headed for home. Maybe next time.


Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 1 °F (Start) 9 °F (End)
Companions: Logan Abell
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 0
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
Logan and I left Milton by 8am and got to Lowell at around 9. There was a lot of powder and I figured the hunting would be hard. We geared up the dogs with their collars and us with our snowshoes. We parked inside the gate to the Buckley's camp. Wayne, the care taker of the camp, let us inside the gate after he plowed. We were to put the cable up, but leave the lock unlocked for the fuel truck. As we went down the old logging road we were sinking in about 12 inches each step and the dogs were sinking about 8. There were a lot of hare tracks crossing the road and Bailey got the first start. Together they worked the feeder trail about a hundred yards before loosing it. The dogs were struggling to keep on the track as they could barely keep their head above the snow. All morning long they were barking on feeder trails, but never got anything moving. There were feeder tracks everywhere! I wish the conditions were better. Our feet were starting to get cold around 11 and we decided to head up towards the truck. I gathered up the dogs and headed for home. Maybe next time.
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
10/25/2009 - Lowell, VT
Date of hunt: 10/25/2009
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 45 °F (Start) 47 °F (End)
Companions: Logan Abell
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 5
# of Rabbits Shot: 1
It turned out to be a really nice day, as the day before was full of rain. I was nervous, looking back I am nervous about a lot of things, but I was nervous today because it was opening weekend of anterless-only moose season. We pulled into the pulloff a little before 7 with the expectation that I would find a couple of trucks there as well. That was not the case, we were alone. I did notice some new Posted signs, and am wondering what the future holds for our hunting spot. Until then I plan on enjoying every hunt when I can get it. We actually waited in the truck for about 10 minutes waiting for daylight to break. Logan fell back asleep again, he woke up briefly when we got there and was able to fall back asleep during the idle time. Once there was enough light we geared up the dogs and made our way down the four wheeler trail. I was hoping to kick up the rabbit that we ran with Dad and Logan last time we were there. Bailey found it first and got the start. She ran it alone for about 40 yards before Remi joined in on the hunt, and a hunt it was! It started out rough and Logan and I ventured down in towards the dogs to help them out. Once the run was going again they did not let up! The rabbit swung up across the 4 wheeler trail and we waited for it come back down where it started. It made a bunch of small swings up above and I didn't think it was coming back down. We went up and set up. I caught a glimpse of it and had Logan ready. It didn't come out in the opening and the dogs kept it going. We waited for it to come around again. It didn't. It changed its swing and ran really tight circles even further above us. We moved in again and I caught another glimpse of it, it still didn't cooperate for Logan, and while we were looking forward it ran behind us. We waited for it come back, and of course it crossed to the lower side of the 4 wheeler trail. It did come back up to us and again I saw it and got Logan ready. It skirted around us again without being seen and the dogs kept running it hard. We set up again with hopes of getting a good view of it this time and the rabbit went down below the 4 wheeler trail again. We were closer to the trail at this point and decided to stand on the trail and wait for it to cross again. As the dogs brought it back up to the trail Logan and I must have turned it as it never crossed and it turned back down. This time the dogs lost it and checked for about 10 minutes. Remi came out onto the trail first and I could hear Bailey not to far off in the brush. I called for her and we went looking for another rabbit. That was a great run and lasted about an hour and a half. At that point that was the longest run the dogs have ever ran!
We worked for about an hour and a half looking for a rabbit before we actually got one going. We worked across the power line where Logan and I shot a rabbit last year and found nothing. We went back up the 4 wheeler trail a little bit and Bailey got the start. The two of them took that rabbit out of hearing and Logan and I ventured in the direction where we last heard them. We found ourselves in familiar territory when we started hearing the dogs again. We were in the softwoods where we saw the rabbit last year jump through the hole in the up rooted tree. We couldn't get into position in time before the dogs lost it.
Remi got the next start and it ran right by the big popul tree that we have stood by a few times. The rabbit ran along the back side of the cut and we were ready for it to come back to us. It never did. When got out near the NC camp the rabbit started to run a different circle, must have been a different rabbit. We made our way over to that run when we ran into Bruce and Sue Buckley again. We talked for a while and Sue commented on the music the dogs were making. At that point the dogs had checked and were not running. We talked for a while and after their departure we made our way in the direction of the last bark. I called them in and Bailey picked up the check and ran the rabbit right by me. I called to Logan to shoot but he couldn't see it, so I shot, twice, missed. They ran it by the popul tree again. We waited for them to come back to us. Logan saw the rabbit first, but didn't shoot. I did, 3 times, and missed all of them. When the dogs come down through they were actually running a smaller rabbit, about 10 yards off from the line that the rabbit I shot at ran. The circles turned small again out in the thick stuff. That confirmed that they ran two different rabbits. The small circles continued out in the thick alders and it made it real tough to get any sightings of the rabbit. I made the decision to get aggressive and Logan was game for that. We B-Lined it through the alders to a small patch of tall softwoods. We saw the rabbit once and no shot. The dogs brought it back to us again but when it ran by it stayed in the thick stuff and I didn't shoot. When the dogs brought it around again the rabbit poked its head out from behind a stump and "click", I never chambered a shell after that last round of shooting. I chambered a shell that was in the magazine and the made the rabbit bust out, I shot twice, and connected on the second. Thank God, that was my last round! It is fun to hunt with a .410, but a bit pricey for the ammo. Remi and Bailey came in Remi finished it off. She did not want to give up the rabbit. I leashed up the dogs, and Logan carried out the rabbit. Another hour and a half plus run, that would be there longest run to date! We made our way back up to the truck and cut acoss the Buckley's camp lawn. They came out and took pictures and we exchanged contact information. We bid our farewells and got to the truck at 1.
When I got home the dogs were tired. Bailey ran to the dog pen for water, but Remi stayed behind at the truck. I managed to convince her to only take 2 steps. I ended up carrying her to the pen, she didn't fight it at all. I successfully managed to tire out the dogs! What a great day! Logan loved it, and I am thankful to have such a great hunting partner! Thanks bud!
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 45 °F (Start) 47 °F (End)
Companions: Logan Abell
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 5
# of Rabbits Shot: 1
It turned out to be a really nice day, as the day before was full of rain. I was nervous, looking back I am nervous about a lot of things, but I was nervous today because it was opening weekend of anterless-only moose season. We pulled into the pulloff a little before 7 with the expectation that I would find a couple of trucks there as well. That was not the case, we were alone. I did notice some new Posted signs, and am wondering what the future holds for our hunting spot. Until then I plan on enjoying every hunt when I can get it. We actually waited in the truck for about 10 minutes waiting for daylight to break. Logan fell back asleep again, he woke up briefly when we got there and was able to fall back asleep during the idle time. Once there was enough light we geared up the dogs and made our way down the four wheeler trail. I was hoping to kick up the rabbit that we ran with Dad and Logan last time we were there. Bailey found it first and got the start. She ran it alone for about 40 yards before Remi joined in on the hunt, and a hunt it was! It started out rough and Logan and I ventured down in towards the dogs to help them out. Once the run was going again they did not let up! The rabbit swung up across the 4 wheeler trail and we waited for it come back down where it started. It made a bunch of small swings up above and I didn't think it was coming back down. We went up and set up. I caught a glimpse of it and had Logan ready. It didn't come out in the opening and the dogs kept it going. We waited for it to come around again. It didn't. It changed its swing and ran really tight circles even further above us. We moved in again and I caught another glimpse of it, it still didn't cooperate for Logan, and while we were looking forward it ran behind us. We waited for it come back, and of course it crossed to the lower side of the 4 wheeler trail. It did come back up to us and again I saw it and got Logan ready. It skirted around us again without being seen and the dogs kept running it hard. We set up again with hopes of getting a good view of it this time and the rabbit went down below the 4 wheeler trail again. We were closer to the trail at this point and decided to stand on the trail and wait for it to cross again. As the dogs brought it back up to the trail Logan and I must have turned it as it never crossed and it turned back down. This time the dogs lost it and checked for about 10 minutes. Remi came out onto the trail first and I could hear Bailey not to far off in the brush. I called for her and we went looking for another rabbit. That was a great run and lasted about an hour and a half. At that point that was the longest run the dogs have ever ran!
We worked for about an hour and a half looking for a rabbit before we actually got one going. We worked across the power line where Logan and I shot a rabbit last year and found nothing. We went back up the 4 wheeler trail a little bit and Bailey got the start. The two of them took that rabbit out of hearing and Logan and I ventured in the direction where we last heard them. We found ourselves in familiar territory when we started hearing the dogs again. We were in the softwoods where we saw the rabbit last year jump through the hole in the up rooted tree. We couldn't get into position in time before the dogs lost it.
