Monday, April 30, 2012

Hunt #99, April 29


Predawn, at the meet, 6:10am


...we had 2" of rain  the week before, and another nice rain shower overnight.  But by the time hounds moved off at 6:15am, the showers had moved off the coast and a slight ground fog had formed.  It was 45 degrees, with winds to be out of the north. but calm at dawn.  Couldnt ask for more perfect hunting weather!

We had 9 1/2 couple out- Bobby and I emptied our kennels, to make 6 1/2 couple, thrown in with Freddy's 3  couple. Freddy  cast his hounds into the swamp of Georges Branch from the north side, while Bobby and I walked ours in from the south side.  My Sara found the line of the first fox, which ran for a short 35 minutes before going to ground on high ground on the edge of the woods.    A second fox was found, and we had a good chase that lasted for almost 2 hours with this pilot staying in the bottom of the swamp the entire time.  There was a brief split, but we were powerless to do anything about it ( just cant get to the hounds in that quagmire!).  During the split, we listened as the foxes passed each other, travelling in oppostie directions, 3 times. Finally, on the fourth pass, the two packs must have run head-long into each other because they all got together for the last 1/2 hour of the chase, which ended with that fox denning  in a field on the north side of the swamp. (First fox went to ground on the south side).

I was thrilled that Sara was the hound that got the line sorted during the first find- you can see and hear it all on the video.  My internet was down for 2 days, and already the details of the hunt are fading- but the video was uploaded right after the hunt, so everything is accurate on it.



Taken right after the first fox went to ground
It was definitely worth getting up at 3:45 am!  All the puppies did great- well, Rebel got left ( you will hear it on the video, lol!),but my Reilly and Bobby's Raven stayed right with the pack all morning,came right to my horn when I blew, nd jumped into their resp;ective hound trucks readily.  That makes hunt #6 for my Reilly. She's gonna be a good huntin' hound!!!

All the hounds were covered with thick , black swamp mud- when I got home, I let my bitches out into the exercise yard for 2 hours, hoping they would roll around in the grass to clean off.  That mud is still stuck to them!
Violets growingamidst the skunk cabbage in the swamp bottom


Monday, April 16, 2012

Trying to find a fox in the skunk cabbage

Drawing the skunk cabbage in the dried-up swamp @ 6:30am.

...at 6:30 am on April15.  It's so very, very dry. and warm- 59F degrees at the draw in the "swamp"- which isnt much of a swamp these days.  We walked right through the "branch"  and barely got our boots wet.  Not good.

13 1/2 couple out today. Freddys' and Jeffs' hounds joined up with Bobby's, Tommy's and mine.  At 7:10am, freddy's hounds opened on a fox that was viewed crossing the County House Rd.  The rest of our hounds, which had been working the other side of the road, but further west, harked. We got a decent chase going, with surprisingly good hound music in light of the conditions.  Unfortunately, we have a car follower that comes out with his cur dog always along for the ride.   And something happened..... ( watch the video)...which caused the chase to blow up 40 minutes later..  Hounds were loaded and we headed for the only other wet spot around, Georges' Branch, located about 2 miles away.  A  second pilot was found down in this boggy bottom, and hounds ran him well for 45 minutes. 

Since I had scheduled to ride in a fund-raising event  in the afternoon, I departed the hunt at 9 am, without taking part in the second chase. ( No regrets, there!)  I did stick around long enough to get hound music from that chase, also. I only post a few seconds of the hound music from each chase on the video-although I could listen to it for hours,I doubt most folks could!


Most excellent ride on the big guy later in the day, followed by a good dinner, and champagne with dark chocolate and strawberries as I write this and upload the video. Not a bad day!
Curtis brought his 10week old pups out for a ride in his hound truck



Hounds casting themselves after their fox got headed by a car follower. None of the hunters viewed where the fox had gone



Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Easter Monday Hunt

Marilyn, Sara and Reno, trying to recover the line of their fox at the road.

...which didnt happen until we got all the way back to that woods' edge in the background. The fields are just too dry.
...was a tradition on the Eastern Shore for generations of foxhunters. Up until the turn of this centruy , people would come from Pennsylvania, Maryland's western shore, New Jersey, and who knows where else to watch as upwards of 50 couple of hounds would be set loose on the  red fox population of Kent Island, Kent County and surrounding areas. It wasn't unusual to have 30 or more car followers and 15 or more hound trucks watching the combined pack of PennMarydel foxhounds run from just after sun up until the last few hounds gave out.  It was a tough ,but friendly competition, amongst a breed of houndmen that are now virtually  extinct.   Toby Calloway, one of the few remaining,   passed away on Saturday at the age of 94.

