Sunday, December 30, 2012

A co-operative fox on a very windy day



Looking east, over my barn at 7:00am. That is a fox weathervane silhouetted against the sky.




..and looking out my drive to the west, also at 7am.

We had 12 couple out again today - but not the same 12 couple as usual. Tommy is away, so his  4 couple are up in kennels until the first week of January.  Bobby is taking GOOD care of them -making sure they are getting plenty to eat so that they will be nice and FAT by the time  Tommy returns.  ;-)

I am estimating the number of hounds- I didnt get a confirmed  total, and I havent had time to count hounds in the video. It seemed to me to be   a few more than 12 cple. Whatever...

It was  33 degrees when we made the draw at 8:10am. The wind was out of the N/NW, already gusting 20mph. The wind advisory was for winds to be sustained at 25-35 mph. all day.

Three foxes were viewed during the draw, and the hounds settled on one ( thank goodness- no splits with the guests' hounds!) that decided to stay pretty close to home today. This fox stayed within one rather small area for the entire chase, making several circles around me .  I barely moved from one position for the duration of the chase ( about an hour and 20 minutes).   Only downside to that was that I was on the edge of the woods and in the wind. ( you can hear it on the video-wow, did it intensify as the morning progressed!) When the fox gained a sizable lead over the pack, we called them off the line.  It was close to 10am.

We relocated to another covert several ;miles away , and hounds were cast into the gravel pit behind Freddy's  farm.  Reno found a fox within 5 minutes of the cast, and the pack was in full cry headed down the branch towards the "party bridge'.  However, Reynard didn't  run the woods long before breaking covert and making a bee-line for a large earth in the middle of a fallow cornfield. The run didn't last more than 15 minutes!  Hounds were gathered and another draw was made , but by this time it was close to 11am and the wind was getting ridiculous.    When Bobby and  Freddy emerged at the party bridge after drawing the entire length of the branch without a strike, we all agreed it was time to load hounds.  The wind was blowing so hard it almost knocked me over.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

4 hours on 4 foxes - December 28

...12 couple met at 8:30am under clearing skies that had dumped over 2 1/2 inches of rain on Boxing Day.  (I dont think any packs on the east coast got out on 12/26.)  

Copious amounts of standing water lay everywhere and  plans to take a horse had to be scrapped.  It would turn out to be a busy day on foot and in the trucks....


We ran 4 foxes in 4 hours.  I am writing this too long afterwards, and the chases are running into one another in my mind.  I recall a long, long run in the open  - on either the first or second pilot- and I was the only one with the hounds to enjoy it.   It was around 10:45 when the best fox of the morning got on the move, however.  This fellow:

must have been visiting  a lady-friend at the pony shed where he was
roused because he left that area in a hurry,taking the pack on a tour of the countryside as he headed south.  He covered an impressive  amount of country in the 90 minutes hounds pressed him.  Twice he threatened to cross Hickman Rd ( a boundary we cant allow hounds to  cross) , and twice the guys were sucessful in heading him back.  But this fellow was determined to get to the Hickman woods ( 2000 acres) and out-foxed  ( pun intended!)  us on his third attempt.  It was now after 12pm, and we had no clue  as to where this fox was headed next.

(I had really hoped to be home by 1pm to keep a 2pm appintment , but that hope  had evaporated when the guys headed this pilot the second time at Hickman rd.  All hounds were on, the fellas knew they couldn't let hounds run on the other side, and yet rather than break them right there at the road, they turned the fox and then let the hounds keep running . Sheesh....)

It was only a matter of time before that fox was going to get across -once a fox decides it wants to go somewhere, it's pretty hard to change his mind!

Diana was looking out for us .   About 15 minutes after they crossed into the Hickman woods, Freddy viewed the fox cross Burrsville road .  He was less than 1/2 mile from busy Rt. 16.  We don't know where that fox was headed next, but there was no discussion this time about what to do with the pack.  I got to Freddy first, grabbed my pistol and ran into the field where he was trying to hold up the hounds alone. Two shots in the air got them stopped . Jeff and Bobby arrived as we were jogging the pack out to the road.  It was12:30, but I  still couldn't make my 2pm appointment- I had cancelled it as soon as that fox got turned the second time, lol!


My camera's battery died as I was trying to capture the hounds as they ran the lane up behind the fox on the video.  I exhausted the memory card, and normally dump minutes of useless footage as the day progresses, but this day was just too  hectic.  So the video here is just a montage of some of the hounds working - and one very beautiful, very cunning fox.


Just the clip of the fox running towards me


And here is the montage :

Monday, December 24, 2012

A Christmas Eve view for you!