Remi got the next start and it ran right by the big popul tree that we have stood by a few times. The rabbit ran along the back side of the cut and we were ready for it to come back to us. It never did. When got out near the NC camp the rabbit started to run a different circle, must have been a different rabbit. We made our way over to that run when we ran into Bruce and Sue Buckley again. We talked for a while and Sue commented on the music the dogs were making. At that point the dogs had checked and were not running. We talked for a while and after their departure we made our way in the direction of the last bark. I called them in and Bailey picked up the check and ran the rabbit right by me. I called to Logan to shoot but he couldn't see it, so I shot, twice, missed. They ran it by the popul tree again. We waited for them to come back to us. Logan saw the rabbit first, but didn't shoot. I did, 3 times, and missed all of them. When the dogs come down through they were actually running a smaller rabbit, about 10 yards off from the line that the rabbit I shot at ran. The circles turned small again out in the thick stuff. That confirmed that they ran two different rabbits. The small circles continued out in the thick alders and it made it real tough to get any sightings of the rabbit. I made the decision to get aggressive and Logan was game for that. We B-Lined it through the alders to a small patch of tall softwoods. We saw the rabbit once and no shot. The dogs brought it back to us again but when it ran by it stayed in the thick stuff and I didn't shoot. When the dogs brought it around again the rabbit poked its head out from behind a stump and "click", I never chambered a shell after that last round of shooting. I chambered a shell that was in the magazine and the made the rabbit bust out, I shot twice, and connected on the second. Thank God, that was my last round! It is fun to hunt with a .410, but a bit pricey for the ammo. Remi and Bailey came in Remi finished it off. She did not want to give up the rabbit. I leashed up the dogs, and Logan carried out the rabbit. Another hour and a half plus run, that would be there longest run to date! We made our way back up to the truck and cut acoss the Buckley's camp lawn. They came out and took pictures and we exchanged contact information. We bid our farewells and got to the truck at 1.
When I got home the dogs were tired. Bailey ran to the dog pen for water, but Remi stayed behind at the truck. I managed to convince her to only take 2 steps. I ended up carrying her to the pen, she didn't fight it at all. I successfully managed to tire out the dogs! What a great day! Logan loved it, and I am thankful to have such a great hunting partner! Thanks bud!
Sunday, October 11, 2009
10/10/2009 - Lowel, VT
Date of hunt: 10/10/2009
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Rainy
Temperature: 51 °F (Start) 45 °F (End)
Companions: Steve Abell, Logan Abell
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 1
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
It was misting at the house when I left to get Dad and Logan. I was hoping that Lowell would have better weather, but the rain was still coming down when we got there. We went down the four wheeler trail towards the power lines. I was hoping to pick up the rabbit that Logan and I ran a couple weeks ago. The dogs picked up a little bit of scent but never got a run going. We worked our way thru the softwoods in the direction of the clear cut below the truck. Bailey started to pick up some scent, but again, couldn't get a run going. We kept working all the little areas I thought would produce a hare, no luck. We circled back thru the woods towards the four wheeler trail again, hoping to find something. Nothing. Dad was getting wet and was talking about getting home to do trash and stuff. I really wanted to get something going. With one last effort I worked the dogs up through the softwoods along the edge of the power lines. Bailey got the start and got a long run going on her own before Remi joined in. The ran it well for about 15 minutes. They crossed the four wheeler trail and circled up above. As the rabbit came back down we go Logan ready. The rabbit hugged the woodline along the edge of the four wheeler trail and stayed up above us. The dogs circled it back up and lost it for about 3 minutes. They got on it again and were bring it back down again. Logan was ready again and again, the rabbit stayed up high and ran another circle above us. As it came back down again Dad and Logan were ready, it still didn't cross. The dogs ran it back up again and lost it on the turn. As I called them in they picked up the scent again on their way to me. They ran it for a short distance and lost it. At this point the weather was starting to break, but Dad was ready to leave. We packed up and headed home, 10:00am.
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Rainy
Temperature: 51 °F (Start) 45 °F (End)
Companions: Steve Abell, Logan Abell
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 1
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
It was misting at the house when I left to get Dad and Logan. I was hoping that Lowell would have better weather, but the rain was still coming down when we got there. We went down the four wheeler trail towards the power lines. I was hoping to pick up the rabbit that Logan and I ran a couple weeks ago. The dogs picked up a little bit of scent but never got a run going. We worked our way thru the softwoods in the direction of the clear cut below the truck. Bailey started to pick up some scent, but again, couldn't get a run going. We kept working all the little areas I thought would produce a hare, no luck. We circled back thru the woods towards the four wheeler trail again, hoping to find something. Nothing. Dad was getting wet and was talking about getting home to do trash and stuff. I really wanted to get something going. With one last effort I worked the dogs up through the softwoods along the edge of the power lines. Bailey got the start and got a long run going on her own before Remi joined in. The ran it well for about 15 minutes. They crossed the four wheeler trail and circled up above. As the rabbit came back down we go Logan ready. The rabbit hugged the woodline along the edge of the four wheeler trail and stayed up above us. The dogs circled it back up and lost it for about 3 minutes. They got on it again and were bring it back down again. Logan was ready again and again, the rabbit stayed up high and ran another circle above us. As it came back down again Dad and Logan were ready, it still didn't cross. The dogs ran it back up again and lost it on the turn. As I called them in they picked up the scent again on their way to me. They ran it for a short distance and lost it. At this point the weather was starting to break, but Dad was ready to leave. We packed up and headed home, 10:00am.
Monday, October 5, 2009
10/3/2009 - Milton, VT
Date of hunt: 10/3/2009
Location: Uncle Philip's Lot
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 58 °F (Start) 58 °F (End)
Companions: Alone
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
I pulled in to the lot around 2:30pm and geared up the dogs. The dogs started working hard right off. We worked our way over towards the garden and Remi got the first start. She was already out in the middle of Mike Duffy's field and was running up on to the bank. They brought the rabbit back towards me and I was ready. I caught a quick glimpse of the rabbit running back down the bank but the dogs didn't turn with it. They kept running up on the bank past me and then a rabbit popped out of the tall grass and ran across the mowed section. I managed to get off 3 shots and wounded on the second and the third. I took off after the rabbit and lost sight of it. The dogs came in and continued to run its track right into a stone pile. I felt bad that I wounded a rabbit and lost it, that's a first for me.
I brought the dogs back to where I saw the other rabbit run down the bank and Bailey got the start on this one. She ran it down into Mike's field again. I turned back towards the mowed piece and there was guy standing there with his dog. His name was Mark Gallee and was quite concerned that I was shooting. He started to drill me with questions. "Who's property are you on?", I told him my Uncle Philip's and he asked me "Isn't it Mike Duffy's?". I corrected him and showed him the property line. He asked me what I was hunting and I told him rabbits. He thought I was hunting Grouse, because he heard the shots and saw some grouse fly over his house. I told him that all my shots were directed towards the ground and he said "thanks". I told him where his house was and he was a bit surprised, I also told him that I already talked with Joe St. Hilaire and he told me where your house was. He asked me if I worked with Joe, and I told him that I didn't work with him, but at the same place as him, Husky. He shook his head and said, okay, you do work at Husky, okay. It then remembered that he was a police officer, that would be the reason for the DRILLING! Needless to say my anxiety level was high and I was not really wanting to hunt there anymore. The dogs ran the cottontail in 2 more circles but the rabbit stayed in the thick stuff. We packed up and headed home.
Location: Uncle Philip's Lot
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 58 °F (Start) 58 °F (End)
Companions: Alone
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
I pulled in to the lot around 2:30pm and geared up the dogs. The dogs started working hard right off. We worked our way over towards the garden and Remi got the first start. She was already out in the middle of Mike Duffy's field and was running up on to the bank. They brought the rabbit back towards me and I was ready. I caught a quick glimpse of the rabbit running back down the bank but the dogs didn't turn with it. They kept running up on the bank past me and then a rabbit popped out of the tall grass and ran across the mowed section. I managed to get off 3 shots and wounded on the second and the third. I took off after the rabbit and lost sight of it. The dogs came in and continued to run its track right into a stone pile. I felt bad that I wounded a rabbit and lost it, that's a first for me.
I brought the dogs back to where I saw the other rabbit run down the bank and Bailey got the start on this one. She ran it down into Mike's field again. I turned back towards the mowed piece and there was guy standing there with his dog. His name was Mark Gallee and was quite concerned that I was shooting. He started to drill me with questions. "Who's property are you on?", I told him my Uncle Philip's and he asked me "Isn't it Mike Duffy's?". I corrected him and showed him the property line. He asked me what I was hunting and I told him rabbits. He thought I was hunting Grouse, because he heard the shots and saw some grouse fly over his house. I told him that all my shots were directed towards the ground and he said "thanks". I told him where his house was and he was a bit surprised, I also told him that I already talked with Joe St. Hilaire and he told me where your house was. He asked me if I worked with Joe, and I told him that I didn't work with him, but at the same place as him, Husky. He shook his head and said, okay, you do work at Husky, okay. It then remembered that he was a police officer, that would be the reason for the DRILLING! Needless to say my anxiety level was high and I was not really wanting to hunt there anymore. The dogs ran the cottontail in 2 more circles but the rabbit stayed in the thick stuff. We packed up and headed home.
