Uma historia a ler (em inglês e com fotos)

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CindelP
Membro Veterano
Mensagens: 2892
Registado: segunda jan 01, 2001 12:00 am
Contacto:

sexta ago 22, 2003 3:50 pm

Cada vez mais, hoje em dia, o cão é encarado apenas como um cão de companhia, afastando-se a passos largos da sua verdadeira função e perdendo toda a sua original capacidade de trabalho.
Paralelamente, os donos dos petzinhos condenam e muito quem ainda usa os cães no trabalho, especialmente quando este pode ser fatal para os bicharocos. É o caso do Dogo argentino. Aqui fica uma historia, contada por Marcelo Fernandez (aka dogoman), canil Calfucurá

"I am arriving to Neuquen; it’s Thursday night. Weather is nice for this time of the year; actually quite warm (in the 50’s). My dear friend Ricardo picks me up at the airport and we head down the supermarket, where we buy all we will need for the next 4 days, and then some. We always like to leave Luis’s storage full; it’s hard for him to go shopping, so to speak.
After doing the groceries, we head down to the nearby small town of Allen, where Ricardo and Leo live. Actually, less than 20 blocks away from where the immortal (literally; he is almost 80 and still going strong) Amadeo Bilo lives.

Ricardo’s place is as warm and cozy as always. His sweet wife Veronica is waiting for us with some great home-made cooking, and Ricardo’s daughters (3-year old twins Trinidad and Valentina, and the smaller midget, Juliana) are as sweet and rambunctios as ever. I always feel at home here, and the kids make me remember my Sophie, who according to my wife is already asking for me. Leo comes, and we crack open a bottle of Domingo Molina Malbec 2000. Strong, spirited; a rich, full-flavored red wine which lights our spirits for the upcoming hunt. Doesn’t last long, unfortunately, but helps to start getting into the appropriate climate.

Leo leaves after dinner; I stay and sleep at Ricardo’s. In the morning, we jump into the truck and go to Ricardo’s fruit farm; 150 acres of good land full of apple, pear, and peach plantations. We pick some of the dogs we are taking: Lihuel, Antu, Pial, Tigre Viejo, Tigrero, Fiel…most of these are veterans, some running over the 10-year old mark. Pial is a younger Dogo we sent down with Victor. Small dogo (son of Bombon, but unusually small); maybe 80 lbs, but a grip like a vise. Luis is waiting for us with his usual stuff (Charly, Allen, Jingo, Rusa, etc, etc), and some of the new blood which has been added: Candunga, Mate, Falucho, Flaco. Flaco is still recovering from a hunt in which he lost a 8x5 skin-losange from his right hand; muscle showing itself. The dogs are supposed to be young but proven hunters (and they DO are), but how will they blend with the rest, is still an enigma. Luis has done some hunting with them but at night; but in order to see how each of them works as a pack member he needs to take them out during the day in horse-hunts. That way he can see the whole package.

We finish our duties at Ricardo’s farm (which included some tinkering with the irrigation pump and system), and we finally head east, towards Choele Choel and Luis’s place. We have decided not to bring the boat; the island where the monsters were had been treaded and “dogged” only a few days ago by my friends; 1 hog was killed and another wounded, so the chances of the third being still there seem to be slim.

After and uneventful 3.5 hours ride, we reached Luis’s place. We embraced with the same sincere affection we always do and feel for each other; Guido, another friend and excellent hunter is also there. There is another guy I didn’t know, whom we call Quitino…turned out to be quite a character later on. Great, funny guy.

We download the dogs and chain them to different trees. They look good…actually, “too good” to me. Not as skinny as they always are. Not in “pet-weight”, of course; much leaner than that. Yet, I’ve seen them leaner. I take a look at the new dogs; they look good. Both Mate and Falucho are strong dogs with powerful heads and jaws. If they have the adequate grit, they will make good fighting and catching dogos. Regarding how they do the rest (scenting, tracking, running down)…that remains to be seen. There is also a nice 5-monther with a strong head, heavy bones and clear almond eyes…reminds us of Allen a lot. And Flaco…he is also a mystery as to how he will adapt to this pack…a mystery that will soon be developed.

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We have dinner, plus the regular chat, jokes and stories. We update each other on the events occurred since our last hunt. Time ceases to run and be considered in the usual manner; it just dissolves into the twilight zone. It’s just day and night, like everytime we get together.

Soon we are packing. It’s late at night and we start gearing up. We choose the dogs; a mixed pack. Several new ones plus some vets like Lihuel and Antu. It is interesting to see the way these latter dogs have evolved with age (they are around 10 or 11 years old). They have never lost the grit or the joy of hunting. They do work differently, though. They are now almost never the first ones to jump-off the truck; and they definitely are no longer the last ones to come back on a failed attempt. They will jump after scenting and will disappear in the brush, but will come back sooner and wait to try to hear if any of the other dogs catch. If they do, they will shoot again. It’s like they have lost some of the edge, the fury, the willingness to scent and track miles away, leaving that task for the new “tender feet”. Allen, on the other hand, is a non-stop working machine. We go out, hours pass….3, 5, 7 hours scenting from the truckbed, several misses…yet, I look at the rearview mirror, and I always see Allen’s head, nose-up, face against the wind, scenting frantically, as if he had just began. Speaking of the wind, btw….what a hellish night. Strong crossing wind plus whirling gusts; a curse for the dogs and ourselves. Too strong a wind means scenting from miles away when facing up-wind, and the dogs will jump from the truck trying to catch a hog that could be very far away. And you can forget about hogs down-wind; even if they are 100 yards from the dogs, they will just not scent them. Hogs are sooo smart…sometimes the dogs will scent them and jump from the truck and the first thing the hog will do is run across full speed, trying to place itself down-wind with regards to the dogs. They can even cross the path we are standing in, wires and all, 30 feet away from us, and we can feel all the frustration in the world buidling-up while we hear the dogs trashing the vegetation in their frantic search, scenting up-wind.

