John's Journal...

How to Produce a Grand Nite Champion Coon Dog

Day 4: How to Identify the Pups That Can Become Grand Nite Champion Coon Dogs

Editor’s Note: Keith Tate (205-527-1862) has been training coon dogs for 15 years, mainly for Dexter Whatley of Kildare Junction in Cass County, Texas. To produce dogs that have the potential to be Grand Nite Champions, the trainer and the owner of the dogs must have the same philosophy about the dogs that are bought and trained. Even though each man performs a different task, they work in harmony like the defensive coordinator and the offensive coordinator on a professional football team. Tate and Whatley share the same mindset of what’s required to produce a Grand Nite Champion coon hound.

Click for Larger ViewClick for Larger ViewPhillips: Keith, out of a litter of pups that has a Grand Nite Champion daddy and a Grand Nite Champion mother and possibly some Grand Nite Champions farther back in their pedigree, how many Grand Nite Champions do you think you’ll get out of that litter of pups?

Tate: A bluetick female usually will produce six to 10 pups. To make that math easier, let’s say she has 10 pups. I think that three of those 10 pups should be able to make Grand Nite Champions. If you have more than 30 percent of a litter that makes Grand Nite Champions, you’re batting well above average.

Phillips: Keith, for how much will these pups sell?

Tate: At 6- to 8-weeks old, our 10 pups in this litter may sell for $300 to $700 each. Of the three pups in the litter that make Grand Nite Champions, those three pups will sell from $3,500 up to whatever price a man wants to pay for a champion dog. Some of our three dogs may sell for $10,000 or more. Ten is the least amount of hunts that I've had to take a dog to and compete with that dog to help the dog earn the Grand Nite Champion title, and that was a dog named Latch, a female bluetick hound that was extremely fast. She had a great nose to smell a coon track with, and she had the speed of a racehorse. Once Latch put a coon up a tree, she’d come and find me, and I’d follow her back to the tree where she’d left the coon. But in competition, you don’t want a dog to leave the tree. So, I had to solve that problem for her. Dexter Whatley and I owned Latch together. At one time, we could have sold her for $6,000 to $8,000, but I had gotten attached to her, and Dexter let me buy his 49 percent of that dog for $600, which was a bargain.

Click for Larger ViewClick for Larger ViewPhillips: Keith, what advice would you give to a newcomer on how to pick a coon dog puppy?

Tate: First of all, don’t ever get talked into buying a coon dog. People who sell coon hounds will tell potential customers, “This pup has the potential for being one of the greatest coon dogs in the world.” The real secret to buying a good coon dog is to talk to someone else who has puppies out of that same dog, and somebody who knows the breeding of the dog and understands what this female’s pups have produced in the past. Don’t bet on the man who’s trying to sell you a good coon dog. I usually don’t pick pups. I let Dexter Whatley or my wife, Ashley, pick the pups. I couldn’t pick a winner in a one horse race. So, I take the advice of people who’ve picked great pups in the past.

To learn more about all kinds of outdoor subjects, you can find Kindle and print books written by John E. Phillips at www.amazon.com/John-E.-Phillips/e/B001HP7K6O

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About the Author

John Phillips, winner of the 2012 Homer Circle Fishing Award for outstanding fishing writer by the American Sportfishing Association (ASA) and the Professional Outdoor Media Association (POMA), the 2008 Crossbow Communicator of the year and the 2007 Legendary Communicator chosen for induction into the National Fresh Water Hall of Fame, is a freelance writer (over 6,000 magazine articles for about 100 magazines and several thousand newspaper columns published), magazine editor, photographer for print media as well as industry catalogues (over 25,000 photos published), lecturer, outdoor consultant, marketing consultant, book author and daily internet content provider with an overview of the outdoors. Click here for more information and a list of all the books available from John E. Phillips.

Tomorrow: Why Bluetick Hounds for Championship Coon Dogs


Check back each day this week for more about How to Produce a Grand Nite Champion Coon Dog"

Day 1: How to Tell Which Coon Dogs Have Greatness in Their Blood
Day 2: Do Your Research for a Female to Get a Grand Nite Champion
Day 3: Correcting Coon Dogs That Run Off-Game
Day 4: How to Identify the Pups That Can Become Grand Nite Champion Coon Dogs
Day 5: Why Bluetick Hounds for Championship Coon Dogs

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Entry 805, Day 4