9/26/2009 - Lowell, VT
Date 9/26/2009
Location: Lowell
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 33 °F (Start) 5 4°F (End)
Companions: Logan Abell
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
Running Partner: Logan
# of Rabbits Ran: 6
# of Rabbits shot: 2
Wow, what a great hunt! I woke up at 4:40 and went and woke up Logan. He was the only one going with me and stayed the night at the house. We were out the door a 5:20, about 20 minutes later than I wanted to be. Legal shooting time was at 6:12am and it was an hour drive ahead of us. Logan fell asleep on the way there and it was past legal shooting time when we pulled on to Robtoy Road. The chain down to the NC camp was down so I figured they were there, and that changed my game plan of the hunt. I was going to walk down the logging road towards the beaver pond, but parked at the log landing instead and worked down from there. When we let the dogs out we worked down the edge of the 4 wheeler trail (opposite side from the power lines). Bailey started barking on some scent within 2 minutes. She worked it slowly for about 10 minutes. She really started in hot and took off on the run real fast. Remi came in from a good distance out and joined Bailey on the run. I was really happy to see her pack! The rabbit made a turn towards the 4 wheeler trail that I was standing on and it quickly popped out on the road and ran up it for a ways. I told Logan that I saw it and I tried to set him up in position to get a shot if it crosses again. The dogs kept running it really hard and fast and quickly brought the rabbit back across the road right in front of Logan. He got really excited and started yelling "here it is, the rabbits right here!". He was too excited to get a shot off. The dogs ran it back up near the truck and lost it. It was a good run to start the morning and I was excited to see such a good run on hare again. It was really good to see that Remi packed with Bailey. I went back up to truck to grab some food and called in the dogs to start again. We worked back down below the truck and swung over to the log road down to the old clear cuts. Remi got the start on this one. She had already crossed the log road ahead of Logan and I where she pick up her first start of the day. Bailey quickly caught up with Remi and they were off on another fast run. They ran two decent sized circles above us, but below the road. There was a short check before they picked it up again and ran it really fast again down in our direction. Come to find out they ran it down the opposite side of the log road then where we were. The rabbit made a turn out across the log road and the dogs missed to the corner. They checked for about a minute and then picked it up again. Logan and I were ready, with Logan being a position to see it first. The rabbit skirted around him and then turned back in towards me. The first chance I had to shot he was already about 10 yards from me. I get nervous at that close of a distance, I hate to blow the rabbit apart so I don't aim so well. I aimed low and it took off again. I pumped and shot again, this time it was closer and again I just didn't aim at the body, or head. I clipped its back foot. I pumped again and shot again. I hit the rear legs again and it started to squeal. Remi and Bailey were closing in and Remi was able to finish off the rabbit. After the kill they wanted nothing more to do with it and started looking for some more scent. Logan was pumped! He was praising the dogs as much as I was. We worked down through the woods towards the first clear cut and Remi got the next start again. Bailey ran by Logan and I at full speed to catch up with her and off they went again. Logan and I set up where Remi started the rabbit and waited. They ran it hard for a quite a while. Twice that brought it down near us but it never came back down in where we were. They ended up loosing it near the bottom of the log road. I called in the dogs after a long check to try and work the clump of softwoods in the center of the clearing. Remi started the next rabbit within a minute of us getting in the thicket. Bailey joined in and their barks quickly changed from a working bark to a hot bark. They ran it fast in a tight circle, staying in the thick stuff. Logan made the comment that it will be hard to get a shot in the cover and we tried to set up in what we thought would be the best place possible. Logan made his way out towards were Remi started the 3rd start to find a stump to stand on. I had found a 6 in diameter downed tree to stand on and balanced myself on it to wait. Logan was just starting to stand on his stump when the rabbit came and stopped about 10 feet from me. I pulled up and actually closed my eyes when I pulled the trigger. It became really apparent that I didn't want to see how destructive a .410 would be at that close. I shot low, and did open up the rabbit a lot. Logan hollard in a disbelief, "you got it?"; "yeah"; "really?"; "yeah"; "already?"; "yeah". He came over and was really excited. He kept talking about how great the day was, and how well the dogs were doing. We talked for a bit about the hunt and Bailey opened up where Remi had got the start on the 3rd rabbit. They both ran the rabbit hard and Logan and I set up in the same spot where we stood before on the 3rd rabbit. The rabbit ran the exact same line as it did before. It had to have been the same rabbit as before. We moved to where the rabbit had crossed a couple of times and set up for the time it came through. This time the dogs made the turn with the rabbit and headed back up past where we shot the 1st rabbit and it turn above us. The dogs ended up losing it just beyond where we shot the last rabbit. At that point we started hearing cow bells and saw a couple of dogs skirting through the trees, with a couple of hunters close behind. I figured it was the owner of the NC camp. We worked down below where we shot the last rabbit and ran in to the hunters. It was Bruce and Bob. Bruce is the owner of the camp and Bob was from VT. We talked for a while and discussed the area, the camp, the differences between bird hunting and rabbit hunting and the Garmin Astro. A very nice piece of equipment! Bruce asked what he could do to not interupt my hunt and I asked the same. We both found that we really wouldn't effect each other in any way. So we parted ways and Logan and I ventured towards the NC camp. Bailey picked up here and there with nothing solid for a run. I called them in and started to head back up near the camp in hopes of running the rabbit that lives near the bottom of the NC camp meadow. Bailey all of a sudden started barking and took off with her hot bark. Remi came in from a good distance away and ran with her. Come to find out we were just below the camp and we set up where I had seen the rabbit run through before. The dogs ran the rabbit counter clockwise around the camp and then the rabbit turned a tight circle up above the camp. They camp back down the same side of the woods as they went up and turned again out towards the log road. The rabbit ran back up along side the camp and above it. It turned again and ran the same line back down through the woods towards Logan and I. It turned again before it got to us and the dogs followed it back up again, this time loosing it up above the camp. We made our way back up towards the dogs and finally got them gathered up. We worked our way back down towards the clear cut and picked up the rabbit we had left behind. We made our way back up to the truck and were pretty worn out when we got there. The dogs were very thirsty and drank for a good minute in the first water hole we came across. Logan kept commenting on how great a day he had and how it was the best hunt he had ever been on. I was very happy with the day and I am excited to invite others along for a hunt some time. Overall, a great day!!


Location: Lowell
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 33 °F (Start) 5 4°F (End)
Companions: Logan Abell
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
Running Partner: Logan
# of Rabbits Ran: 6
# of Rabbits shot: 2
Wow, what a great hunt! I woke up at 4:40 and went and woke up Logan. He was the only one going with me and stayed the night at the house. We were out the door a 5:20, about 20 minutes later than I wanted to be. Legal shooting time was at 6:12am and it was an hour drive ahead of us. Logan fell asleep on the way there and it was past legal shooting time when we pulled on to Robtoy Road. The chain down to the NC camp was down so I figured they were there, and that changed my game plan of the hunt. I was going to walk down the logging road towards the beaver pond, but parked at the log landing instead and worked down from there. When we let the dogs out we worked down the edge of the 4 wheeler trail (opposite side from the power lines). Bailey started barking on some scent within 2 minutes. She worked it slowly for about 10 minutes. She really started in hot and took off on the run real fast. Remi came in from a good distance out and joined Bailey on the run. I was really happy to see her pack! The rabbit made a turn towards the 4 wheeler trail that I was standing on and it quickly popped out on the road and ran up it for a ways. I told Logan that I saw it and I tried to set him up in position to get a shot if it crosses again. The dogs kept running it really hard and fast and quickly brought the rabbit back across the road right in front of Logan. He got really excited and started yelling "here it is, the rabbits right here!". He was too excited to get a shot off. The dogs ran it back up near the truck and lost it. It was a good run to start the morning and I was excited to see such a good run on hare again. It was really good to see that Remi packed with Bailey. I went back up to truck to grab some food and called in the dogs to start again. We worked back down below the truck and swung over to the log road down to the old clear cuts. Remi got the start on this one. She had already crossed the log road ahead of Logan and I where she pick up her first start of the day. Bailey quickly caught up with Remi and they were off on another fast run. They ran two decent sized circles above us, but below the road. There was a short check before they picked it up again and ran it really fast again down in our direction. Come to find out they ran it down the opposite side of the log road then where we were. The rabbit made a turn out across the log road and the dogs missed to the corner. They checked for about a minute and then picked it up again. Logan and I were ready, with Logan being a position to see it first. The rabbit skirted around him and then turned back in towards me. The first chance I had to shot he was already about 10 yards from me. I get nervous at that close of a distance, I hate to blow the rabbit apart so I don't aim so well. I aimed low and it took off again. I pumped and shot again, this time it was closer and again I just didn't aim at the body, or head. I clipped its back foot. I pumped again and shot again. I hit the rear legs again and it started to squeal. Remi and Bailey were closing in and Remi was able to finish off the rabbit. After the kill they wanted nothing more to do with it and started looking for some more scent. Logan was pumped! He was praising the dogs as much as I was. We worked down through the woods towards the first clear cut and Remi got the next start again. Bailey ran by Logan and I at full speed to catch up with her and off they went again. Logan and I set up where Remi started the rabbit and waited. They ran it hard for a quite a while. Twice that brought it down near us but it never came back down in where we were. They ended up loosing it near the bottom of the log road. I called in the dogs after a long check to try and work the clump of softwoods in the center of the clearing. Remi started the next rabbit within a minute of us getting in the thicket. Bailey joined in and their barks quickly changed from a working bark to a hot bark. They ran it fast in a tight circle, staying in the thick stuff. Logan made the comment that it will be hard to get a shot in the cover and we tried to set up in what we thought would be the best place possible. Logan made his way out towards were Remi started the 3rd start to find a stump to stand on. I had found a 6 in diameter downed tree to stand on and balanced myself on it to wait. Logan was just starting to stand on his stump when the rabbit came and stopped about 10 feet from me. I pulled up and actually closed my eyes when I pulled the trigger. It became really apparent that I didn't want to see how destructive a .410 would be at that close. I shot low, and did open up the rabbit a lot. Logan hollard in a disbelief, "you got it?"; "yeah"; "really?"; "yeah"; "already?"; "yeah". He came over and was really excited. He kept talking about how great the day was, and how well the dogs were doing. We talked for a bit about the hunt and Bailey opened up where Remi had got the start on the 3rd rabbit. They both ran the rabbit hard and Logan and I set up in the same spot where we stood before on the 3rd rabbit. The rabbit ran the exact same line as it did before. It had to have been the same rabbit as before. We moved to where the rabbit had crossed a couple of times and set up for the time it came through. This time the dogs made the turn with the rabbit and headed back up past where we shot the 1st rabbit and it turn above us. The dogs ended up losing it just beyond where we shot the last rabbit. At that point we started hearing cow bells and saw a couple of dogs skirting through the trees, with a couple of hunters close behind. I figured it was the owner of the NC camp. We worked down below where we shot the last rabbit and ran in to the hunters. It was Bruce and Bob. Bruce is the owner of the camp and Bob was from VT. We talked for a while and discussed the area, the camp, the differences between bird hunting and rabbit hunting and the Garmin Astro. A very nice piece of equipment! Bruce asked what he could do to not interupt my hunt and I asked the same. We both found that we really wouldn't effect each other in any way. So we parted ways and Logan and I ventured towards the NC camp. Bailey picked up here and there with nothing solid for a run. I called them in and started to head back up near the camp in hopes of running the rabbit that lives near the bottom of the NC camp meadow. Bailey all of a sudden started barking and took off with her hot bark. Remi came in from a good distance away and ran with her. Come to find out we were just below the camp and we set up where I had seen the rabbit run through before. The dogs ran the rabbit counter clockwise around the camp and then the rabbit turned a tight circle up above the camp. They camp back down the same side of the woods as they went up and turned again out towards the log road. The rabbit ran back up along side the camp and above it. It turned again and ran the same line back down through the woods towards Logan and I. It turned again before it got to us and the dogs followed it back up again, this time loosing it up above the camp. We made our way back up towards the dogs and finally got them gathered up. We worked our way back down towards the clear cut and picked up the rabbit we had left behind. We made our way back up to the truck and were pretty worn out when we got there. The dogs were very thirsty and drank for a good minute in the first water hole we came across. Logan kept commenting on how great a day he had and how it was the best hunt he had ever been on. I was very happy with the day and I am excited to invite others along for a hunt some time. Overall, a great day!!