Anyway, a less than ideal situation. Very strong wind, a mixed pack untested as such…hours pass by, vain intents piling-up one after another.

Suddenly, for the nth time, the dogs scent and jump off the moving vehicle. We stop, and so does the other truck (we are 6 hunters deployed in 2 different trucks, although the pack goes in one of them). They shoot like bullets in a Y race; entering the brush to the back and the left of our position some, while a few others go to the left and front. Not great, but not as bad as it could have been given the fact that the other truck is 200 yards ahead of us; they can take care of what happens with the dogs that go upwards The wind is coming full force from the left, and the pack has split. Luis, Ricardo and I start walking backwards and then stop to listen. We hear a deaf bark, the type our dogs give just the moment before catching, and a loud grunt. We start running but before we can cover 200 yards in the brush, we hear a dog’s yelp. Then we see Charly, a fast crossbred, coming and suddenly dropping to his side. We go look at him and we find evidence of a heavy hit on the low belly region, near the testicles. Not a cut, but is seems to hurt a lot when we touch it. Charly almost doesn’t want to get up. We shout some commands and he does get up, limping. We take him back to the truck. It is clear he has been hit pretty hard, although the damage will only be totally evident in a few hours. Being as it is that there is no cut, we can speculate that he could have been hit by a round-tusker, those big boars with tusks which are so long that after they curve to the inside they can no longer cut with them, but instead, hit.
The rest of the dogs come back, empty. It is clear that whatever Charly tried to tackle, he was on his own, and he received a nice dose of sour medicine. We started thinking the pack wasn’t working so well, after all. I mean, Charly is faster than the rest and we know it, but he is also tough and has a long history of catches, even alone. The fact that no dog was able to be there when he tried for the catch doesn’t look good. It is only later, when we gather with the boys from the other truck, that we learn that the rest of the pack (those that had gone front and left) had followed another hog, and that was ther reason Charly was alone.

It is late (or early, depending on how you look at it); about 7:00 am. It will soon be dawn, and we have been hunting for the last 8 hours, with the dogs making many runs due to the wind and it’s tantrums. We decide to go back home.
When we reach Luis’s place, the sun is coming out. Now we take a better look at Charly, and we see a huge lump, a big swelling forming around and near his testicles and penis. We give him some pain killers and 1 cc of dexamethasone, IM. A few hours afterwards the swelling will be much better, but we won’t know it till then. Time to get some sleep now, after a long, tiresome and difficult night. Hey, this is hunting, and we know it: If we could bring the bacon home 100% of the times, it wouldn’t be that fun. We would soon have a chance for revenge, although it wouldn’t turn out as expected either....

That Saturday, after our fruitless previous night, we slept till noon, and after a great meal prepared by Leo, we took an additional nap, not before I did the dishes, btw. Good thing my wife is not here to see this…she might start getting some wrong ideas…;-). Sleep was essential since we wanted to be fresh for what we thought would be a long night’s hunt.
The day before we arrived, Luis had released the horses into open land, so they could grass on richer pastures. Although “pasture” is not a word that can apply to Patagonia, I should say. Winter is hard in this region, and though this has been an unusually rainy one, tender grass is still not abundant. Luis has half a dozen horses, which are now grazing somewhere else. Only his own is right here at his place. He will gather them on Sunday, thinking of a possible horse-hunt that will finally not take place this time.

At night, we are off again. Some changes in the pack: Luis has added some dogs of his own: Jingo, Rusa, and Allen. Allen is such an extraordinary dog and works in such a manner that it is difficult for me to describe it, more so being English a foreign language for me. A 3.5 year-old son of the late Lanin, Allen is currently Luis’s top dog. It was given to him by Ricardo; all of us always exchange dogs, and Luis is the one who has more time and opportunity to train them. Some kind of disease (which I will never know exactly what it was) has worn out Allen's teeth to a degree that it undoubtedly affects his catching power (Leo jokefully tells Luis that Allen doesn’t catch hogs, but sucks them instead…lol). It has nothing to do with regular use, and I have never seen it in another dog. Yet, his scenting ability, his heart, power and stamina, and most of all, his unrelenting, never-ending business-like attitude towards hunting commands my love and admiration. I love this dog to death. When the hours pass and the rest of the pack starts showing lapses in their concentration or simply some physical tiredness, Allen will always be on his tip-tops, head-up, running up and down in front of the wind, always meaning business. And regarding the fight…he has faced almost any conceivable boar, and he has also had to stand the pain of being a “teacher”: Sometimes when he catches a big sow we will let him fight (without killing the pig) until the green dogs arrive so they can see and bite, starting to develop their own stuff. Allen will stoically keep on fighting until the green dogs arrive and then the boar is finally killed.