I moved here 20 years ago from Pennsylvania, and was fortunate to witness some of these hunts while there was still  enough country to run that many hounds.  But, sadly, Kent Island is now full of condos and marinas and housing developments have surrounded the quaint old towns of Centreville , Chestertown , Easton, et. al.

...And so , our Easter Monday Hunt today consisted of just our regular little pack, diminished in size slightly due to the fact that the winds were to blow upwards of 45 MPH. I left  Marney and Reilly home,after seriously considering   leaving them ALL at home.  I have been doing this huntin' stuff long enough now that I must learn to trust my instincts. Sigh.

The meet was moved up to 7 am, in an attempt to be ahead of the heaviest wind gusts. ( Here on the Shore, the wind usually cranks up  right about 10am- almost always!).  I hemmed and hawed long enough before leaving the farm to make me 10 minutes late. (I called ahead and told them not to wait for my hounds.  In a way, I was hoping that they would find a fox and be running upon my arrival - and I  could just turn out behind them.) 

We have only Tagglers Gate or the County House woods left to hunt this time of year when the wind is blowing this hard. Tagglers Gate in no where near a highway,and therefore, our choice again today. (Holiday traffic going home  from the beaches would most likely be crowding the main  roads).

As I was headed towards Tagglers, and only about a mile from where the others had begun their draw, a HUGE red fox came flying across the road right in front of my truck.   He was exiting some state-owned forestry that is currently being harvested , via a cutover cornfield.  The loggers must begin operations at 7am, and the start-up of their  heavy, HUGE, equipment ( relevant later in this tale) must have flushed  Reynard.   He was running west, straight upwind, and towards the covert where Bobby, Curtis and  Tommy were hunting. I grabbed my radio and tally-ho'd .  They had their hounds on the ground, but had not yet found a fox.  I was instructed to stop and turn my three bitches (Marilyn, Sara and Reno)  out behind the fox.

My mind raced-  Reno and Sara have deep voices, but Marilyn- she's not exactly a squeaker, but she's no basso , either. All of the other hounds would be upwind. Would they even HEAR mine??  On the other hand, the fox was running right towards them - somebody's hounds should hark.

Me: "Bobby, are you sure??!"
He: "YEAH , go ahead. I'll load mine and be right around to you."

I flew out of the truck, dropped the tail gate, and in less than 10 seconds SARA (!!!) , followed by Reno, and then Marilyn, struck the line.  They were off in a flash, running the edge of another cornfield back to an  old cutover woods  their fox had  entered less than 30 seconds ahead.   Being downwind,  I  got a good earful of the music 3 PMD's can make when they are up on top of a hot fox.

Sadly, it didnt last.  I listened as they ran this fox left-handed, moving in a counter-clockwise circle.  I was wishing, at that point, that I had brought all five of my bitches.  Wow- these 3 were really sounding great! That wish  went out the window rather fast, BECAUSE  :  the fox crossed back over the road,  about 100  yards from where he had come over.  I viewed him fly over the blacktop, and  go on into the cornfield on the other side.  He was heading right towards the loggers, and even though that equipment was downwind of me, it was incredibly loud.  I turned my back to it and the fox -my hounds were coming to the road.

WHERE THE HELL IS EVERYBODY???  I radioed to Bobby, not in those exact words. None of the guys could hear my hounds, and they were in the same woods, just upwind. And their hounds weren't harking, which meant they couldn't hear mine , either.  Bobby told me he was still loading his hounds.   I told him he'd never get here in time, and I wanted to hold mine up at the road until more hounds got to me. 
First, he said, "ok".  Then he shouted, "NO, don't break them!  Let 'em  go, we'll get ours right  to ya."

Now, Reynard was crafty,  and he had  put some distance between himself and his pursuers when he ran them through that cutover mess, but he still wasn't more than a minute ahead of them when he crossed the road.  But when my bitches hit the pavement,  they couldn't smell him. The wind was cranking up, and it was only  about 7:25am.  I  tried to help them pick up the scent, and all three were trying, heads down, sterns going like mad.  But the ground was too dry. Scent was gone.  I took them into the cornfield and walked them all the way through it and back to the woods' edge ( another , oh, 200  yards, at least). Encouraging them and trying to talk to Bobby on my cell phone at the same time. ( I didnt grab my radio).