9/16/2009 - Milton, VT
Date of hunt: 9/16/2009
Location: Husky
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 58 °F (Start) 52 °F (End)
Companions: Alone
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 3
Wow, what a turn around! The dogs ran really well on a cottontail! I'm very happy with their performance and their new behaviors! I've ran them a bunch of times throughout the summer without creating log entries. I've struggled every trip out, and actually went through a bout where I was ready to sell them and start over with different genetics. Something clicked over the past couple of weeks and I'm hoping it continues. Remi is now packing with Bailey, and Bailey is working better on her checks. We started off by the gate and working the tall brush on the north side of the road out to the salt shed. Remi got the start by yipping on some old scent and the rabbit jumped out across the mowed road to the upper side of the tall grass. Bailey was the first to get on the line and Remi came in to pack when Bailey barked. The ran it through the tall grass towards the road out to the salt shed, crossed it and kept going. The rabbit ran out behind the first parking lot and the dogs were really hot on its trail. The lost it for a minute on the turn back but worked out the check and brought the rabbit back across the road by the gate. The kept on it at the road crossing and the rabbit circled back where it started. They lost it where it started. I've ran this same rabbit a number of times during the summer and found that they tend to lose the rabbit at the same place every time. There must be a hole that it goes into there.
We went out to the salt shed and picked up a rabbit on the south/west corner thicket. They were running that rabbit so fast and well that I was nervous it might be some off game. The ran it back to the road, turned and followed along the side of the road. Brought it under the apple tree and back to where they started. They lost this one again where they started.
We moved over to the north/west thicket and the quickly ran one around in the tall grass for about 15 minutes. It was a choppy run, but a run none-the-less.
Unknowingly this would be my last run at Husky. A member of Human Resources heard the dogs running and thought that dogs were being killed. They called the facilities manager who then sent out a couple of maintenance guys to see what was going on. When I told them I had permission to run my dogs on rabbits they were fine with it and left. The next day was a drawn out, all day affair of explaining myself. Good thing I had the email that fully explained what a dog does when it runs rabbits back when I asked for permission (August of 2007). In the end my manager, my second level manager, and the Human Resources manager pulled me in to a room and told me that I wasn't in trouble as I was doing exactly as I had asked, and that I was handling the situation very well. They told me that they had to change their mind about the permission they granted and they were happy that I was okay with it. Why wouldn't I be? It is a matter of keeping my job or running my dogs, hmmm, easy decision.
Location: Husky
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 58 °F (Start) 52 °F (End)
Companions: Alone
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 3
Wow, what a turn around! The dogs ran really well on a cottontail! I'm very happy with their performance and their new behaviors! I've ran them a bunch of times throughout the summer without creating log entries. I've struggled every trip out, and actually went through a bout where I was ready to sell them and start over with different genetics. Something clicked over the past couple of weeks and I'm hoping it continues. Remi is now packing with Bailey, and Bailey is working better on her checks. We started off by the gate and working the tall brush on the north side of the road out to the salt shed. Remi got the start by yipping on some old scent and the rabbit jumped out across the mowed road to the upper side of the tall grass. Bailey was the first to get on the line and Remi came in to pack when Bailey barked. The ran it through the tall grass towards the road out to the salt shed, crossed it and kept going. The rabbit ran out behind the first parking lot and the dogs were really hot on its trail. The lost it for a minute on the turn back but worked out the check and brought the rabbit back across the road by the gate. The kept on it at the road crossing and the rabbit circled back where it started. They lost it where it started. I've ran this same rabbit a number of times during the summer and found that they tend to lose the rabbit at the same place every time. There must be a hole that it goes into there.
We went out to the salt shed and picked up a rabbit on the south/west corner thicket. They were running that rabbit so fast and well that I was nervous it might be some off game. The ran it back to the road, turned and followed along the side of the road. Brought it under the apple tree and back to where they started. They lost this one again where they started.
We moved over to the north/west thicket and the quickly ran one around in the tall grass for about 15 minutes. It was a choppy run, but a run none-the-less.
Unknowingly this would be my last run at Husky. A member of Human Resources heard the dogs running and thought that dogs were being killed. They called the facilities manager who then sent out a couple of maintenance guys to see what was going on. When I told them I had permission to run my dogs on rabbits they were fine with it and left. The next day was a drawn out, all day affair of explaining myself. Good thing I had the email that fully explained what a dog does when it runs rabbits back when I asked for permission (August of 2007). In the end my manager, my second level manager, and the Human Resources manager pulled me in to a room and told me that I wasn't in trouble as I was doing exactly as I had asked, and that I was handling the situation very well. They told me that they had to change their mind about the permission they granted and they were happy that I was okay with it. Why wouldn't I be? It is a matter of keeping my job or running my dogs, hmmm, easy decision.
6/5/2009 - Lowell, VT
Date of hunt: 6/5/2009
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 71 °F (Start) 60 °F (End)
Companions: Alone
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
Went up to Robtoy Road after work on Friday. Pulled in and was geared up by 6:30. I let Bailey out and kept Remi on a leash as we went into the woods. Walked down in front of the NC camp again in hopes of kicking up the rabbit we ran on Monday. Bailey worked for about 15 minutes and still nothing. I let Remi go and help out. 5 minutes later Bailey got a start. Both of them were running it. Bailey was definitely out in front by 10 yards at times and you could hear her go back to Remi. Clashing speeds. The rabbit came out of the softwoods and turned back in when it saw me. I leashed Remi on her way by because it was choppy running for both of them. Bailey lost out and Remi kept pulling me in the direction the rabbit ran. I let her go and the race was on again. They both ran it down over the bank and out of hearing. They must have lost it on the turn because they took a long time to come back. As they came back towards me it was very choppy running. I let them work it for a good 45 minutes. There were some guys with 4 wheelers that tried to come down towards me on a trail and I could hear them try to get a four wheeler unstuck. They must have worked for a good hour before they made their way back up out of the area. I then felt I could call the dogs in without having them bother me. I leashed Bailey and let Remi work. She got a rabbit going and ran it hard by herself for a full circle she lost it when the rabbit came back up by Bailey and I. It was dark, and we made our way back up to the truck. I will definitely have to run both dogs alone, they clash too much to run them as a pair.
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 71 °F (Start) 60 °F (End)
Companions: Alone
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
Went up to Robtoy Road after work on Friday. Pulled in and was geared up by 6:30. I let Bailey out and kept Remi on a leash as we went into the woods. Walked down in front of the NC camp again in hopes of kicking up the rabbit we ran on Monday. Bailey worked for about 15 minutes and still nothing. I let Remi go and help out. 5 minutes later Bailey got a start. Both of them were running it. Bailey was definitely out in front by 10 yards at times and you could hear her go back to Remi. Clashing speeds. The rabbit came out of the softwoods and turned back in when it saw me. I leashed Remi on her way by because it was choppy running for both of them. Bailey lost out and Remi kept pulling me in the direction the rabbit ran. I let her go and the race was on again. They both ran it down over the bank and out of hearing. They must have lost it on the turn because they took a long time to come back. As they came back towards me it was very choppy running. I let them work it for a good 45 minutes. There were some guys with 4 wheelers that tried to come down towards me on a trail and I could hear them try to get a four wheeler unstuck. They must have worked for a good hour before they made their way back up out of the area. I then felt I could call the dogs in without having them bother me. I leashed Bailey and let Remi work. She got a rabbit going and ran it hard by herself for a full circle she lost it when the rabbit came back up by Bailey and I. It was dark, and we made our way back up to the truck. I will definitely have to run both dogs alone, they clash too much to run them as a pair.