Allen
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The beautiful thing about building-up a pack is how the hunter has to work to blend the individual characteristics of each dog into a homogeneous mix that performs like a team. Hog hunting with dogos is teamwork, and the sum of 6 good dogos does not necessarily means the conformation of a good pack. It is almost like building-up a philharmonic orchestra; the music is only as good as what the whole group of musicians can make. A good hunter knows his dogs like the palm of his hand, and has to be able to read them all the time. Like I said before, good dogs work as a team, but that doesn’t mean each of them doesn’t have it’s own individuality which needs to be evaluated constantly. Pain, for example, is not demonstrated in the same manner by all dogs. A dog that shows no pain might be more severely wounded than another dog that is voicing his pain more vocally or even physically (limping, etc). In general terms, dogos don’t show pain, which is something that forces the hunter to keep an eye on them every time they come back from a run, to try to detect cuts or wounds (or even closed contusions, which are trickier because they don't bleed openly) that might go unnoticed.


Back to reality. So, it’s Saturday night, and we go out again, hoping to have better luck. Like I said before, Allen, Jingo and Rusa have joined us. Jingo is a fast-running cross that, same as another dog we are not taking, called Lorenzo, has the characteristic of hunting waay-off the rest. Lorenzo, in particular, has caught hogs as far away as 2 or 3 miles, and that’s the reason we prefer not to use him at night (specially with this fu/&#?\gly strong wind which keeps blowing…grrr!!), but on daylight hunts, when the horses allow us to provide him support when he catches so far. Veterans Tigre Viejo, Tigrero, Lihuel, Antu, Fiel; seasoned but young Pial, and the rookie Falucho are coming. Charly, recovered from the hit suffered the night before, is also joining. And…Flaco, another rookie that was about to prove once again that building and maintaining a pack is an art and that a non-educated member can spoil-rotten the whole night.

Eleven dogs, with 2 of them being rookies, 6 hunters, 2 trucks…I wonder what is out there waiting for us…if anything.

We start the usual drill. Like always, Allen can be seen from the rearview mirror, his head above the rest, scenting frantically. His eagerness and happiness are such that I cannot help but think how much these dogs love what they do; this is something that strikes me every time I go out hunting, and I’ve been on this for a long ride already. If only I could take a peek inside his brain and see his thought-process (if that expression can be used when talking about dogs)…I would love to see what’s going on in there. Not that his body language isn’t explicit enough, of course; yet…


From up to down…Allen, Falucho, Charly. Of the 2 half-heads seen at the bottom of the pic, the one at the front belongs, I believe, to Fiel, while the other is just a shadow and I can’t tell for sure. The pic was shot aiming at the rearview mirror.

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We are going through the usual motions. Mostly silent, like we always do, aside from some isolated joke from one truck’s radio to the other. Usual hunters’ stuff: Dirty jokes, healthy fun. My mind wanders a bit towards my big-city origin. It is interesting that many people think of hunters and their activity as something morally incorrect. Most of the fellow hunters I have known were and are honest, straightforward, and decent people, full of solidarity; people I could rely on in whatever situation I might be involved, and who would walk through life with a few, very simple but monolithically-solid codes of ethics. We care for each other, we love each other, and there is a general sense of brotherhood that bonds us together. Many of the people I know who look down at hunting and / or hunters couldn’t hold a candle to any of my hunting comrades.

Luis’s shuffled, emotionless voice brings me back to more pedestrian thoughts: “Now”. Which to me means…“pork”. The dogs have jumped from the truck bed; Ricardo stops the truck (we usually drive at between 15 to 20 mph when scenting), and we step out of it trying to do the least possible noise (which includes no slamming of the doors thank you please, so help you God if you do). Off they go, upwind, in a particularly “dirty” area, full of low brush and trees with thorns as large as 4 inches long. Five minutes afterwards they return, jump up the truck bed, and off we go again.

Luis suggests trying a plot of land that has suffered some burning during last summer. It is about 5.000 acres of pretty clean land; the darkness of the night (which is still total, since the moon is showing-up at about 1 am) doesn’t allow us to appreciate how different this topography is: A sandy surface punctured through by scattered black sticks of burned-down trees and some low brush already growing. If we find something here, it should be a piece of cake for the dogs. No place to hide, no thicket to run through…suddenly the dogs yelp and jump off again. We stop and step down of the truck with the almost certainty that this will be it. I just cannot imagine a hog getting away from our dogs at this place.
We stand in silence, as usual. The dogs have disappeared into the night, running up-wind. We hear the scattered galloping of the dogs, plus the heavier, thump-like sounds of hogs’ hooves. We can also hear branches breaking…I am already feeling something is not good, and Luis mutters… “Dogs are scattered and running in all directions…what a mess…if we don’t catch here, we better go to bed, since we won’t catch anywhere else…” I silently agree; I, like the rest of us hunters, am already used to that strange sensation of being always anticipated by Luis. Simply put, the guy is always ahead of all of us.
From the noise we hear, it seems the hogs are running trying to go down-wind (because we hear them approaching us, and we are in their way to their target); the dogs seem disoriented. We hear some barking; unexpected, unforeseen, and absolutely unwanted barking. This is not our classical “torido” (the short, deaf bark of the dog which is just about to catch), but seems more like the barking behind a trail…holy shit!! I can’t believe our bad luck and I want to kill the dog that’s doing it, although I am not sure which one it is. “Flaco”, said Luis, like he could read my mind. “That dog is barking on the track. He is confusing the rest of the pack and moving them away from the hogs”. I can sense Luis’s frustration, which surprises me. Luis has hunted so much for so long that there is almost nothing that can move him by now; he has the typical stoic philosophy which identifies the people who only worry about things that are within their scope of control...