Me:  "They can't find it, I'm gonna load them.... JUMP, RENO. Yoyoyooyyoyo...Marilyn ,Hoick!'
He: " I'm almost there"
Me: " The equipment is making so much noise over here and the wind is howling and it's just too dry....JUMP, RENO!"

....and then:

RENO hollered: "FOUND IT!!!"

Followed in a nano-second by:

MARILYN  and  SARA asserting:  "YEP, HERE IT IS!!"

One of the few times in my  foxhunting life that I have regretted hearing hounds open on a fox.

The little pack of 1 1/2 couple recovered the line at the woods'edge and disappeared into the thicket.  They were headed in the general direction of the logging equipment.   Briefly, they made a swing due south and away from the loggers.  I ran the edge of the woods to try to stay in earshot , while making yet another call on my cell to Bobby.  He informed me that he had arrived at my hound truck in the road, and had his hounds on the ground. Jeez.... we both were  UPWIND.  I was more than 200 yards closer than he, and already I could no longer hear anything.  Wonderful.  A shotgun start  was quickly turning into a mess.

Several minutes passed before I caught sight of his hounds' sterns- they were going to pick up the scent exactly where my bitches had found it: right at the woods' edge.  At that moment, I caught the sound of my girls tonguing - they were going away from me and towards the loggers, and I only caught a brief note.  Bobby's 2 1/2  couple were tonguing now, but they were so far behind that they would never make my hounds.   Great.  We had two small bunches running downwind from us, and perilously close to the moving timber cutters.

[Sidebar: Have you ever seen this logging equipment?? It's  2  stories high, and has a big sign  plastered down the side of it that reads :  STAY BACK 300 FEET.  It sounds as "bad " as it looks. Bad, in the slang sense of the word, that is.]

I, as my Dad used to say, was not a happy camper.  In fact, I was kinda ticked off.  Shoulda, woulda... next time, I will follow my gut instinct. But no time for regrets- I had a situation, and I  had to deal with it.  Once I saw Bobby coming towards the woods, I turned around and began to run back to my truck.  No point in two of us being upwind. And Tommy and Curtis had yet to appear...

For the next hour,  we hunted those hounds. I must have walked/ran  5 miles. I drove around to the downwind side of the covert and walked in from there,blowing my horn and calling. I could hear nothing.
I got back to my truck, and drove around to where the logging trucks exit the woods onto the road, parked and walked in the woods from that side.  I would be upwind, but if I blew my horn, and those hounds were in there, they should  hear me. IF they could hear above the din of the loggers. 

Last fall, I spent  several hours clearing out a boundary trail in that woods for me and my horse. It took the loggers less than that to block it with the crowns  of the cut   trees that they had raped.  But I was able to find my way, climbing over  downed branches thick with pine needles. O, the ticks....

I kept getting closer and closer to that monster machine that plows down the trees and it was moving straight towards me. I was WAY less than the 300 feet that the thing warns one to stay clear, and it was really kind of scary.  For me.  And then it occurred to me,  how scary must it be for these timid foxhounds? I was concerned that a  tree branch could easily fall on one of them.   I kept calling and blowing, and to my relief, turned to see  Marilyn  coming up behind me.  The others had to be somewhere  in here , too.

 Apparently, the foxes had become acccustomed to the loggers'  presence already. There is a well-used earth in the field located only  150 feet from where the  loaded tractor trailers exit the woods, and I had the opportunity to check it as I went by.  There were fresh tracks all over it.  Reynard had chosen to take my hounds through the work area, obviously with hopes of foiling them. He succeeded.

 I kept navigating the blocked trail down to its' end at a"canal", hollering and blowing the entire time.  And, thank the Lord, just as I emerged onto the ditch, I saw all 3 couple of the missing hounds coming to me.  It was a long walk to get them back to a hound truck, and once loaded, I resolved that mine would not be on  the ground again until they got home. It was only 9am, but I knew this was a bad idea from the start,  and I had had enough.