6/1/2009 - Lowell, VT
Date of 6/1/2009
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Light Rain
Temperature 51 °F (Start) 51 °F (End)
Companions: Alone
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 1
Opening day of running rabbits happened to fall on a Monday this year. I left work at 5, and went home to load up before heading to Lowell. Pulled on to Robtoy Road at 6:30. By they time the dogs and I were fully geared up it was 6:45. I dropped Remi first and left Bailey in the box with a bark collar. Remi and I went down the log road at the entrance of the NC Camp and headed towards the softwoods. Remi started to bark on something within 10 minutes and took off on a scent out of hearing. I quickly got nervous as the moose sign was active in the area. I ventured in the direction of the last bark I heard and started to try and call her in. I bumped her and she barked closer than I had expected. Still a long way out, but within hearing. I called her in and she was by my side within 5 minutes. She started working again got a scent going within a minute. I let her take it without any worry because the thicket she was in could not possibly hold a moose. She again ran a line right out of hearing. I let her go and about 2 or 3 minutes later I could hear her again. As she got closer I was able to see the rabbit run by me at about 15 yards. It was a really good size snowshoe. Remi was having a hard time working the trail and I called her in using the “I just saw a rabbit” call that they dogs have got accustomed to. Remi came right in and got on the trail again. She circled the rabbit up along the side of the NC Camp and then back down by me again. It sat still for about a half a minute before taking Remi back out of hearing again. Remi lost out on the trail on her way back up towards me. I called her in and brought her back to the truck. Remi got a good hour and a half run in before I switched her for Bailey.
I dropped Bailey at about 8:15pm and headed back down the NC Camp driveway. On the edge of the woodline I noticed a rabbit sitting up looking up towards us. I quickly got Bailey on the track and off she went. She was like a loose canon. The rabbit made a straight line out of the area while Bailey made it look like it had zig zagged around every tree and then back again. She was just so excited to be running scent that she was barking all over the place. When she finally settled down a bit and took the line the rabbit had brought her out of hearing. She came back up towards me and the rabbit had snuck by me without me seeing it. Bailey was working the line slowly and I’m guessing the rabbit was probably a county line ahead of her. I went up to the truck and brought Remi down on a lead in hopes of having the two pack together. Bailey was barking a bit and I let Remi go. Remi had no interest in helping out Bailey, she just wanted find a line herself. I leashed up Remi again and made my way closer to Bailey again. As I sat and listened to Bailey work the line Remi started to get a bit antsy and had a bit of spark to want and join in with Bailey. I think I will have try this tactic a bit more to get Remi excited and want to honor Bailey next time. Darkness closed in at around 9 and I all of sudden felt quite small in the big wilderness. I called in Bailey and brought the two dogs back up to the truck to head home.
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Light Rain
Temperature 51 °F (Start) 51 °F (End)
Companions: Alone
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
# of Rabbits Ran: 1
Opening day of running rabbits happened to fall on a Monday this year. I left work at 5, and went home to load up before heading to Lowell. Pulled on to Robtoy Road at 6:30. By they time the dogs and I were fully geared up it was 6:45. I dropped Remi first and left Bailey in the box with a bark collar. Remi and I went down the log road at the entrance of the NC Camp and headed towards the softwoods. Remi started to bark on something within 10 minutes and took off on a scent out of hearing. I quickly got nervous as the moose sign was active in the area. I ventured in the direction of the last bark I heard and started to try and call her in. I bumped her and she barked closer than I had expected. Still a long way out, but within hearing. I called her in and she was by my side within 5 minutes. She started working again got a scent going within a minute. I let her take it without any worry because the thicket she was in could not possibly hold a moose. She again ran a line right out of hearing. I let her go and about 2 or 3 minutes later I could hear her again. As she got closer I was able to see the rabbit run by me at about 15 yards. It was a really good size snowshoe. Remi was having a hard time working the trail and I called her in using the “I just saw a rabbit” call that they dogs have got accustomed to. Remi came right in and got on the trail again. She circled the rabbit up along the side of the NC Camp and then back down by me again. It sat still for about a half a minute before taking Remi back out of hearing again. Remi lost out on the trail on her way back up towards me. I called her in and brought her back to the truck. Remi got a good hour and a half run in before I switched her for Bailey.
I dropped Bailey at about 8:15pm and headed back down the NC Camp driveway. On the edge of the woodline I noticed a rabbit sitting up looking up towards us. I quickly got Bailey on the track and off she went. She was like a loose canon. The rabbit made a straight line out of the area while Bailey made it look like it had zig zagged around every tree and then back again. She was just so excited to be running scent that she was barking all over the place. When she finally settled down a bit and took the line the rabbit had brought her out of hearing. She came back up towards me and the rabbit had snuck by me without me seeing it. Bailey was working the line slowly and I’m guessing the rabbit was probably a county line ahead of her. I went up to the truck and brought Remi down on a lead in hopes of having the two pack together. Bailey was barking a bit and I let Remi go. Remi had no interest in helping out Bailey, she just wanted find a line herself. I leashed up Remi again and made my way closer to Bailey again. As I sat and listened to Bailey work the line Remi started to get a bit antsy and had a bit of spark to want and join in with Bailey. I think I will have try this tactic a bit more to get Remi excited and want to honor Bailey next time. Darkness closed in at around 9 and I all of sudden felt quite small in the big wilderness. I called in Bailey and brought the two dogs back up to the truck to head home.
Saturday, October 3, 2009
3/8/2009 - Lowell, VT
Date of hunt: 3/8/2009
Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 36 °F (Start) 39 °F (End)
Companions: Steve Abell, Logan Abell
Dogs of mine: Bailey
# of Rabbits Ran: 4
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
Today was the last day of the 2008-2009 Vermont Hare season. Dad, Logan and I pulled into our spot at about 8:15. The time change made it a little darker, which was nice. We geared up with snowshoes and headed down the logging road. Bailey got a start right off and worked it slowly down parrallel with the logging road we were standing on. She lost it after about 50 yards. I found a cross trail that I walked down with hopes of cutting the rabbit track that Bailey lost. I found the track, called Bailey in and put her on it. She took off on it, slow at first (zig-zagging) but then picked up the trail on a steady pace. She ran it out away from us on a nice solid run. She brought it just to the edge of hearing range and started to make the turn. She got through the turn and started to bring it back to us when she lost it. I thought for sure I was going to get a crack at it. I had the "perfect" spot. Dad thought the same from his position. If I were to put money down I would guess my Dad would have got it, don't they always? Bailey was in line to bring it back to us when she hit the check. We waited about 10 minutes in hopes of her solving the check before I called Bailey back in. We worked back onto the logging road and headed down towards the beaver pond. We found the pond that Google Earth told me was there, and walked along the edge of its profile. Not much of a pond anymore, looks like the beaver dam broke and it was drained. We worked the cover near the pond with now luck and decided to head back up where we came from as the rabbit sign was lacking. Bailey picked up a track and started working it. She worked it slowly, off and on for about 5 minutes. She finally started on the line and this is where I feel she needs some work, lots of it too. She would run the straight line for about 10 yards and then zag to the right. She would bark (off the line) for about 5 yards and then realize that she wasn't running the line and then stop. She would go back near the line, find it and then run it for another 10 yards and then zig to the left. Barking the same as before. She finally picked up on the line and ran it solid after those two episodes. She ran it well and deep and ran it just about out of hearing distance. She made the turn to come back towards us. Dad made a comment about how good she was doing. And then she lost it. It was the same as last time. Can't quite run the rabbit in a full circle. I would like to blame it on the ground conditions but I know that a lot of it is Bailey. The 3 feet of snow was soft and slowly melting. She would sink up to her belly and struggle to climb up any kind of elevation. We worked back up below the NC camp and made our way over to the other running ground that I ran on in October. Bailey kicked up a rabbit and ran it pretty hot for about 2 minutes. It sounded like it turned and was heading back up towards me, when she lost it, AGAIN!! I can't catch a break. Bailey needs to get over that! I'm hoping some good summer running will help refine her. After letting Bailey work for about 20 minutes and try to find the track again I called her in and headed closer to the clear cut. There was one last clump of softwoods on the edge of the clearcut that Bailey worked and she got another start. She had a couple of good bawls that sounded like she was sight chasing it. It made a real tight circle and was coming back towards me. I felt that I was going to see it, and I found out later that Dad thought so too. She made the turn on the small circle and then lost it again. Four times in a row she seemed to loose it in the same spot…..on the turn. What is it? Hopefully next year at this time she will be able to run a rabbit non-stop until I either shoot it or call her off. We made our way back up towards the road, that was tiring. Uphill and softer snow, made for a tough climb. A good year, I guess, but I look forward to a better year next year.