From one of our red foxes!  Tommy, Bobby and I met at 8am with 9  couple . Our hope was  to have a nice chase of about an hours' duration before heading off to distribute gifts to our landowners.

At 8:26 Twister bellowed that he had found a likely prospect, and within seconds the entire pack was in full cry. This fox gave us a good run for just shy of an hour before he went to ground not far from where Twister had made his discovery. All hounds were on, and all came readily to our calls.  I missed at least 3 good views of this fox, but  I managed to be in the right place for the best view of the entire chase. 

So, I hope y'all enjoy this video of a very clever red fox and the hounds only seconds behind him. ( I never turned thecamera off, and didnt edit any of the blurry stuff so that you can see exactly what I saw. )
Merry Christmas!

Sunday, December 23, 2012

December 23, 2012 -nice fox 'til he headed towards the highway



It was a chilly 28 degrees when Curtis, Tommy and I met at 8:25 am.  Winds were much calmer than yesterday , and were to blow out of the SW this time at 10-15 mph.  Far better conditions than yesterday! 

We split up- Curtis was going to draw one side of the covert  with his 3 1/2 couple while Tommy and I would come in from the other side with our 6 couple.  Just after Tommy and I unkenneled our hounds, Curtis radioed and tally-ho'd a fox. Tommy and I quickly loaded ours back up ( GOOD HOUNDS!!), and hurried to join up with Curtis' just as they opened on the viewed fox.   It was 8:35am.

This fox ran circles for close to an hour and a half but threatened to break his pattern and run to the highway at around 9:30. But it was a false alarm that left me jittery for the remainder of the run- and justifyably so. (The guys think I panic too soon,lol!)  Because at just about 10am, the fox pointed his mask towards the highway again- and this time he meant to cross.  Charles got turned by a car right at the side of the road, but his scent was swept downwind right into the road. (Tommy viewed the fox going back, but the hounds ran right smack into the roadway. Fortunately, he was right there to stop traffic.) We loaded all the hounds and quit for the day.  (Bobby's hounds werent out today, and we are all hunting tomorrow. None of us want to go up against his fresh hounds with tired ones on a Christmas eve hunt !!)

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Hunt #40 for my hounds - A fox that ran the open in the WIND!


Charles James

Look to the far left- that's Marilyn getting it figured out!!!!
38 degrees at the 8am draw. Winds were forecast to be steady at 25-30mph with gusts up to 50 mph - and the weatherman wasnt lying!

12 1/2 couple of hounds  (my puppy, Reilly is out of heat finally!!)  found their fox at 8:05 in the woods north of High Stump road.  This red tried all morning to slip the hounds by running in the open- downwind, upwind, every which way he could!  After 2  1/2 hours of some impressive hound work, our fox finally resorted to enlisting the aid of a second fox at 10:30.  Perhaps a tag-team manuever had been the foxs'  intention.  Instead, the pack got busted up  and the chase came to a halt in almost the exact same area where Charles had been roused. You can't tell me these foxes don't enjoy this!  We rounded them up ( Lily and Marney decided to hang out in the woods for awhile, lol!) and called it a day. 

The video pretty much sums it all up. 

Another day at Wye Island

Looking east again going onto the Island - the clouds cleared off within a half hour of our first draw. The tide is IN this time!.
...on Wednesday, December 19th. We were blessed with almost the exact same weather as our day here last Friday. But the tide was IN today -high tide was to be at 11am.   This time,  I had my  2 couple of bitches, Bobby had Repo, Rebel, Pearl, and Roscoe and Curtis joined us with his 2 couple: Annie, Hustler, Chase ( new entry wearing the GPS collar) and Jack.

We jumped a fox at about 9:20 ,but he went to ground within 15 minutes.   Our second fox was found about 10minutes later and Tommy D.and I both viewed him run the road for a couple hundred yards before ducking in toward the schoolhouse woods.  Hounds ran him until they lost him  in a water-logged field only 20 minutes later. As hounds were being gathered, Tommy D. viewed yet another fox leave the schoolhouse woods  and run parallel to the dirt road to the Holly tree thicket.  Bobby walked the hounds to the view and you will see Marilyn hit the line.  This fox went in at the Holly tree and hounds either picked his line back up within those thick briars or they jumped yet another one. This fox ran the west side of the road and then  crossed over the dirt lane up at the point of the island - right before the "no-mans land" of private property right at the very point.  Bobby and Curtis drove to the border  in one truck to break the hounds, while I stayed away.  As I waited, Curtis' dad and I viewed 3 more foxes leave the covert.  My bitch Marney, who got spooked when Bobby cracked his whip, disappeared to be heard 15 minutes later running yet another fox.