had walked down with Luis; about 500 yards back off from our truck (the other one was 500 yards ahead of the first). The burned forest to our right seemed alive with all kinds of noises, like a class-B horror movie. Suddenly, we hear an opening, and a small hog just crosses the road 50 feet in front of us, desperately seeking to put himself downwind in regards to the dogs. He hits the wire fence to our right, dodges, and passes through under the last wire. It didn’t last more than 5 or 10 seconds, but it seemed like an eternity. We would later learn that one more hog had passed between our truck and the one in the front, and at least 2 more had done the same 100 yards ahead of the first truck. We feel like a fishing-net full of holes, helpless while all the fishes go through. I mean, we have 11 dogs running down what looks like a small herd of pigs in a relatively easy although large piece of land, and they just keep going through us like we are a football team with no defense!!
And all the time we can hear Flaco barking. Damn...

After a few minutes, it’s all over. The dogs start coming back. Luis is incredibly pissed, like I’ve never seen him before. Although we have only been hunting for a couple hours, he sentences…”well, we better go to sleep tonight. If they did not catch here, they won’t catch anywhere”. He sits down on the ground, while we wait for the rest of the pack to arrive. I can hear him mutter…“if I wanted to feed someone for charity, I would give food to hungry children. I won’t waste food in dogs that cannot catch”. In spite of the situation, Luis’s phrase makes Ricardo and me burst-out laughing, and we tease him heavily. The man is poisoned, he really is. Luis concept of dogs is so intrinsically embedded in function and working ability, that it has been a long time since I have discovered he has absolutely no grasp of the concept of beauty in a dog. Every once in a while I would ask him (on purpose) if he liked x or z dog, and his answers would inevitably hovered around how they work. He never addresses conformation issues, and I guess a dog could have 2 heads and 3 legs and he wouldn’t even notice it, as long as it works well. On the other hand, a dog could be a beautiful specimen, yet it wouldn’t last 2 weeks in Luis’s hands if it couldn’t earn his food or at least show some promise.

From then on, the hunt is almost doomed. Of course we insist, till about 7:00 am again, but we have no luck. We go back to Luis’s house, and while Leo is preparing something to eat, I can see Luis slipping into his bed. Ricardo and I look at each other and grin…the man really IS poisoned. Like we’ve never seen him before. We are also very pissed, and I wouldn’t want to be in Flaco’s place. But the good thing about hunting is that it always gives a chance for payback. It has been a long, long time since we have had such a drought. But we never give up, and this was not going to be the exception…we still had a full Sunday to try.

(continua)
Good friend Vs true friend: A good friend will come bail you out of jail....But a true friend will be sitting next to you saying "... WE screwed up! BUT WASN'T IT FUN!!!
CindelP
Membro Veterano
Mensagens: 2892
Registado: segunda jan 01, 2001 12:00 am
Contacto:

quarta set 03, 2003 9:46 pm

continuação

Sunday we wake up at noon. This is something that hampers our chances of going out on horse. In winter, days are short, so when we decide to go out on horse, we usually leave as early as 8 am.
As usual, Leo prepared a great meal. Guido was talking about a herd of Guanacos (Llama Guanicoe), an animal from the camel family that lives in wild herds in large numbers in that area. Their meat is very tender and sought after. Same happens with the ñandú (South American Ostrich) a huge running bird who stands as much as 6 feet tall and is only second to the African Ostrich. So we decide to give it a short try just after lunch, while the rest take a nap. We pick the truck and off we go; Guido, Ricardo, and me.
Guido guides us to where he has last seen the animals, and in just a few minutes we see them: A large flock of ñandus running away from us at maybe 200 yards. Their speed is unveliebable. Some people in the region use racing Greyhounds to catch them; no other dog can come close to them.
Then, we see the even more coveted guanacos; a herd composed of 7 specimens. Guanacos are very shy and very difficult to get near, even more than deer. They can weigh as much as 150 lbs, and they usually live in small herds, like this one. We stopped the truck and they started running; Ricardo attempted a few shots with his 30-30 Marlin lever-action rifle, but I knew they were just too far away for that kind of gear….over 300 yards, 30-30 caliber, short carbine, with open sights, and a moving target? Come on, Ricardo, give me a break. We should have brought the 30-06 with the Karl Zeiss scope; that would have given us a chance, at least. In any case, it was more of a relaxing thing; of course we would have loved to get one and eat it in a bbq, but our mind is still set on hogs, as usual.

After a brief ride, we get back home and slip to bed to take a nap. I was expecting to get out late at night, but it is 7 pm when Luis wakes me up… “Marcelito, come on. We are going out scenting” (funny thing, I am the oldest there –1 year older than Luis-, but they have always called me “Marcelito”. I know it is a sign of just how close together we are) . I woke-up and see Luis ready to go. I know the drill too well (and I know my friend, also), so I don’t need any further explanation. He wants to start early so that if we do not catch (again), we can come back maybe 2 or 3 am (instead of the usual 7 or 8), take a brief sleep, and then yes, go out with the horses to try a day-hunt.
I gear up. Weather is not too cold, but I know deep night will bring lower temperatures. One of the clues for a comfortable hunt is to always keep in mind one of our dogmas: “When we hunt, we know when we are going out, but we don’t know when we are coming back”. There is simply no way to know where the hunt will take us, and what it might have in store for us…a lost dog, a wounded one, a long chase, a broken truck…The secret is to gear-up adequately. Dress like the weather suggests at that moment, but be prepared for lower temperatures if you are going out at night, and carry some extra clothing (thermal wear) behind the truck’s seat. It’s the same concept that makes us take at least 1 flashlight even if we go out in the morning. You never know what can happen.