Location: Doug Duffy's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 36 °F (Start) 39 °F (End)
Companions: Steve Abell, Logan Abell
Dogs of mine: Bailey
# of Rabbits Ran: 4
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
Today was the last day of the 2008-2009 Vermont Hare season. Dad, Logan and I pulled into our spot at about 8:15. The time change made it a little darker, which was nice. We geared up with snowshoes and headed down the logging road. Bailey got a start right off and worked it slowly down parrallel with the logging road we were standing on. She lost it after about 50 yards. I found a cross trail that I walked down with hopes of cutting the rabbit track that Bailey lost. I found the track, called Bailey in and put her on it. She took off on it, slow at first (zig-zagging) but then picked up the trail on a steady pace. She ran it out away from us on a nice solid run. She brought it just to the edge of hearing range and started to make the turn. She got through the turn and started to bring it back to us when she lost it. I thought for sure I was going to get a crack at it. I had the "perfect" spot. Dad thought the same from his position. If I were to put money down I would guess my Dad would have got it, don't they always? Bailey was in line to bring it back to us when she hit the check. We waited about 10 minutes in hopes of her solving the check before I called Bailey back in. We worked back onto the logging road and headed down towards the beaver pond. We found the pond that Google Earth told me was there, and walked along the edge of its profile. Not much of a pond anymore, looks like the beaver dam broke and it was drained. We worked the cover near the pond with now luck and decided to head back up where we came from as the rabbit sign was lacking. Bailey picked up a track and started working it. She worked it slowly, off and on for about 5 minutes. She finally started on the line and this is where I feel she needs some work, lots of it too. She would run the straight line for about 10 yards and then zag to the right. She would bark (off the line) for about 5 yards and then realize that she wasn't running the line and then stop. She would go back near the line, find it and then run it for another 10 yards and then zig to the left. Barking the same as before. She finally picked up on the line and ran it solid after those two episodes. She ran it well and deep and ran it just about out of hearing distance. She made the turn to come back towards us. Dad made a comment about how good she was doing. And then she lost it. It was the same as last time. Can't quite run the rabbit in a full circle. I would like to blame it on the ground conditions but I know that a lot of it is Bailey. The 3 feet of snow was soft and slowly melting. She would sink up to her belly and struggle to climb up any kind of elevation. We worked back up below the NC camp and made our way over to the other running ground that I ran on in October. Bailey kicked up a rabbit and ran it pretty hot for about 2 minutes. It sounded like it turned and was heading back up towards me, when she lost it, AGAIN!! I can't catch a break. Bailey needs to get over that! I'm hoping some good summer running will help refine her. After letting Bailey work for about 20 minutes and try to find the track again I called her in and headed closer to the clear cut. There was one last clump of softwoods on the edge of the clearcut that Bailey worked and she got another start. She had a couple of good bawls that sounded like she was sight chasing it. It made a real tight circle and was coming back towards me. I felt that I was going to see it, and I found out later that Dad thought so too. She made the turn on the small circle and then lost it again. Four times in a row she seemed to loose it in the same spot…..on the turn. What is it? Hopefully next year at this time she will be able to run a rabbit non-stop until I either shoot it or call her off. We made our way back up towards the road, that was tiring. Uphill and softer snow, made for a tough climb. A good year, I guess, but I look forward to a better year next year.
2/15/2009 - Milton, VT
Date of hunt: 2/15/2009
Location: Corey Lombard's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 19 °F (Start) 26 °F (End)
Dogs of mine: Bailey
# of Rabbits Ran: 0
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
A bunch of tracks right behind Corey's house. Bailey barked a few times here and there but never got anything running. She barked up by the field at the VAST trail "Y". She barked over behind the beaver pond near the Middle Road side, and then right behind Corey's house. She needs more experience to get the cottontails running and to work harder on her checks.
Location: Corey Lombard's
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 19 °F (Start) 26 °F (End)
Dogs of mine: Bailey
# of Rabbits Ran: 0
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
A bunch of tracks right behind Corey's house. Bailey barked a few times here and there but never got anything running. She barked up by the field at the VAST trail "Y". She barked over behind the beaver pond near the Middle Road side, and then right behind Corey's house. She needs more experience to get the cottontails running and to work harder on her checks.
2/8/2009 - Lowell, VT
Date of hunt: 2/8/2009
Location: Doug Duffys
Weather: Snowy
Temperature: 41 °F (Start) 34 °F (End)
Dogs of mine: Bailey
Running Partners: Dad, Dustin, Logan
# of Rabbits Ran: 3
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
We pulled onto Robtoy Road around 9:40. Geared up with the snowshoes and geared up Bailey. I found the road down to swamp that I had been looking at on Google maps. It was right next to the driveway of the new camp built up there. Each step sunk about 10 - 12 inches, but we stayed on top of the 3 foot base. I cut the trail down towards the swamp while keeping an eye out for rabbit tracks. Cut moose tracks first, and then saw a few old rabbit tracks covered by the fresh inch of snow from this morning. There were a lot of young hardwoods and few soft woods that I was looking for. There was a small patch of softwoods that I told Bailey to get into. Dad followed her in to try and get her to work. She was hitting the holes pretty good and searching hard. She started barking a bit and I was nervous. With all the moose sign around I wasn't 100% sure if it was a rabbit. She started running a track slowly and then hit hard and started running good. She kept steady for about 3 minutes and then checked for about 2. Ran for about 10 minutes and checked again. It was patchy running, but I was really happy that she was running! My low expectations were met and blown away. It was great! Bailey lost the rabbit after about 30 minutes. There was about 2 small circles out in front of us and then one last circle towards us where she lost it. We decided to pick up and head down deeper towards the swamp.
Deeper down the road I started to see more softwoods and a trail that cut West into the softwoods. We tucked into the softwoods and started looking for sign. Dustin was leading and I told him to call Bailey over and have her look in the blow down right next to him. She looked for a bit and then moved on. Logan mentioned to jump on it and I did. Out came a rabbit like a bullet. I called Bailey over and she got right on it. She ran it better than the first one, but lost out after 10 minutes. At this point we were pretty deep and Dustin wore sneakers with his snowshoes. We thought it would be best to hunt back up towards the truck. We worked the woods on the way up and decided to just walk up the trail and go to the truck. We got back up to where we started the first rabbit and I saw where a rabbit crossed our snowshoe trail. I got Bailey on it and she ran it well. She ran solid for about 15 minutes without a check. I was really impressed how much better she ran each time today. She circled the rabbit a couple of times out near the first run and then checked. After a while I called Dustin up to have him go up to the truck, I was concerned about his feet. When he got back up to us Bailey started up running again. She kept getting closer and we were all at ready. Dad saw a glimpse and pointed it out to Dustin. No shot. The rabbit ran right down to where Dustin was, had he been there. We grabbed Bailey and headed up to the truck as it was getting late and keeping her on the trail would be another hour before we got Dustin back up to the truck.
I was really happy with today's hunt. It was Bailey's first run in the snow and she got better on each run. I look forward to another day like today.
Location: Doug Duffys
Weather: Snowy
Temperature: 41 °F (Start) 34 °F (End)
Dogs of mine: Bailey
Running Partners: Dad, Dustin, Logan
# of Rabbits Ran: 3
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
We pulled onto Robtoy Road around 9:40. Geared up with the snowshoes and geared up Bailey. I found the road down to swamp that I had been looking at on Google maps. It was right next to the driveway of the new camp built up there. Each step sunk about 10 - 12 inches, but we stayed on top of the 3 foot base. I cut the trail down towards the swamp while keeping an eye out for rabbit tracks. Cut moose tracks first, and then saw a few old rabbit tracks covered by the fresh inch of snow from this morning. There were a lot of young hardwoods and few soft woods that I was looking for. There was a small patch of softwoods that I told Bailey to get into. Dad followed her in to try and get her to work. She was hitting the holes pretty good and searching hard. She started barking a bit and I was nervous. With all the moose sign around I wasn't 100% sure if it was a rabbit. She started running a track slowly and then hit hard and started running good. She kept steady for about 3 minutes and then checked for about 2. Ran for about 10 minutes and checked again. It was patchy running, but I was really happy that she was running! My low expectations were met and blown away. It was great! Bailey lost the rabbit after about 30 minutes. There was about 2 small circles out in front of us and then one last circle towards us where she lost it. We decided to pick up and head down deeper towards the swamp.
Deeper down the road I started to see more softwoods and a trail that cut West into the softwoods. We tucked into the softwoods and started looking for sign. Dustin was leading and I told him to call Bailey over and have her look in the blow down right next to him. She looked for a bit and then moved on. Logan mentioned to jump on it and I did. Out came a rabbit like a bullet. I called Bailey over and she got right on it. She ran it better than the first one, but lost out after 10 minutes. At this point we were pretty deep and Dustin wore sneakers with his snowshoes. We thought it would be best to hunt back up towards the truck. We worked the woods on the way up and decided to just walk up the trail and go to the truck. We got back up to where we started the first rabbit and I saw where a rabbit crossed our snowshoe trail. I got Bailey on it and she ran it well. She ran solid for about 15 minutes without a check. I was really impressed how much better she ran each time today. She circled the rabbit a couple of times out near the first run and then checked. After a while I called Dustin up to have him go up to the truck, I was concerned about his feet. When he got back up to us Bailey started up running again. She kept getting closer and we were all at ready. Dad saw a glimpse and pointed it out to Dustin. No shot. The rabbit ran right down to where Dustin was, had he been there. We grabbed Bailey and headed up to the truck as it was getting late and keeping her on the trail would be another hour before we got Dustin back up to the truck.
I was really happy with today's hunt. It was Bailey's first run in the snow and she got better on each run. I look forward to another day like today.
1/4/2009 - Ferrisburgh, VT
Date of hunt: 1/4/2009
Location: Ferrisburgh
Weather: Sunny
Temperature : 8 °F (Start) 12 °F (End)
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
Running Partner: John Roberts
Other Dogs: Bowie
Driver/Truck: Ryan
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
# of Rabbits Shot: 1
John talked me in to going down to Ferrisburgh to run some cottontails. I should have gone north and ran some snows, but hindsight is 100%. The snow was dry and didn't hold any scent, and a cottontail with less scent then a snowshoe didn't help. The dogs are inexperienced as well, can't forget this big one. This was Bailey's first run on snow.