By now it was almost noon, and we decided to call it aday. (I was feeling sicker with a stomach virus  as the morning progressed - it was not an enjoyable ride today!)


We did hunt Monday, 12/17 . We had 11 1/2couple out, and they ran a fox clear across the Marshy Hope canal ( we watched, helpless, as the hounds swam it) and into a hot-wired enclosure full of hogs,where their fox went to ground in a big woodpile. O-and the landowner had raccoon traps set everywhere.THAT was fun. (NOT!)




Sunday, December 16, 2012

Doesn't get any better than this!!

The short version, showing just one time around:


And the long version,showing 3 times around with subtitles




12 1/2 couple today. 47F on the way to the 8am  meet, 53F  on the way back at 12:30.  Winds variable, but out of the SE, supposedly.( I would argue  that fact with weatherman). Foggy, overcast, with rain in the forecast ( but it never materialized).

It was a less than perfect start-two foxes found during the first couple of hours , but both went to ground within giving the pack  a good run.  Hounds seemed to have trouble finding and staying with scent. By 9:45, I was beginning to think that the day would be a bust.  UNTIL....

Hounds jumped fox # 3 right before 10am.  What a co-operative pilot he proved to be!  He made several large swings around the Buzzard Swamp, and three times he ran the north edge of it down to where Bobby and I were positioned.  He was not shy, and showed himself often.  His image on this video makes up for not being able to capture any of the foxes with my helmet cam at Wye Island on Friday. (but I love the hound work on that video!)

We treated Twister for Lyme's last summer and now he seems like a different dog. He and Sara have taken to palling around together, and apparently , he brings out the best in her! If you havent noticed in the vids, oftentimes of late it is Twister and Sara out in front.  And so it was when our fox made a return run to the Buzzard Swamp after a change in pattern following his third trip along its' edge in my view.  He had busted out of the west side of the covert and made a loop behind the Drummond Girls place before running the powerline cutover and across another fallow cornfield, heading back to the Buzzard Swamp.   Bobby and I got to them as they were crossing  the field, but not in time to stop those front-runners.  Tommy pulled up behind us, and although I was inclined to let the pack roll on and attempt to catch up with Twister and Sara ( who had a sizeable lead) , Tommy , needing to be somewhere in the near future, opted for breaking them.  When I saw how hot the hounds were, and how easy it was to break them, I quickly agreed.    We got them loaded , caught up with that front couple,  and were done at 11:50.

The video shows our fox as he makes at least two rounds past me.  The second time he ducks into the woods after running the edge, hounds over- run it badly- but they did recover the line without losing too much ground. Which is evident when Charles makes his third round past us: the pack is only seconds behind him.  He pulls a fast move  this time by running the edge, then turning east to run across the field in front of us.  But he only goes half way.  He then disappears briefly from our view as he runs along a ditch  bottom, to reappear to us as he makes his way back to the exact same spot where he had entered the woods the previous time around. It was awesome ( I hate using that word, but it truly applies here)  to watch the hounds solve the puzzle, unaided by any human interference.  (We   try not to help them if at all possible and leave  the hounds  to do their job). Its all on there.  ( the video)  :-)

There is alot of video to sift through - so Ill update this blog entry later to include some more.





After our second fox went to ground, Marney ended up in my hound truck.  I snapped these two shots  of Bobby holding her as we get ready to let her hark to the pack as they run fox #3.  I think its great how Marney and Bobby are both intently following the hounds.  They were running  in the covert about 150 yards away, and I wanted to be certain that she would make them, so I made Bobby hold onto her for a few seconds.  Her stern was beating so hard it almost knocked Bobby over!

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Glorious day at Wye Island -December 14, 2012



Arriving, looking at the west side of the Island

..and looking east @ 8:15am

... Wye Island is an island in the Chesapeake Bay, lying just west of the eastern shore of Maryland. It is comprised of  2800 acres, 2,450 of which are managed by the State of Maryland for wildlife conservation. For a short period of two weeks surrounding Christmas, the state opens Wye for foxchasing. . A permit is required and  a limit of only 6 couple of hounds is allowed. Today, Tommy, Bobby and I took 2 couple each.

The weather was superb!!!  A hoar frost, with temps in the high 20'sF, quickly gave way to a bluebird, cloudless sky and a warming , slight breeze  from the SW. It can be brutally cold and windy here in December, but not today! The forecast was for a high of 52 degrees. I had far too many layers of clothes on!


At the meet looking west fom the parking area - a heavy frost still on the ground at 8:30am.