We load the dogs. The usual routine, the same excitement, so visible in them. Luis is serious, and we all mean business. Two empty nights in a row, ok. Three…no way. We check the leather belt, custom-made with several pouches full of medical stuff…elastic bandages, siringes, dexamethasone, adrenalin, thread, needles, stapler… we carry saline solution and Ringer lactate in a trunk that’s in the truckbed. Hoping for the best but expecting the worse.

We finally go out. Two trucks, as usual. “Quitino” drives his own Peugeot pick-up truck, a small vehicle with 2-wheel drive but that has shown the 2 previous nights (and will show it again tonight) that it is extremely reliable in dirt, mud and water, probably because of a combination of it’s light weight and auto-blocking differential. Quitino goes with Leo and Guido; and I go in the big Ford pick-up with Ricardo and Luis. The Ford has huge all-terrain tires, is lifted like 30 cms above the ground, and has powerful 4-wheel drive. Dogs are on the Ford truckbed. Rusa is coming…what an amazing b###h. She is like 8 or 9 years old, and she is pregnant (probably like 45 to 50 days pregnancy); yet, she is ready, lean, hungry…and as fast as usual.
Routine starts again, dogs scenting, trucks slowly rolling. We are in silence, except for some profanities that Guido shuffles through the radio every once in a while. There is also a soccer match going on in the radio; Boca Juniors is playing and most of us root for this team, so every time Boca scores, Quitino tells us through the radio. We prefer to keep our stereo radio off.

Quitino is a great, funny guy. Not a hunter; he is just going out for the second time in his life. Resilient, though; he has shown he can drive for hours and hours without needing a rest. He is cheerful and brings good humour to all of us, and although he is eager for some catch, he pays his dues, so to speak, and works hard. He has a funny way of pronouncing the letter “S”; mostly like “SH” “sho, are we going to have shuccess, or not”? (please try to imagine this in Spanish). We talk about him inside the Ford truck, and have a good laugh. He has been a good partner these days and….WOHAAA!! The dogs yelp and claw their way off the truckbed; we stop and step down. We close the doors very slowly, and quietly wait for any noise which might suggest a catch. The dogs scatter up-wind, and we soon loose sight of them in the middle of the night. The moon won’t be up till 1 or 2 am, so we have several hours of complete darkness ahead of us. The other truck has stopped 200 yards behind ours.

A few minutes pass, and we hear some galloping coming towards us. It’s the dogs…suddenly, like a rocket, a Mara (Patagonian Hare) shoots from the brush towards us. Rusa and another dog are behind her; the mara crosses the wire fence and shoots directly towards us. Luis’s reflexes make him turn-on the flashlight and direct it towards the hare; upon receiving the light, she makes an unbelievable L turn…a mara can weigh around 15 lbs and run 40 miles an hour; a direct hit from one at full speed can break your knee like a toothpic. Rusa turns behind the mara, clawing her way on the dirt of the track like a cartoon, trying not to lose one inch in the pursuit. The hare heads straight down the dirt road; Luis and I look at each other with a comical expression combining bewilderment and amusement; he manages to utter “she is going to…”…STUMP!!! Wow! She hits Quitino’s truck (which had it’s light’s turned-off) full blow…what you could call a “kamikaze hare”…Rusa managed to turn to the left just enough to avoid the collision.
Quitino, totally surprised, babbles…“Qué pasHó?” (“what happened?”). The hare had snapped her neck and broken the plastic bumper of Quitino’s truck; but his main concern was that he thought it had been one of the dogs who had hit it. Guido steps out, mockingly shouting “qué pasHó”, imitating Quitino. We laugh our asses out, until our belly hurts. We put the dead hare on Quitino’s truckbed. The rest of the dogs are coming back now, no catch. At least we started the night with a good, relaxing laugh. Suicidal hare…I had yet to see one of those....

Back on the road, trucks rolling. A long time passes without much action; the wind keeps blowing strong and the dogs have a hardtime locating scents. But we start to see some added eagerness on some of them (specially Allen); something must be starting to hit their olfactory cells. Suddenly Allen jumps and the rest follow suit; we stop again and release the truck-bed’s door for the last 2 dogs who did not jump. Off they go. Fast as rockets, they all disappear in the brush. The way Allen jumped tells me this could be different. Luis must sense it, too, because instead of waiting near the truck, he prefers to jump the wire fence and be ready for what might happen next. I do the same. Some loong seconds of absolute silence; I hear a distant, acute shout (it is not a yelp, or a howl…but a shout); a fox, I mentally recognize. Nothing to worry or be happy about.
Suddenly, VERY far away, we hear a “torido”. A deaf, short, forced bark. Nothing else. Luis just whispers…“ahí está” (“that’s it”), and we both start running full speed. Ricardo is on the other side of the fence, so it will take him some time to follow us. I see Luis zig-zagging 15 yards ahead of me; he runs in short strides, like a little mouse. He doesn’t seem to be going fast, yet, as usual, I need all my strength just to keep-up with him. Two hundred yards to mi right, I see a flashlight moving quickly in our same direction, parallel to us: It’s Guido, running fast (in spite of having a torn cruciate left knee ligament). The land is “medium-dirty” (in terms of brush thickness); it allows us to gain speed but it also makes it dangerous since the faster you run at night, the more likelihood of a fall.