We walked in from the gate of Button Bay State Park. John jumped up a rabbit and tried to shoot it on the jump, but missed. He wanted to get a rabbit down for training his dog. I brought the dogs over to where the rabbit was and they never picked up any scent. I knew it would be a long day after that. We jumped on a brush pile and kicked a rabbit out. I got the dogs on it. They ran it slowly for about 50 yards, but then lost it. They picked it up again and ran it about 300 yards before losing it. John jumped up another rabbit and shot it. Bailey was about 80 yards from where the rabbit was and started to bark. I thought she might be trailing the scent of the rabbit John shot. Before I knew it she was sight chasing a bunny. She sight chased it for about 80 yards before losing it. The scenting didn't go well and she lost it. I brought Remi in and they never picked it up. We started walking back and then both Bailey and Remi kicked up the rabbit, where they started it before, and ran it the same distance and direction as before. They lost it again.
We changed locations, went down closer to the Slaughter House. When we crossed the road from where we parked we kicked up a rabbit. The dogs wouldn't run it. John managed to kick up another one. Got the dogs on it and they followed it, without barking. The rabbit ran into a brush pile and the dogs went into the pile after it. They started barking once they were in there. The rabbit ran out the back side and ran around to the front side of the pile and back tracked. John shot twice and wounded it on the second shot. It just sat there. I got the dogs on and the sight chase was on Bailey took off with it first and managed to catch it once, it shook free. She caught it a second time and it shook free again. Remi caught up to the chase as the rabbit took off across a field. Remi chased it down and finished the hunt. That is now the second rabbit that Remi has caught after it was wounded.
Location: Ferrisburgh
Weather: Sunny
Temperature : 8 °F (Start) 12 °F (End)
Dogs of mine: Bailey & Remi
Running Partner: John Roberts
Other Dogs: Bowie
Driver/Truck: Ryan
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
# of Rabbits Shot: 1
John talked me in to going down to Ferrisburgh to run some cottontails. I should have gone north and ran some snows, but hindsight is 100%. The snow was dry and didn't hold any scent, and a cottontail with less scent then a snowshoe didn't help. The dogs are inexperienced as well, can't forget this big one. This was Bailey's first run on snow.
We walked in from the gate of Button Bay State Park. John jumped up a rabbit and tried to shoot it on the jump, but missed. He wanted to get a rabbit down for training his dog. I brought the dogs over to where the rabbit was and they never picked up any scent. I knew it would be a long day after that. We jumped on a brush pile and kicked a rabbit out. I got the dogs on it. They ran it slowly for about 50 yards, but then lost it. They picked it up again and ran it about 300 yards before losing it. John jumped up another rabbit and shot it. Bailey was about 80 yards from where the rabbit was and started to bark. I thought she might be trailing the scent of the rabbit John shot. Before I knew it she was sight chasing a bunny. She sight chased it for about 80 yards before losing it. The scenting didn't go well and she lost it. I brought Remi in and they never picked it up. We started walking back and then both Bailey and Remi kicked up the rabbit, where they started it before, and ran it the same distance and direction as before. They lost it again.
We changed locations, went down closer to the Slaughter House. When we crossed the road from where we parked we kicked up a rabbit. The dogs wouldn't run it. John managed to kick up another one. Got the dogs on it and they followed it, without barking. The rabbit ran into a brush pile and the dogs went into the pile after it. They started barking once they were in there. The rabbit ran out the back side and ran around to the front side of the pile and back tracked. John shot twice and wounded it on the second shot. It just sat there. I got the dogs on and the sight chase was on Bailey took off with it first and managed to catch it once, it shook free. She caught it a second time and it shook free again. Remi caught up to the chase as the rabbit took off across a field. Remi chased it down and finished the hunt. That is now the second rabbit that Remi has caught after it was wounded.
11/1/2008 - Island Pond, VT
Date of hunt: 11/1/2008
Location: Dead Bull 1
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 36 °F (Start) 40 °F (End)
Dogs of mine: Bailey
Running Partners: Lanny, Dean
Other Dogs: Jitters, Brook
Driver/Truck: Lanny
# of Rabbits Ran: 1
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
What a rough day. Started out okay, but went down hill from there. Dropped the dogs at the Dead Bull area, same place where Dean and I ran last year and the dogs took off on a buck rabbit. We walked in, almost still in sight of the truck, and Bailey started to bark. The other dogs came over but didn't open up. Bailey cold trailed the line back to the road, crossed it, and kept cold trailing on the other side. Jitters squeeled a couple of times and Brook sounded a couple as well. Bailey still kept going in away from the road. The got in about 80 yards from the road and then Jitters sounded off hard. They were off. They ran it in a tight circle down in the balsams. I stayed up in sight of the road in the thinner soft woods in hopes of getting a shot. The dogs circled the hare down low enough where the hare never showed himself. They circled down low and then brought it back up by the road. The hare ran tight to the road and was heading towards me. I was expecting to see it at any time. The dogs crossed back over the road and they ran back in the area where Bailey started it. They checked a couple of times. During the checks Bailey would bark here and there. I thought she was picking up on the scent, but Lanny knew otherwise. After about the 4th check he radio'd me and asked me to leash Bailey. I called her in, she came (no shock needed). Jitters and Brooks never picked up the rabbit again. Lanny came and found me and asked me if I understood what was happening. I understood a little bit, but not completely. Lanny explained that when Bailey was running with the pack she/they would miss the sharp turns and overrun the dekes. The kicker was that Bailey would not stay close to the check. He explained that she has so much drive and excitement to run that she wanted to find scent, any scent, anywhere. She wouldn't stay close to where the last scent was lost and would go off and bark wherever she could find scent, sometimes 40-50 yards away from the check. Lanny thought she might be barking on the scent of the dogs sometimes, or the old track. This extra mouth would confuse the other dogs and pull them off the check and produced rough running. Lanny wanted me to understand and not be upset. I wasn't upset, just disappointed. We put Bailey in the box and kept hunting with Jitters and Brook. I had to shock Bailey once to keep her quiet in the box. We headed deeper in the thick stuff and managed to get two rabbits up at the same time. Jitters ran one one way, and Brook the other. Brook gave up on hers and went and joined Jitters. They ran it for a bit out in the thick stuff, and then circled it back towards the truck. They lost it right back near the road where we went in. We picked up the dogs and went over to Phil's Buck area. We walked all around for about 2 hours and only got a couple barks out of Jitters. Nothing ran. That was a long hunt. I was tired, and ready to get home. Lanny commented that if we had put Bailey down we might have had a start ;). Lanny told me that I need to run Bailey alone to help her overcome her quirks. Running with other dogs could make that trait stick. So, I will be trying to run her alone for a while to help refine her and hopefully tighten her up.
Location: Dead Bull 1
Weather: Sunny
Temperature: 36 °F (Start) 40 °F (End)
Dogs of mine: Bailey
Running Partners: Lanny, Dean
Other Dogs: Jitters, Brook
Driver/Truck: Lanny
# of Rabbits Ran: 1
# of Rabbits Shot: 0
What a rough day. Started out okay, but went down hill from there. Dropped the dogs at the Dead Bull area, same place where Dean and I ran last year and the dogs took off on a buck rabbit. We walked in, almost still in sight of the truck, and Bailey started to bark. The other dogs came over but didn't open up. Bailey cold trailed the line back to the road, crossed it, and kept cold trailing on the other side. Jitters squeeled a couple of times and Brook sounded a couple as well. Bailey still kept going in away from the road. The got in about 80 yards from the road and then Jitters sounded off hard. They were off. They ran it in a tight circle down in the balsams. I stayed up in sight of the road in the thinner soft woods in hopes of getting a shot. The dogs circled the hare down low enough where the hare never showed himself. They circled down low and then brought it back up by the road. The hare ran tight to the road and was heading towards me. I was expecting to see it at any time. The dogs crossed back over the road and they ran back in the area where Bailey started it. They checked a couple of times. During the checks Bailey would bark here and there. I thought she was picking up on the scent, but Lanny knew otherwise. After about the 4th check he radio'd me and asked me to leash Bailey. I called her in, she came (no shock needed). Jitters and Brooks never picked up the rabbit again. Lanny came and found me and asked me if I understood what was happening. I understood a little bit, but not completely. Lanny explained that when Bailey was running with the pack she/they would miss the sharp turns and overrun the dekes. The kicker was that Bailey would not stay close to the check. He explained that she has so much drive and excitement to run that she wanted to find scent, any scent, anywhere. She wouldn't stay close to where the last scent was lost and would go off and bark wherever she could find scent, sometimes 40-50 yards away from the check. Lanny thought she might be barking on the scent of the dogs sometimes, or the old track. This extra mouth would confuse the other dogs and pull them off the check and produced rough running. Lanny wanted me to understand and not be upset. I wasn't upset, just disappointed. We put Bailey in the box and kept hunting with Jitters and Brook. I had to shock Bailey once to keep her quiet in the box. We headed deeper in the thick stuff and managed to get two rabbits up at the same time. Jitters ran one one way, and Brook the other. Brook gave up on hers and went and joined Jitters. They ran it for a bit out in the thick stuff, and then circled it back towards the truck. They lost it right back near the road where we went in. We picked up the dogs and went over to Phil's Buck area. We walked all around for about 2 hours and only got a couple barks out of Jitters. Nothing ran. That was a long hunt. I was tired, and ready to get home. Lanny commented that if we had put Bailey down we might have had a start ;). Lanny told me that I need to run Bailey alone to help her overcome her quirks. Running with other dogs could make that trait stick. So, I will be trying to run her alone for a while to help refine her and hopefully tighten her up.