Our first fox was found at 9:05am- only minutes into the draw.The tide was going out-low tide was to be at 11AM-  and Charles took advantage of the re-appearing shore. He stayed to the waterline  for 90 percent of his run and after 50 minutes of this , we broke the pack and struck out to find a more obliging pilot. We had come to see long runs in the open, and this fellow just didnt want to co-operate.( It is noteworthy that Rebel, Bobby's puppy, was credited for recovering the fox's line down along the water early in the chase . You can hear Bobby on the video - just a bit excited about it!)

But our next red  gave the pack a real run for 90 minutes.  Hounds roused him on the opposite side of the island, and although he, too, began his journey hugging the waterline, he didnt stay out of sight for long. 
TommyD., a car follower positioned on the only road through the preserve, had the fox run right into his lap. He had his camera, but he says that he didnt get the pics because he was pointing it right into the sun.( I hope he finds that he is wrong when he goes to look at the images.. .I can always update this blog!)
look who is up front- that "wrong-colored" hound again!




Anyway, this fox crossed the road behind Tommy D. and  Tommy, then made a large swing on that side of the road before crossing back over it.  From there, he pointed his brush eastward and just ... kept... going!!!
He did choose to run the shore again on that side for  15 minutes ( I know this because I mistakenly left the helmet cam on for the entire time)  after which he then hit high ground behind the Lodge, ran down the Lodge lane, behind  the parking area and my horse trailer, and then struck out across that field that had the frost on it earlier.(see picture above).  And me with no memory left in the camera...Maybe Tommy D. caught it with his.

Our fox kept on going right back to where this second chase had originated.. When the little pack  checked back down along the water, we called them in. It was 11:35. Time for lunch!  And if it's Wye Island, then lunch must be:

Muffeletta!!

The principals discussing the mornings' events  over lunch
the video wont load completely on you tube-

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Monday andWednesday hunts-December 10 and December 12

Monday: Not one of our better days!  11couple (mine, Tommy's,Bobby's and Curtis') did find a fox in the County House woods at about 8:30.Hounds ran him east towards the Dead End Road, where Tommy D.( car follower)was watching the field on the east side of that dirt road. I was the first one to get to Tommy D, and I arrived just as a HUGE buck broke covert from where the pack was singing, crossed Dead End road , and ran the field about 100 yards before disappearing into Webber's woods. He had a most beautiful rack.  And it was he who was most likely responsible for these fresh marks:

                         ( This was during the draw - we saw lots of places where the buck  had been  rubbing)

I  was trying to get a pic of his rack, but I saw the hounds coming!!
Seconds later, some very young, very NEW , entry broke covert behind the buck . They were running him by sight across that field, dragging most of the pack with them. The front pups were almost to the woods when I hollered and cracked my whip, while the rest of the hounds were strung out across the field.  All of them came right back- which made me certain that there was no fox running ahead of that buck.  One couple had stayed with the  fox -Part-Time and I forget who else now (it was, afterall, MONDAY, lol!).  But I had my hands full trying to load all of the hounds into my hound truck alone. And by the time everyone else showed up, that fox had gotten way ahead of Party.

I am betting that the pack was on the fox  ( he turned north) when the buck must have run right smack into them.  The pups took the bait, and the others followed! Our first , albeit short-lived , deer chase this season.. 

We regrouped and another fox got on the run on the far west side of the covert. Tommy D. viewed him first, and then I viewed him on a long run in the open  as he was on his way - in a BIG hurry- across Baker Rd headed towards the Skinny woods.(Which is only a stones' throw from the outskirts of  the town of Denton!)   Hounds were held up before they got to Skinny's.  We had all of the hounds save for old Roscoe,and it took us a good 1/2 hour to locate the old boy -he was at Douggie 's house, getting  fed a snack from Douggie! We called it quits for the day.

Now TODAY (Wednesday) -today was a whole 'nother animal! We had 9 couple- Tommy brought 7, Bobby brought 7, and I brought 4 ( my puppy is still in heat-which is a  kind of  roundabout way of stating that it wasnt my pup on that buck on Monday , lol)

We had no other help, the wind was out of the dastardly NE, and we were planning on drawing the Walston woods for the first time this season. It isn't but a stones' throw to the DE state line, and this week it is Delaware firearm season for deer. However, that cold, biting NE wind proved to be in our favor as our pilot today ran with the wind and away from the state line.