We stop. Just a few seconds. Heart thumping, air coming in and out like a piston…the grunts, and off we go again. Uff, this is getting long!! I am beginning to run out of breath (we have probably ran like 1 mile, full speed, brush getting thicker and thicker), when I start to hear the sounds of battle. Close, maybe 300 yards more. Suddenly, I almost crash against another wire fence. The lot we are running through has come to an end and the hog has been able to run through the fence, dogs behind, into the next lot…looking for the river. He won’t make it, though…no way. The noise of the battle clearly indicates he is caught. Luis has already cleared the fence and is running again; I do the same and follow as fast as I can. I manage to reach the catch almost at the same time Guido does. Luis is already there, of course. Could it be different? No.

Imagem

It’s a hog, medium-sized, from what I can see. He is caught, and there’s no way in hell he can get himself free. He just lacks the size and power to do so. I pull-out my knife, and with my left ear I hear Ricardo arriving…he has been running with our new Digital Mini DV Camera, a Samsung I brought from a trip to South Corea. Ricardo makes it just in time when I sink the full 10-inch blade under the hog’s left armpit. The sudden explosion of blood that bursts-out from the wound and covers all of my right hand tells me that I have hit the heart, which is pumping blood through the cut. The hog collapses almost immediately, without any need for a second stab. The dogs release, some easier than others. Fiel needs a few hits to leave…the snout, what else (damn, what a stubborn dog!). Falucho doesn’t want to relinquish; he has a full-mouth grip over the dead hog. Luis hits him over the head with the sole of his sneaker; one, two, three times. Falucho finally releases. I remove Tigre and Tigrero. Pial is also there, honoring his father Bombon: Grip like a vise. The smell of the blood makes the dogs so excited…

We pause, look at each other like if saying…“finally”!! Quitino arrives a couple minutes later, gasping for air. He couldn’t see the catch, but he is so excited, nonetheless…We take a look at the hog: A new one, probably around 2 years old and about 150 lbs. Short (1.5 inches, approx) but razor-sharp tusks. Had he been hit by fewer dogs, he could have cut some badly. As it turned out, he was simply overpowered.

We field-dress the catch right there, take it back to the truck (a long walk, indeed; and since I was the one who made the kill, the ritual indicates I have to carry him the most…), and decide to call it quits for the night. Once again the catch has proven to be more elusive than usual, which makes it all the more satisfying. We relax on our way to Luis’s place, and start thinking about our next time…we talk dogs, and how we plan to keep building-up the pack. We will breed my Cautiva, probably to Allen, or maybe Orejas (an awesome retired hunter)…I have my Toro x Lola pups already on the ground…the future seems promising. Big hunts to come…

It can’t get any better than this…

Dogoman
Good friend Vs true friend: A good friend will come bail you out of jail....But a true friend will be sitting next to you saying "... WE screwed up! BUT WASN'T IT FUN!!!
nynf
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quinta set 04, 2003 10:50 am

Estava quase quase a enviar um reminder tipo..."então e o resto da história?" :lol:

Vou tentar ler antes do fds. Gostei da primeira parte, exceptuando a parte em que ou um cão trabalha e merece a sua comida ou então "não serve". Embora compreenda essa atitude, tal como compreendo várias que a maioria das pessoas que gostamd e animais não conseguem compreender.
Por exemplo, ainda ontem em amena discussão me perguntavam o porquê de trabalhar a Shiva, porque não ficava pelo treino básico - "que é o que a maioria das pessoas fazem, quando fazem"... O meu amor pela Shiva não está em causa, gostaria dela da mesma forma se fosse uma rafeirita e se se limitasse ao papel de animal de companhia.
Contudo, para mim, um Rott é essencialmente um companheiro e um cão de trabalho. Os laços que se desenvolvem durante o trabalho são diferentes dos que se desenvolvem em casa. A relação é também diferente.
Resumindo, não me choca essa atitude uma vez que essas pessoas têm cães não pelas mesmas razões que o pessoal na cidade, o objectivo desses cães é igual ao de qualquer outro animal nessas quintas e vivem razoavelmente bem e (felizes certamente!) enquanto capazes de desenvolver as suas tarefas correctamente. Mas não posso dizer que eu seria capaz de ser assim, logo, não posso gostar da atitude em si.
hmmmmm acho que estou a ser um pouco contraditoria...
;)
<p><strong>Sauda&ccedil;&otilde;es!</strong></p>
<p><strong>Cristina Paulo</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
CindelP
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sábado fev 14, 2004 11:36 pm

Não para o tipico amante dos animais, mas cá vai (a quem possa interessar ..) :

Por Marcelo G. (aka Dogoman)

took the time to do a quick translation of the last (9th) Chapter of Agustin's book "El Dogo Argentino". This Chapter is in fact a reprint from an article that Agustin wrote and publihed in an outdoor magazine called Diana, in August 1967.
I know the translation sucks, and I apologize. Agustin was damn hard to translate (to me, at least), and I did it in a couple hours, since I have little time. But try to go beyond my own limitations and look at the passion behind the words of this man, written 37 years ago. Look how high is the standard; how hard the mirror in which we have to try to reflect ourselves. Such a dog could only have been produced by two such men. May we try to be 1% of what they were....yes?

Hope you enjoy it.

Dogoman

PS: Please take note on Agustin's "breeding practices". Not a single reference to beauty, comformation, or "complete health screening". Just performance.