During this search,Tommy and Curtis had decided to move further south and draw the Big Pine woods. Really???  Bobby's and my hounds would never hear theirs to hark, should their hounds find.  Once we got our hounds sorted, Bobby and I went around to see what was happening.  Not much. They viewed a fox.  They tried to put hounds on it. The hounds picked at it for awhile and then the hunt blew up. Gee, no surprise, there.  Winds howling and ground dry as a bone.   It took them awhile to round up their hounds, also.    The hunt was over.  And maybe, if we dont get any rain to speak of soon, this may be it for the season.
                                        Sara, Reno and Marilyn trying to recover the line after the fox crossed back over the road .  Notice how hard they  are panting  already- and they had only been running about 15 minutes

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Hunts # 95 and 96

....were not barn burners, but Friday's hunt, #95, was another "puppy hunt", with 3 of the pups and 4 mentor, older hounds.

We haven't had any rain to speak of in weeks, and everything is dry and crispy. The ground in the fields is like hardpan. Most of the many ditches are almost dry, save for the very wide and deep "canals". You know it's dry when the farmers resort to irrigating the winter wheat!  Pivot irrigation is rarely needed during Spring...

The puppy hunt was a good exercise. A long draw of over 70 minutes finally yielded a luke warm trail that eventually got a bit warmer The older hounds opened seriously at 9:10, and the little pack stayed with their fox through the swamp for 40 minutes. Their pilot, however, was way ahead of them, and when the hounds came to the road, we broke them. It was never going to be a hot chase, and since the hound s were headed into an area where it would be really difficult to get to them, we played it safe and loaded at the road  . We had begun the draw at 8am, and we were done by 10 am. It was enough for the pups, since they would be going out to hunt with the regular pack the next day.


...Saturday, hunt 96:
The cast at 7:30am, after the initial outburst on the cold trail ( pics below), I didnt mess with the camera








The warm spell has ended, and the temps are really where they should be for this time of year .  It was 37 F when 12 1/2 couple were cast into the hedgerow alongside Gallo's field at 7:30 am.

A beautiful full moon was setting in a cloudless sky as I drove to the meet. I always think this portends a slow hunt, and today this proved to be the case. The foxes must have been out carousing all night. Part Time hit a cold line right at the cast, and trailed it into the woods, a distance of a couple of hundred yards. Once in the woods, the hounds picked at this line for a good half hour. Finally, they began to tongue "with some authority" as the locals say (love that expression!), and they ran this red for 40 minutes until it went to ground. Another fox was viewed running Gallos field only minutes later, but by the time we could get hounds forward to the line, scent had evaporated. They could not find it. The view came from a car follower on the road and his description wasn't precise enough , especially with the wind now blowing at 20-30 mph.  The hounds would have to be right on top of the line to smell it.

Hounds were gathered, although we had several scattered throughout the Big Pine Woods,  I headed  to  Fisher's Bridge to get downwind in an attempt to locate  the 6 or 7 still unaccounted for. As I  passed the Big Piine woods, I viewed a fox running the blacktop road  in front of me . He popped back into the Big Pine Woods and about a minute later Tommy's dog, Joe, wandered out into the road not far from where the fox went in. Joe was leaving the covert that the fox had just entered, but about 100 yards away.  I tried to get Joe to find, but he just couldnt smell anything. Once we finally had all hounds loaded, we called it a day.

We need this wind to stop blowing, and we need some serious rain.  The forecast for our Easter Monday hunt:  windy ( 20 -30mph sustained , AGAIN) with 20% humidity - just a carbon copy of the last several days. ( Now THAT is an expression that is totally obsolete, lol!)

PS - all puppies did  very well again.  Reilly went off with the others at the cast and never looked back. And when Bobby emerged from the woods after the one  short chase, she was right with him.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Hunt # 94-with the pups!

Reilly, my puppy,  asking, "are we there yet?"  At least she's used to riding in the truck now- no slobbering anymore!

12 1/2 couple today- including the 2 couple of new entry hunting for their 4th time.  But this is the first hunt where all four pups hunted with all the other hounds. (Tommy's puppy, T-Bone hunted with the regular pack on April 1).

It was 47 degrees at 7:30, but the day was to warm up quickly to a forecast high of 74 ( it is 77 as I write this!). We wanted to get a short, tidy chase in , and be done before 11am.   But with Part Time and Marney out, along with new entry, I was ready for anything and cleared my schedule for the entire afternoon.
I should have more faith in our hounds, because before 10 am, we were seated in the restaurant ordering  our  post -hunt breakfast.