Because we were  short on sets of eyes and ears, Tommy walked his hounds into the point of the covert while Bobby and I waited to hark ours. This way, we both would be close to our hound trucks in case we had to get somewhere in a hurry.  Tommy hadnt even gotten into the woods when Twister bellowed and the others honored.  The time was 8:03!  Tommy had but a couple of  hundred feet to walk to get back to his truck, and Bobbys and my hounds had the same short distance to hark. Could NOT have asked for an easier, safer start to the morning!

This red ran west through the woods, then broke covert out the north side to cross a huge expanse of wheat  as he set his sights for the goose pond. No one viewed him cross, but I did get to the middle of that field ( on an irrigation lane) in time to see the hounds as they ran him BACK over to the covert where he had been found.  After a couple of  long rounds in the Walston woods , Tommy viewed Charles as he broke covert on the south side, crossing a paved road to  continue  over a power line cutover and on into  Johnny-boy's thicket.   Once our fox arrived on the south side of the power lines, he spent the remainder of the chase there. But he had company- lots and lots of company.  Our pack split evenly- 4 1/2 couple on one red, and 4 1/2 on another.  But I viewed ( and they are on the video)  3 foxes cross a watery path within seconds of each other - 2 were running together- so I cant say when the split occurred. I viewed a large, light colored fox, and two smaller foxes.  Later, I viewed a large, light colored fox twice- but I dont know if it was the same one I had seen cross the path earlier.  What I can say for certain is that the LAST fox being persued was yet another red that had a slightly itchy tail.

There were too many foxes,and so very much water!!! Which played to the quarry's advantage. But it sure made for an interesting  chase. We broke the last  4 1/2 couple off that itchy-tailed fox at about 10:30. O-and many deer were viewed leaving this covert during our chase, but not a single hound was naughty!   A fun day, with no worries!

Monday, December 10, 2012

A road-running red, but Reno stayed with him

46 degrees,and raining hard when I arrived at the meet . Bobby had called me at 7:45 to    inform me that they had just viewed a fox leaving Johnny Boy's thicket and they were going to turn out on him. I was only ten minutes away,with my horse and 3 of my 5 hounds on board.

The rain abated just as I was unloading the trailer.  I had a short hack to get to the covert where hounds were running. My hounds harked and moments later the fox ran a dirt road , without anyone viewing him.   The pack hit the road and made a check- one of several times this fox pulled this manuever, and on more than one dirt road. It was Reno who recovered the line - and it was she who did so everytime the fox pulled this stunt!!  But all of the hounds did super- we had 5 deer run in front of them in the woods and then pop out  across the road, but hounds stayed true to the fox' line. It's on the video-a long video,but if you love watching hounds work, you will like it!

At about 8:45, our fox made a break across a paved road to head into Ringolds Green, where he made several swings before crossing another paved road on his way to the Clay Swamp.  We had to hold hounds up at that road  at 9:10 am because we didnt want them getting  into Clay Swamp.  It was a fast chase and the weather conditions were not improving so we decided to call it a day.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

SARA - draggin' the pack in the open!




Our accomodating pilot

Sara running first!

Today was hunt # 32 for my hounds. Bobby 's have been out 38 times. I am one hunt behind  my last years' pace, but since I lost Lark I am more discriminating as to where I take my bitches.

11 couple met at 8am, and Twister found the mornings' pilot - another healthy red fox- at 8:14.It was cold -26 degrees at 7:15am  -more like it should be this time of year. A stiff breeze of 10-15 mph out of the N N/W made it feel colder.  But the chase that ensued over then next 94 minutes kept  us all heated up!

Our fox made several long runs in the open and also crossed the  road 4 times.   When he made his first long open run,I was looking into the sun and  THOUGHT I had the entire run on video. But, alas, when I later looked in the memory, it wasnt there.  I guess I didnt have the camera on when I thought I did!  But the footage of  the pack (with Sara running up front )across the huge open field  was taken about a minute later.  They were not far behind Charles today!

I did get Charles when he stopped in the middle of the road to look at us during one of his crossings.  Later on in the chase, just as he was trying to come back over that road in the same exact spot where he had gone over, a passing vehicle literally almost ran into him -the driver didnt stop!  (Glad it wasnt hounds crossing at the time!)  You will see on the video the hounds come into the road and Bobby and I are there to make sure they get the line sorted out. .  Notice that MARNEY was in front here, and also when they followed the fox over that road earlier!!!  I love how she keeps her nose to the line while the others get lifted to Bobby's hark. By this time,Sara was out of gas,and you will hear me break her- she didnt take much convincing,lol.  For a hound that supposedly has a bad heart and  should have been put down 3 years ago, she does ok .

This chase ended when Charles popped into a hole in the middle of a wheat field at about 9:50am. All wereon( save for Sara,who was already sound asleep in my truck!)