10/19/2008 - Lowell, VT
Date of Hunt: 10/19/2008
Location: Lowell
Weather Clear
Temperature 22 °F (Start) 43 °F (End)
Dogs: Bailey & Remi
Running Partner: Logan
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
# of Rabbits Shot:1
We did it! We officially have shot the first rabbit in front of the dogs as a pair! No other dogs to help, just mine. What a day. Picked up Logan at 5:30 again. Headed towards Lowell Mountain. Its opening weekend of moose hunting, either sex tags first. Parked in the same log landing as last time, there was already a truck there. In the past I would have got discouraged, and found another place, or headed home. I decided to tough it out. We can share the woods, and the moose hunters can't feel like they own the woods. I've seen that mentality before up near camp. Walked in down low the same way as last week. Bailey started getting excited and ran right down the moose trail. She started to open up as she ran down the trail and I knew it was either a moose or deer. I shocked her (level 5, high) and she stopped and came back to me. Hopefully I can get her broke of other game here soon. We worked our way down to where Bailey ran the rabbit last week. She got a start off from the moose trail on the way down and worked it slowly, sparsely barking as she went. She made her way back up towards the log landing. We went back up to find her, she lost it. Found her and worked both dogs back down into the lower clear cut. Worked the thick "island" in the center, nothing. Went down deeper and found some really nice cover. This whole area is nice running ground. I took the dogs over to a really thick patch of woods and Bailey started to bark. She didn't know it yet, but she kicked up the rabbit and it came right at Logan and me. It stopped about 10 feet from me, and I worked to get Logan over to see it. He finally got the right angle and could see it. I called in the dogs, ("wheeee, wheeee"). Remi was there instantly and the rabbit took off. They ran it together straight up to the log landing, again. They lost it up near the top on the turn, up near the truck. Logan and I walked back up toward the landing and Bailey was deep inside the bigger brush pile of the two. She was barking, but didn't kick anything out. I'm guessing the rabbit went in there, but it seems like odd behavior for a hare, cottontail maybe, but not a hare. We kept moving. Got onto the main ATV trail and headed down in deeper. New territory for me. We flushed up 8 partridge in one group of trees, none of them flew out in front of us. No shot. Found a nice open power line. Started out across it and saw some moose hunters coming up through. They stopped and talked for a bit. 5 moose were shot off from the power lines on Saturday. Found a gut pile with Bailey eating some of it. Shocked her for it, will have to de-worm her for tapes. The whole lower edge of the power lines has some really good cover. Bailey opened a few times but never got anything started. We kept working the edge, and kept finding some good cover. Found an area with really good cover. I told Logan that this is Rabbit Heaven. He asked why, and I started to explain what type of cover rabbits like. Remi started to bark hard and a rabbit ran out of the balsams and out along a blow down. Remi ran it hard. Bailey was a ways out and came in on a dead run barking as she went. She caught up to Remi and together they ran it through a really tight turn and headed back towards us, only to far out to see. They ran it a ways down the edge of the power lines and it made another tight turn back towards us. Long check, about 7-8 minutes. Logan and I made our way up to the edge of the power lines and I found a stump that was cut off about 3 feet off the ground. I stood on it to get an overlook. Two four wheelers came down the power line and drove by us. The first guy didn't see us, but the second did. They stopped and shut their rigs off about 70 yards from us. Wasn't sure what they were doing. Meanwhile the dogs were still quiet and then Remi started barking again. Hot. The two of them were humping the rabbit as they brought it back to me. The rabbit ran right by the guys that were stopped, and continued up the edge of the power line towards me. I got a shot off, missed. Threw another shell into Dad's single shot 20 gauge (break action Savage Model 220B) and got a second shot off. Missed. I jumped off the log and Logan was excited. I told him where we needed to go and I saw it again as we got down in there. I shot again. Hit, but I didn't know it yet, it kept running. The rabbit came right in front of us and stopped, right under the blow down that it ran up when Remi first jumped it. It was only 15 yards out, sitting, and I couldn't get a shot because Logan was standing right in front of me, trying to get a shot too. Except he couldn't exactly see it. The rabbit ran back into where Remi jumped it, I never saw it to get another shot. Called Remi and Bailey in again ("wheee, wheee"). They picked up the scent on the way in and ran it by us and into the brush. Then the squealing ended just as it began. Remi had caught it. I quickly got over to them, could see them but couldn't get to them. They were inside some deep blow down branches. Remi was just laying in there chomping away at the rabbit. Bailey was curious, but not after it like Remi. I had to really work to get in and get the rabbit. The brush was really thick and Remi kept pulling it further from me. I got it out, and Remi was just about jumping up to my shoulder trying to get it. We took some pictures and decided to make our way back to the truck. Quickly talked to the guys on the four wheelers, they were taking down a double seater ladder stand. They shot a cow Saturday morning and were picking up. They commented how the dogs were really pumping as the rabbit ran through. We headed back to the truck, Logan was excited. Bailey started a couple of times on the way out and decided to put them on the lead. Took a couple of pictures up at the truck and headed home, 11:15.
Location: Lowell
Weather Clear
Temperature 22 °F (Start) 43 °F (End)
Dogs: Bailey & Remi
Running Partner: Logan
# of Rabbits Ran: 2
# of Rabbits Shot:1
We did it! We officially have shot the first rabbit in front of the dogs as a pair! No other dogs to help, just mine. What a day. Picked up Logan at 5:30 again. Headed towards Lowell Mountain. Its opening weekend of moose hunting, either sex tags first. Parked in the same log landing as last time, there was already a truck there. In the past I would have got discouraged, and found another place, or headed home. I decided to tough it out. We can share the woods, and the moose hunters can't feel like they own the woods. I've seen that mentality before up near camp. Walked in down low the same way as last week. Bailey started getting excited and ran right down the moose trail. She started to open up as she ran down the trail and I knew it was either a moose or deer. I shocked her (level 5, high) and she stopped and came back to me. Hopefully I can get her broke of other game here soon. We worked our way down to where Bailey ran the rabbit last week. She got a start off from the moose trail on the way down and worked it slowly, sparsely barking as she went. She made her way back up towards the log landing. We went back up to find her, she lost it. Found her and worked both dogs back down into the lower clear cut. Worked the thick "island" in the center, nothing. Went down deeper and found some really nice cover. This whole area is nice running ground. I took the dogs over to a really thick patch of woods and Bailey started to bark. She didn't know it yet, but she kicked up the rabbit and it came right at Logan and me. It stopped about 10 feet from me, and I worked to get Logan over to see it. He finally got the right angle and could see it. I called in the dogs, ("wheeee, wheeee"). Remi was there instantly and the rabbit took off. They ran it together straight up to the log landing, again. They lost it up near the top on the turn, up near the truck. Logan and I walked back up toward the landing and Bailey was deep inside the bigger brush pile of the two. She was barking, but didn't kick anything out. I'm guessing the rabbit went in there, but it seems like odd behavior for a hare, cottontail maybe, but not a hare. We kept moving. Got onto the main ATV trail and headed down in deeper. New territory for me. We flushed up 8 partridge in one group of trees, none of them flew out in front of us. No shot. Found a nice open power line. Started out across it and saw some moose hunters coming up through. They stopped and talked for a bit. 5 moose were shot off from the power lines on Saturday. Found a gut pile with Bailey eating some of it. Shocked her for it, will have to de-worm her for tapes. The whole lower edge of the power lines has some really good cover. Bailey opened a few times but never got anything started. We kept working the edge, and kept finding some good cover. Found an area with really good cover. I told Logan that this is Rabbit Heaven. He asked why, and I started to explain what type of cover rabbits like. Remi started to bark hard and a rabbit ran out of the balsams and out along a blow down. Remi ran it hard. Bailey was a ways out and came in on a dead run barking as she went. She caught up to Remi and together they ran it through a really tight turn and headed back towards us, only to far out to see. They ran it a ways down the edge of the power lines and it made another tight turn back towards us. Long check, about 7-8 minutes. Logan and I made our way up to the edge of the power lines and I found a stump that was cut off about 3 feet off the ground. I stood on it to get an overlook. Two four wheelers came down the power line and drove by us. The first guy didn't see us, but the second did. They stopped and shut their rigs off about 70 yards from us. Wasn't sure what they were doing. Meanwhile the dogs were still quiet and then Remi started barking again. Hot. The two of them were humping the rabbit as they brought it back to me. The rabbit ran right by the guys that were stopped, and continued up the edge of the power line towards me. I got a shot off, missed. Threw another shell into Dad's single shot 20 gauge (break action Savage Model 220B) and got a second shot off. Missed. I jumped off the log and Logan was excited. I told him where we needed to go and I saw it again as we got down in there. I shot again. Hit, but I didn't know it yet, it kept running. The rabbit came right in front of us and stopped, right under the blow down that it ran up when Remi first jumped it. It was only 15 yards out, sitting, and I couldn't get a shot because Logan was standing right in front of me, trying to get a shot too. Except he couldn't exactly see it. The rabbit ran back into where Remi jumped it, I never saw it to get another shot. Called Remi and Bailey in again ("wheee, wheee"). They picked up the scent on the way in and ran it by us and into the brush. Then the squealing ended just as it began. Remi had caught it. I quickly got over to them, could see them but couldn't get to them. They were inside some deep blow down branches. Remi was just laying in there chomping away at the rabbit. Bailey was curious, but not after it like Remi. I had to really work to get in and get the rabbit. The brush was really thick and Remi kept pulling it further from me. I got it out, and Remi was just about jumping up to my shoulder trying to get it. We took some pictures and decided to make our way back to the truck. Quickly talked to the guys on the four wheelers, they were taking down a double seater ladder stand. They shot a cow Saturday morning and were picking up. They commented how the dogs were really pumping as the rabbit ran through. We headed back to the truck, Logan was excited. Bailey started a couple of times on the way out and decided to put them on the lead. Took a couple of pictures up at the truck and headed home, 11:15.
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