  We chose to go back to Taggler's Gate ( we are losing hunt country   because the farmers are getting into the fields in some places,and they have begun logging a large section of one of the state woods),.  We have found a fox there before that stays close, and runs large loops around the woods that encircle the gate and the dirt lane that leads up to it.  A good fox for our puppies to run, if we are lucky enough to find him.

Hounds were unkennelled at 7:35 and at 7:44, they opened on a nice, big red .   Just before we let the hounds out, we had  viewed about 10 deer leaving  the covert we planned to draw.  The fox must have moved the deer, and he moved out behind them. Our hounds had to trail him up, and it took a good 15 minutes from the time they began to trail until they really began to run. 

All of the puppies packed right up and went with the older hounds.  As soon as I i heard the first few notes of the strike hounds, I ran out of the covert and back to my hound truck.  We wanted to ride this pack tight today, and we had only 3 hound trucks. The wind was coming out of the north, and although it seemed calm, the road we needed to guard closely was upwind and ,therefore, hearing the pack wasn't easy. 

This fox was a road runner- he ran the paved road, which turns into a dirt road,  4 times.  Each time he did this,  the hounds would  check on the road giving Reynard a bigger lead.  At about 9:00,  he made his 3 rd trip down the road, running it about 100 yards.   It was the dirt portion, and we knew that the pack would have a hard time picking up the scent.  It was a good time to pick up the puppies. We positioned ourselves where the fox was viewed when he ducked back into the woods.  In the video , you'll see the hounds running right at the camera- we were all waiting so we could hold up the puppies and get them loaded.  They  had had 75 minutes' running, and the temperatures  were rising quickly. That was all they needed for this time out. All the pups had stayed with the pack, especially during the previous 2 checks in the road. They didnt know what  it was that  they were doing, but they were sure having a ton of fun doing it!!

You'll see the older  hounds having trouble finding  the line-mainly because Bobby mis-judged slightly where he saw the fox pop back into the covert.  But the hounds get it straightened out, and once they recover , the fox made one more big swing around Tagglers gate via the road (again!).  Tommy wanted to let them run, so we did not try to break them.  At 9:20, however,   the pack shut up cold behind the gate. Bobby and I ran the 100yards around the bend to find all the hounds on the edge of a wheat field.  The fox had gotten so far ahead of them by this time, that they just couldnt stay with him.   They were hot hounds, and there had been no water where they could refresh themselves with a drink during the chase. It didnt take much effort on our part to call them out to us.  By 9:30, all hounds were loaded and we were headed for breakfast.


Monday, April 2, 2012

Too windy for the puppies, but not for the foxes!

Our first fox of the morning

Marilyn, doing her job!

... at 5:15am, as I was having my coffee,a sudden noise and shudder rocked the house that lasted about 5-6 seconds.  It sounded like a train, but  it was a single gust of wind. One huge blow that actually shook the windows!  Since the weather forecast showed  20-30 mph  sustained winds already in some local areas, I determinded right then that Reilly would not be hunting today.  A quick phone conference between Tommy,Bobby and I confirmed that all puppies would remain in kennels . Their next time out will have to wait until Wednesday.

All the way to the meet, the sky was dark and ominous and the wind was gusting-so unusual here before sunrise.

A gloomy, windy morning as I sorted hounds
This is at 6:30 am
And  these two  were taken right before sunrise.Looking west here.
..And looking east , here.  A heavy , low bank of clouds!
  However, once we got into the woods for  the first draw and subsquent chase , the wind wasnt much of  a problem.  The fox was jumped by Reno and Sara  (she is feeling much better this week!) at 8:31, and ran for just over an hour before going to ground .  All 12 couple  were on at the hole located on the edge of the woods on the upwind side. But  it was clear as we loaded the hounds that the wind was, indeed, going to be an issue for the rest of the morning.

Our second draw yielded another handsome red  at  about 10:10. This one preferred to run in the open quite a bit, and I missed getting to see two long runs over open fields because I  had guessed incorrectly as to where this fox would head.  Tommy radioed to me that Sara was running second over the open!!!  She's definitely responding to the Doxy treatment for Lyme's. ( And I've got a big bottle on hand, because the ticks are the worst I've seen in a long time, and no doubt I'll be treating another hound or two before the summer is out.) .  At  about 10:45,  as  I was heading towards cry , I almost ran over a mangy fox as he crossed the road in front of me.  Hounds were coming on this one- a tag-team manuever by the quarry had been executed.