"Why Do Dogos fight and die" *

* From Agustin Nores Martinez, published by Diana magazine, 1967


A few months ago, journals and radios from our country talked extensively about the heroic way in which a Dogo Argentino, Day De Trevelin, died fighting against a boar in Choele Choel, Rio Negro (*Note from the translator....myself!...hehe: That’s my favourite hunting place!). That Dogo –Day De Trevelin-, had the luck of fighting and dying in the presence of American and Argentinian journalists and was filmed and photographed in action. All this gave resonance to his death and made him popular, not only here but also abroad, since also in the United States the newspapers took care of him and his story.

For those who have never have the chance of seeing Dogos in action, fighting with a European boar, with razor-sharp tusks, it is usually surprising, even amazing, that a dog who is engaged in a fight with an animal which surpasses him several times in weight and in combat weapons will not quit the fight, till he wins or dies. But that is the Dogo Argentino’s motto; his destiny.

Day De Trevelin’s death –beautiful specimen whom we sent to Bilo from Esquel 5 years ago- brings to my memory some anecdotes of fights and deaths of Dogos of which we have either being eye-witnessess or had first-hand, reliable information. We will try to remember a few.

For last year’s Easter, while coming back from Punta Arenas to our home in Esquel on Sunday, we found that a truck driver had brought to our place, leaving him with our domestic employees, a practically destroyed dogo, with so many wounds in his body that it seemed impossible he could survive to so much damage. The dog was not mine and at first I didn’t recognize him, since he was disfigured and swollen. I called one of Esquel’s veterinaries, Doctor Nunez, who took care of his wounds and, helped by a friend and by myself, we stitched his wounds and gave him emergency care. Little by little he started to recover, until he finally made it though.
A few days after that I was able to find his owner, Mr. Pastor Rocha, a foreman in the estancia of Don Elias Owen, in Trevelin –same estancia where Day De Trevelin was born- and he told me what had happened.
Don Elias and his foreman Rocha had gone out on horse to check some livestock, by dusk on holy Friday, and they only took one of their dogos, “Olvido De Trevelin”, and a shepherd dog. As soon as they got deep into the woods, Olvido scented a boar and off he went, full speed.
Few minutes later, they heard the deaf sounds of the fight with the beast, while the shepherd, with his continuous barking, indicated to them the place where the drama was occuring. It was getting dark and the little light left made approaching the distant fight –armed solely with their knives- very difficult for them. They remembered the moon would soon be up, and they kept following the sounds of the fight with their horses through the dense wood, oriented by the shepherd’s barkings because the dogo, when he fights, voices no sound and the boar, when an adult male, doesn’t squeel and fights in silence; only noise it makes is the sound of the dogo’s body being hit against the trees and branches, while the beast tries to get him off his own.
Over half an hour passed, fast to say but seems like a century and it’s vital when such an uneven fight is taking place in the middle of an Andes mountains’ woods in the middle of the night. Finally the moon rose and Don Elias and his foreman were able to approach; they threw the horses against the giant jabali and not without risk they managed to grab him by one leg, while the badly injured dogo kept catching the head...they finally stabbed him to death. The dogo was a big red stain, that contrasted with the whiteness of his hair, that whiteness which down here keeps an immaculate shine, washed by the snow and the water which is so abundant in the Andes. They dressed the prey, which was a huge male jabali, and loaded it over one of the horses. Meanwhile, the dogo disappeared, and as much as they called for him, they couldn’t find him.
They thought he had died, because when the dogo feels he is dying or very wounded tends to hide himself in the bushes. With deep sadness, they went back to the estancia.
This was Friday night. Night passed, as well as Saturday and Sunday morning. Sunday afternoon, a truck was going through the road of the Cold Valley, and the driver saw, barely waking in the direction of the estancia, a badly wounded dogo. The truck driver thought it was mine, so he brought it to my house in Esquel.
The Dogo Olvido De Trevelin had fought, one on one, more than half an hour, in the night, in the middle of the woods, with a boar who was many times heavier than him, in spite of being very badly wounded by the tusks and the hits against the tree trunks. Happily he recovered and 2 weeks later I took him back to his owner’s, fully recovered.
Many more times he was badly wounded; he hunted innumerable pumas and boars, before and after the story I wrote, until he was finally killed, a few months ago, by a jabali, hunting in Rio Grande. Three brothers of him –and as such, of Day De Trevelin-, have died in similar circumstances; this means that from that litter, four of them died fulfilling their duty, while 2 remain alive: Dele De Owen, who is kept by Mr. Bilo, and Facundo, which I keep myself * (As I transcribe this article, 2 years after I wrote it, Facundo has already been killed fighting with a very large boar with very long tusks, on the margins of the lake Situacion. From that litter, then, only 1 dogo, Dele De Owen –whom I gave to Bilo along with Day De Trevelin- remains alive; all the others have been killed in action).