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Woohoo! A fast running red fox this morning

...Bobby and Curtis hunted yesterday ( 12/03/12), while Tommy and I did not. Today.we had 9 1/2cple -some of Curtis', Bobby's, Tommy's and mine. I left Sara home to keep Reilly (in heat)  company.

We jumped the fox at 8:03 and  hounds ran him HARD for the next hour before he went to ground behind some grain tanks. But this fox covered an incredible amount of country in that hours' time!

My Marney was right up front  (again!!), as was old Reno at times.  

The video tells the story of the first half hour.  After that, we all had to split up to stay with the pack, and I ended up guarding an upwind road and   never got close to them again.  But Curtis' dad  viewed the fox 3 times in that second half hour!



The fox running through the farmyard


On the far left is Twister, the sire of the new entry, and in front of him is Reno, their mother! these are the front hounds!!!

 

..And right behind them is my Marilyn -the black-backed hound with the pink collar. .(Since I am the only female that hunts with this  group, I put pink collars on my hounds!)  O!And that is Marney'sbrown head right bvehind Marilyn. All of my hounds ( I left two at home) up front!!!!
  Since it was going to warm up quickly to a record 73 degrees, we did not try to find another fox. Hounds will rest tomorrow, and then hunt again on Thursday.




Sunday, December 2, 2012

December 2, 2012





14 couple, foggy , damp and chilly all morning. (sun never broke out until after  noon).  We had lotsa foxes, but too tired too write-the video with its subtitles are a pretty good synposis of the hunt.

Mel held up for 3 hrs, not bad considering I havent been on him since the last time I hunted him. Good boy -he was the first to view our last fox, and had I not followed his gaze, I would have missed getting Charles on the video...and we might not have had our last chase of the day.



R.I.P.Emmett
4/12/1999-12/02/2012


Saturday, December 1, 2012

Heavy fog and too many curs




...made for a frustrating morning !  We waited until 9:35 to turn out, with heavy fog still in the area.  Hounds were cast into the woods on the west side of Foxhunters' rd but within minutes some hounds opened behind us at the road.   I got to them first, and saw 2 of mine and several of Tommy's and Freddy's trail across the road to the east side.  The other hounds harked, and by 9:50,we had our fox on the run.

Charles ran the east side of the road for about 10minutes, then crossed back over to the clubhouse side, but not before being turned by a fork-lift truck  that was busy moving trees in the field  ( yeah- on a Saturday morning in heavy fog. sheesh) .Mr.Fred and I viewed the fox  cross the road , but I jerked the camera and missed getting him!  Charles crossed behind 3 deer-which you can see on the video.  All hounds were on the fox, and a nice chase commenced  that was to be ruined  only 1/2 hour later when our pilot was again turned - TWICE-by 3 cur dogs trying to hark to our pack..   By the time we got our hounds sorted from the other groups hounds, it was warming up quickly. We opted to quit , since we will hunt again tomorrow.

I went home and spent a fun  afternoon with a redhead. ;-)

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Another fox runs right into me




... at 8:10 we cast our 12 1/2 couple into the woods, and at 8:16 hounds opened on a line , but it was quickly determined to be" the back foot" ( heel).  Hounds got turned around and were running right by 8:22.
I hurried out of the covert and to the road just in time to view a  very small, very dark red fox cross High Stump Rd, but on the far end of the covert from where I was positioned.

I tally-hoed to the fellas still in the woods, and proceeded to move down the road so as to get a closer look at the hounds as they crossed.  I usually stop too far away, and today was no exception. However, as I stood listening as the pack approached,  I  was stunned to see another, lighter-colored fox moving right towards me. He was coming from the same section of woods  the first one did, but he was going to cross the road much closer to me.    I tried to get the camera to focus, but it couldnt capture this fox as he was attempting to emerge onto the blacktop EXACTLY where I was standing.   If you watch the video carefully, I cue where to look- the fox is VERY close, and you can see him turn his back to me and run. It just isnt in focus.  

Before I had the run-in with the second fox, I saw two hounds emerge on the line of the first one, and assumed they had the foxs' line ahead of the other hounds.  But as soon as the second fox ran into me, I looked up to see the rest of the pack running to me .  I managed to get the camera focused on them, and it just kept roling while I turned the pack around and got them settled back on fox # 2's line.   The other two hounds on fox # 1 harked back to the pack at this time, also.  We now had all on, and a nice chased ensued with much running in the open, until Charles decided to run towards the Marshy Hope canal.  We had to break the pack before they got there, as we didnt want them swimming across the canal. It was about 9:35 when we broke them.