By now,  the wind was getting ridiculous.I have video of the hounds running the fox I viewed  as they crossed the road and ran downwind of us across some open cornfields.  But the wind is so deafening that I didnt bother posting it.  At 11 am, we dsecided we would break the pack at the first opportunity, while all hounds were still together.  At 11:10, Bobby and I managed to get into position ahead of the pack- without viewing the fox-and got them stopped. All were on. Phew, thank goodness for that! Looking for a wayward hound in that roaring wind would not be fun.

Yep, no regrets leaving a horse and puppies at home for this one!

This video has some footage of Bobby and my hounds making the find, and our first fox on the move:


The bottom video is just the fox, for those not interested in watching the hounds

Sunday, April 1, 2012

April Fool's Hunt

Tommy's puppy, T-Bone, after the  hunt this morning - one tired pup!
  Today our hunt consisted of a small pack of only 7 1/2 couple, including Tommy's puppy,T-Bone. Bobby could not join us because a  ball game took priority, and when he called me mid-\morning to ask how the hunt went, I could not resist an April Fool's prank:

Our actual hunt:

We began the draw at 7:45am, and it took until 8:35 for the hounds to get their fox to leave the covert where he had been tiptoeing around them for close to an hour. Hounds trailed him around the small covert the entire time.   The  hounds ran this fox well for another hour until their pilot ran a large swing in the open and back to a woods adjacent to a large den at the edge of a field.  I think the fox was attempting a hand-off, but only 2 couple of hounds fell for the ruse. The others continued  to pursue the original  fox.  My hounds and Tommy's pup were with with the larger bunch that  stayed true to the first fox.   (T-Bone had gotten a breather at one point earlier in the chase , when the fox crossed a road and Tommy loaded  the puppy at the road . Later, when the fox crossed another road, Tommy let  T-Bone back out again.)

At about 10:15,  when the fox was making a run over yet another road, headed back to the covert where he had been jumped, all hounds were picked up. ( We are hunting again tomorrow, and I know they were thinking about Bobby's hounds being fresh from a day off! lol!) T-Bone did super! But he was ready to fall asleep only moments after he got back inside the hound truck.

Now, what I told Bobby:

He: "So, how did your hunt go?"
Me: "WOW, SUPER!!!! You Should have BEEN here!!!  Tommy and I brought our puppies  .  We got a hot fox and the puppies were running 4th and 5th - they ran for over 2 hours!!"
He:  "REALly?"
Me: " Yeah, and at  one point, they were even running him  BY SIGHT!!! Ran him by sight right to the hole! They got a really good noseful at the den-Reilly was in up to her butt!  And then... you're not gonna believe this..."
He: " what, what, you took your puppies when i 'm not there, huh."
Me (ignoring his comment):  "THEN,  the fox bolted out another hole in the den and  Tommy's puppy almost ran right into it! He and the fox made eye contact!!"'
HE:  "Damn. " Long silence.... then: "I'm bringing both my pups tomorrow".

It was all I could do not to bust out laughing and fess up that it was an April Fool joke.  But he fell for it, totally.  So as soon as I hung up , I  called Tommy and asked him to go along with  it. 

As far as I know, Bobby still thinks I took Reilly.  I guess his mind was so much on umpiring , that he didnt even realize the date  Tommy and I will get an earful tomorrow, I'm sure.

And I am going to take Reilly, because I know  all of  the other puppies will be there...

Hunt # 91, Saturday, March 31st - aiming for 100!

First, I must own up to something: During the puppy hunt on Thrusday, while waiting for Tommy's hounds to find a fox during the second draw , I had a bit of a mishap.  There were two very large, downed trees ( about 24" diameter oaks-no small pines were they!) laying on the ground. One was laying slightly overtop of the other one.  The bark was stripped, and the trunks were  as smooth and as hard as a baseball bat ( only  an 24" diameter baseball bat!)  Well, as I stood on the top tree, it moved.  My feet went out from under me and I came down on that trunk straddled as if I were sitting on a horse.   And I came down hard. So very, very hard. Very hard.  Did I mention, I hit it HARD??? Holy cow. I jumped up and ,of course, acted like nothing had happened. "Fine, yeah, I'm fine."... No really, I'm ok." .... "I'M OK".  But inside, sheesh, I was seeing stars, lol!  Couldnt barely move by Thursday  night.  Went to bed with an ice pack situated in an area where no one wants to have to put an ice pack....

