OK, so he is doing well and you breed him to a female just like him. Then you raise a pup, and solo it until it is good and breed it. You keep doing this and then, three or four generations later, will every single dog have to be soloed extensively to reach its potential? It sounds like you got the most out of this one dog, but do you want to base a kennel on dogs that need all of that special attention just to learn to jump a rabbit and run decent?Rowco Beagle Kennels wrote:I bought a young LP champion from Crabby a while back. Crabby told me, "he is not ready to win, he needs solo work." I soloed the puddin out of him and he became one of the best jump dogs I ever put down. I sold him to a friend because he had something I really needed. The first trial he went to he won the champions. Crabby knew what he was talking about and we solo as much as we can now or at least couple. Like a lot of you, Johnny and I are hindered by time limitations but we believe in soloing. We run packs of 5 to 10 but we want every dog in the pack to be able to hunt, jump, check, and circle. With out that why run them? Thanks Crabby for steering me in the right direction. Bobby
You said, "I soloed the puddin out of him." Did you consider that it just might be endless hours of running that made him? And deep down, wouldn't you like to know what he would have been like without all of the special treatment? Then you would know if he was worth building a breeding program around.
I have rabbit hunted my whole life and I have never seen a true jump dog that needed to be run by itself to learn to jump a rabbit.
Rowco Beagle Kennels wrote: Thanks Crabby for steering me in the right direction. Bobby

I'm scared to even say anything about this. Look at what he has done to hounddog.