We made another draw and got another red on the move, but he ran straight to a hole,staying up for only 15 minutes. It was now about 10:30, the wind was gusting pretty hard out of the N/NW, and it still felt cold! We went home,to give the hounds two days' rest.  They will hunt again Saturday and Sunday.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

'Monday - only 10 couple today


I got to sleep in a half hour later - hounds were cast @ 8am into a frosty wood next to the Dry Cow Lot.  A fox was found at 8:14, but he ran for a short 10 minutes before ducking into a hole.  Hounds were gathered and the draw continued in the same covert.  At 8: 47, the pack opened on another red that gave them a slightly longer, but still short chase of about  45minutes duration.  He left the woods after running it behind the red barn field for the first 15minutes and then crossed High Stump Rd to head over a large tax ditch and on into the state forest. We viewed him, counted hounds as they followed, and then tried to stay with them as best we could with a variable  S/SW wind making  it difficult to hear. (But  it was much less windy and  not as cold as the previous two mornings!)

Bobby and I got behind Wyatt's chicken houses where we could hear them running  and about 5 minutes' later, they shut up cold.  Our fox had gone in just after 9:30. As hounds were coming to our  horns ( mine and Tommy has a cow horn handed down to him from his dad), a gray cat jumped out of the wheel well of an old truck parked right where they were emerging from the woods.  Some green-collared hounds had a short-lived chase on what looked to me like a very pregnant  cat!  We stopped them, and as far as I could tell, the cat escaped with all 9 lives ( plus whatever).

All were on save for Olin's Annie , and she was later  found  back in the covert where the fox was roused, probably headed back to where she was turned out.

Tommy drew the woods behind Wyatt's, but it was blank , so we called it  day .  Hounds need a rest!!!

Sunday, November 25, 2012

130 (added wrong the first time!) Minute Run -Sunday, November 25th

a frame from the video


                                    (Date on the video is incorrect-this was 11/25/12)

...and I was careful not to erase any video this time, lol!  My camera battery threatened to die but it lasted long enough to get our fox running in the open.

It was cold!!! And still  windy - 29 F degrees at 6:45 as I passed the firehouse thermometer on my way to the meet. . Winds were to be steady out of the W/SW at 14mph, with gusts above 22mph.

Today was a Sunday deer hunt in Maryland, (wtf?? dont they have enough days already??) so we had to stay away and go back to the  foxhunter's clubhouse in Delaware again.  In the past, we have only hunted from the clubhouse but 3 or 4 times a season. However, the foxes we have chased here the past two days  have been so accomodating that we may have to come back more often....

15 1/2 couple put into the woods in the same area where we started yesterday @ 7:45am. . It took longer to find a fox - 5 minutes instead of 3, lol. The pack was in full cry @ 7:50am.  (NOTE: We do NOT  drop foxes or feed foxes here- no cheating is necessary .  We have too  good of a fox population here to need to resort to those practices, and the many commercial chicken houses keep them well fed.)

Can't say if this was the same fox we chased yesterday or not-but the pattern today's quarry followed was very similar to the one of yesterday. So- read yesterday's hunt report, it will save me a lot of typing, lol! And I also  cant say for certain if we had a tag-team switch again, but I tend to think so, as hounds had one of their two  checks in the exact same spot as yesterday and again, after that check, the fox changed his pattern and wound circles in the cut-over pines.  Charles crossed Foxhunter's Rd many times again before he decided to stay in those pines.  During one crossing, an old lady in a car would not stop as we tried to wave  her down, and she was right on the foxs' line as hounds flew into the road.  I thought for sure we were about to lose the front hounds. And she did just miss hitting Patty, Tommy's bitch.  What a sick feeling that was.  But, all got across the road alive, and the old biddy smiled and waved as she drove off. I guess she just didnt have a clue as to why we were waving and shouting at her to stop!

               The fox crossed  here several times- 3 or 4, and it was here that the lady almost ran over Patty. But this video was a later crossing.

One fallow cornfield   was recently  fertilized with chicken manure, and you will see on the video how the pack had trouble working the line in the open across it.  Charles had done a very strange zig-zagging  manuever in the middle of this field , to boot ( I didnt view him as I was watching the covert on the north side) , but Freddy viewed his antics. The foxs' plan worked, and you can see Bobby having to help  get the pack straight.

But when Charles crossed the field near the Doc's, earlier in the chase ,  you will see hounds had no trouble running him there -no chicken manure in that field!