The next morning, I was surprised that I wasnt as stiff and sore as I thought I would be. But I had no desire to sit a horse...

...and hadnt really planned on taking one today.  But at the last moment, I decided to throw  Rap ( he was the cleanest) on the trailer, loaded the hounds in the back and  pulled my LeChameau rubber riding boots on overtop of my jeans. ....WHAT WAS I THINKING??!!! Clearly, I wasnt thinking at all about the bruises  on my seat bones and surrounding body parts!

Our meet was set for 7:45am, and although it was raining at 5am,  by the time I arrived it had stopped.  The temp was a cool 47 degrees, and the wind was to blow out of the NE ( off the ocean, but the hunt country is about 35 miles inland).  A  damp, but not cold morning.  At least it didnt feel that way to me as I mounted Rap. (But then, I didnt feel much right at that moment because when my seat hit that saddle -those first 5 or 6 trot posts  were torture, lol!!!)  Hounds were in the covert, and I had a big field to cross to get to them.  I just remember thinking as I moved Rap up into a pain-relieving canter, "will I be able to stand this for 3 hours??"   Did I mention that the 20 yo Berney Bros saddle I use on Rap has a flatter, harder seat than the more padded one I use  on Mel?  Had I remembered, I would have been riding a dirty horse, instead.

Hounds got a fox on the run at 8:10am, and as soon as they began to sing, my mind focused on the chase and I forgot about everything else.  (Well, every once in a while, I would  get a reminder of sorts!  Like ,when I had to jump off and get Raps' leg untangled from a vine.  Getting back on, and having to stretch that left leg up to reach the stirrup... holey,moley.)   But,back to the hunt...
13cple  gave this fox a good run for two solid hours.  There were no splits, and no switching of foxes. Everyone had several good views during the chase as this pilot  ran in the open over large expanses of wheatfields and fallow cornfields several times. He was roused in a mess of cutover ( where Rap got himself hung up), and eventually, at 10:30 went to ground.

My Nikon wouldn't record, and I thought I was getting the fox as he ran right to Rap and me, and then later, as he crossed in the open in front of us. Nope, it wasnt there when I uploaded .  But the helmet cam did capture the fox as he ran to us, although he looks small.  And the hounds in full cry.

A fun day, with good hound work. Trying to reach 100 hunts for the season. Last year my hounds went out 108 times, but I dont expect to best that total this season. Hunting again Sunday and Monday- we're gonna try!!

Matriculation into the graduate school of fox hunting complete!

The puppies' entry into the pack could not have gone better on Thursday, March, 29.

We had a small pack of 8 1/2 couple, including 2 couple of new entry. It was already very windy at the first draw, and the gusts were to be in excess of 40mph again by afternoon.

We met at 8:30am, and had hoped to find a fox and put him to ground before 11am.
It almost didn't work out that way because it took 3 casts and 2 hours to find a fox that was above ground!

Finally, at 10:30, a fox was found in Miller's branch.  Bobby's and my hounds were on the ground at the draw, and all of them opened at one time. They must have run right into the fox! Tommy harked his, but not before I got a great view of  the strike hounds as they crossed over a clearing.  Wes had viewed the fox , but I didnt get there in time.  No matter, all I cared about was getting a view of the puppies.

This fox ran for only 20minutes, but he/she covered alot of open copuntry before going to ground in the Little Cole Woods.  Bobby got another view of the hounds a few minutes before the fox went in.  He said that all were on, but Reilly and Raven were last coming across the wheat and  trying as hard as they could to keep up!  Wish I could have seen that!  Bobby was laughing as he described  how hard those two were trying their best  to stay up with the others.

When we got to the woods, all hounds came right to us as we called them away from the hole , and Reilly was the first one to jump into Bobby's hound truck ( again!!). 

The first draws, although blank, were excellent experiences for the puppies.  Reilly went  away from me and went right with Bobby as he made the first draw-that was great.  She wants to hunt!!!

All of the puppies performed well, no problems with any of them.  Now I just wish I had one more bitch from that litter....