At about 9:20, something happened in the back of that manure-covered field to cause the pack to split. 6 couple were tonguing in the back of the field, while the others had gone on into the cutover pines.  We held those 6 cple up and at 10:10 broke the others in the pines.


All the new entry did super, but Reilly will be staying up in kennels tomorrow, as she came out of the pines on 3 legs. Sara can stay home and keep her company.
6:35 am. "Red sky at morning...."

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Hunt from the Foxhunters Clubhouse, November 24, 2012

A cold front began to blow over DelMarVa at precisely 2:30 am this morning.I know this because the initial gust blew through my open window and shook the house.

Yesterday, I  wore only a light sweatshirt as I rode horses; it was warm (68), sunny and no wind.This morning, it was 36 degrees when we drew the woods northwest of the clubhouse at 7:30am with 12 1/2 couple. The wind was steady out of the N/NW@ 16mph,with gusts up to 25mph, and the forecast was for the gusts to only  increase throughout the day.

 It took but 3 minutes for one of Jim's hounds to open, and only seconds for the entire pack to honor. Our  first fox was on the move at 7:33am!

And boy,did he ever move!  This red bolted right out of the woods on the north side, crossed a fallow field on a long diagonal run of at least a 1/4 mile, pointing his mask toward the opposite side of  Foxhunters Rd.
I viewed the fox, but he was moving so fast i couldnt get my camera out in time.  The hounds were pressing him,less than 30 seconds behind. It was  just enough time for me  to whip out the camera and take some video as the entire pack crossed over the green field. Lovely, it was. Jim's hounds on top.  He was SO wanting to see it on video. As were we all....but I digress...

Our fleet fox flew! Behind some chicken houses he went , then across another hard road toward "the Doc's" .  A quick loop in the woods there,and then back over the road at the chicken houses. He circumnavigated the woods behind same for about 15 minutes, and then darted back across Foxhunter's rd to enter the woods where he had been found . Next, he headed in the opposite direction- threatening to crossa yet another road to the northwest, as if he might go to the Massey woods. (Cant let the hounds get there).

Fortunately for us,  he turned back , running the wood's edge to re-enter the same covert where he had been roused.

 And then, he proceeded to repeat the exact pattern a second time.  When he made his return leg on this second loop, he handed the pack off to a fresh red waiting in that same covert where we started the morning. The time was about 8:35.

  The second fox ran an entirely different pattern, winding round and round the cutover pines behind the Clubhouse, forcing the pack to work hard as they had to pick their way through heavy cutover and bramble. This one  didnt stay up for very long -hounds marked him at 9:10. All hounds were on, with Marney and Repo being last to leave the hole.

By 9:30, we were on our way to get some hot coffee and breakfast.

O- and all that lovely footage of the pack? I accidentally erased it when I tried to free up some memory.  I have the find on the first fox, and the cry as they put the second fox in. Everything in -between:  POOF! Gone.

Hunting the clubhouse again tomorrow, since it is the Opening weekend for Deer firearm in Maryland. ( The clubhouse is in Delaware!)

Friday, November 23, 2012

Black Friday hunt - #24 for my hounds

...this will be short, since we are hunting tomorrow and Sunday and I need sleep.

Heavy, heavy fog-the heaviest I've seen  in a long time -hung over most of DelMarVa this morning. It was 32 degrees at my farm ( ice coated my metal gates), but about 36  at 7:15am when I arrived at the meet.  We waited for the sun to rise higher , expecting it to burn off the mist quickly, but that never happened until we were loading the hounds after their  fox went to ground at  9:30!


We put 19 couple into the woods behind Stevie Leeks house at 8am, and by 8:05 they were trailing up thier pilot.  At about 8:10, they got this red on the move,and I got this pic just as they were getting hot:

This fox covered a lot of country in the next hour and a half, crossing Burrsville Rd 4 times.I viewed him cross twice, and he was FLYING.  The second time I was able to be at the road as hounds crossed,  there were two hounds who had the line way ahead of the others. I held those two up in the field alongside the road until the main pack caught up, and then held my breath again as they all flew across the pavement to continue their pursuit of  one very quick and very crafty fox.


Hounds crossing the third time, the fog actually got worse as the chase progressed


Tail hounds, after crossing the road the first time.  I got there just in time!!

It was nerve-wracking.  The heavy fog kept cry muffled, and keeping track of the pack was a challenge.  Thankfully, every time the pack crossed the road someone was with them, and everyone stayed safe.
I was so relieved to see all of my hounds, and all of Bobby's , walk out from the hole.  Marney must be over her silliness from being kept up for three weeks, as she was RIGHT THERE! And  my puppy, Reilly, what a great bitch she is turning out to be!