When I came back 10 years ago (1959) to establish myself definitively in Esquel, I brought 5 adult dogos, all hunters. I lent them to Major Sustaita, to hunt boars and pumas in his estancia La Diana, in El Corcovado. Jaramillo, his foreman, hunted many boars and pumas during one winter. Alicacha, a beautiful dogo born in La Pampa, was killed in the cordillera (Andes) by a boar after having defeated that same day a puma, whose head I keep as a precious trophy. The height of the Andes mountain, the snow and the thickness of the woods prevented Jaramillo, an experienced hunter and “hombre de campo”, from arriving in time to help Alicacha, who had already died with a severed carothyd. The other dogos were badly injured, but they made it through. Some time later, a female dogo who was pursuing a red fox jumped from several meters of height against the fox, who had seeked refuge in a slab of rock in the mountain. Both of them fell to the abyss, and died. I also keep the fox’s head, which is so big that resembles more that of an American coyote. A son of Alicacha and this latter female, born while they were in Corcovado and which Jaramillo gave to a neighbour “estanciero” (landowner, farmer) called don Alberto Sanchez, was also killed by a boar after having hunted many and being wounded innumerable times. Don Sanchez was kind enough to prepare a wooden board with the tusks of the boar that killed this dogo, and give them to me as a present.
I have just brought down from the cordillera of the Percy a dogo called Nanco, property of estanciero Don Juan Goya. I have brought him for breeding, because he is an extraordinary hunter. His body is covered in scars, like a Japanese Samurai. He is 4 years old and I have been told that he has hunted, in that time, many boars, pumas, and foxes. When they brought him to me, he had been laying for 3 days in a creek where he had fallen while following a fox. He was found by the “puestero” (farm worker, like Luis) Aviles –who hunts with him-, with the dead fox by his side. Happily, he saved his life.

In the estancia that Dr. Argentino Ventura owns in El Corcovado, it’s foreman, Don Corro, has a dogo called Yack, who has hunted innumerable boars. He walks in 3 legs, because in one of his fights he got the lower part of his right leg amputated; the remaining upper part has retracted because of lack of use. Even in this condition, he keeps on hunting and goes out through the woods everyday following his master. A little time ago I have been given the hide of a very big puma, which he killed on a one on one fight, in the altitude of the cordillera. By sheer coincidence, Dr. Ventura (a physician) arrived to his estancia that same day, and seeing the dogo so badly wounded, he worked his science on him, saving his life. When he told me the story, he was still deeply impressed by the description which, in his simple words, the man from the mountains had made to his boss telling him about the fight his dogo had had in the most abrupt canyon, embraced to the “lion” (as they call pumas in the country), while he (the man) had to watch, helpless, knife in hand, unable to help the dog because of the distance and the topography of the land.
Since that Dogo is already 8 years old an is half-crippled, still following his master’s horse based on courage and enthusiams but undoubtedly with great effort, I asked his owner to give it to me and I have it now, to use him as a producer and to give him a peaceful and warm life in his last years. He is a true war hero, because of his scars and amputations. In my life as a diplomat I have met many men who had their chests covered with decorations and crosses, including some who proudly showed the Legion of Honor. May I be forgiven by international law and it’s advcates, but to me, many of these decorated men do not have more merit than this brave and ignored fighter from the cordillera austral. No doubt great poets as Lord Byron and William Spencer would have gleefully dedicated some of their heartfelt poems, like the ones they dedicated in their time to nobles Maida and Gelert, respectively.

In a letter I have received from Mr. Jordana Baro, owner of estancia Rio Meseta, Puerto Santa Cruz, who has taken a couple dogos some months ago, he told me the following: His son went out on horse with the 2 dogos, who were around 1year old. Very far away from the house, each dogo started following a trail, and they got lost behind them. Being unable to find them, the son went back home alone, only to come back with his father, to look for the dogs. After several hours searching they found them, very far apart from each other. And each of them had killed his own puma, and were sitting nearby to their preys.

And to finish this short stories, I will refer to a photograph that illustrates this book. The dead female dogo who appears in the front of the picture (page 48), in the middle, was locked like a pincers, on the rear leg of a boar. When we asked her to release she didn’t; we moved her, and fell to her side. She was already dead, and she hadn’t let go. This need no further comments.

I would tire the reader if I put myself to remember all the cases in which our dogos have fought to the end or died in the fight. It is their destiny. But all these faithful and brave hunting partners which I have recalled, as well as so many that challenge my memory or my knowledge, didn’t have the luck of dying in front of journalists and cameramen as Day De Trevelin did, and they died anonimously, like the unknown soldier, who offers his life for his country without even leaving his name for the statue or the history.

The Dogos Argentinos who have died heroically like Day De Trevelin are innumerable, leaving their inert bodies, blood-bathed, true white and red landmarks of criollo courage, all over our beloved “Patria”.
It is to those dogos who die silently, who have no more grave than the green grass of the virgin lands, and no more shroud than the white snow, or more tombstones than the milenary larchs or “coihues” (patagonian giant tree) or the mountains covered with eternal snows....it is to them that I want to render my eternally grateful memories.
I confess, without hesitations, that everytime I learn that a dogo has died in the line of duty I feel, jointly with the inherent sadness, that kind of pride that must have been felt by the Spartan mothers when, while saying farewell to their sons who were going to war, they told them, giving them their shields: Come back with it, or die over it...

God knows that, up to this day, all Dogos have known how to win their battles or die like Day De Trevelin. As such, the monument that Winchester has erected to this Dogo in their HQ’s, will also be a monument to so many other dogos who, anonimously, silently, like frontier soldiers, have faithfully complied with the breed’s commandment which, like a childhood dream, we imposed upon it more than 40 years ago with my brother Antonio: To win, or die in battle.

Agustin Nores Martinez
Argentina, 1967
Good friend Vs true friend: A good friend will come bail you out of jail....But a true friend will be sitting next to you saying "... WE screwed up! BUT WASN'T IT FUN!!!
Siioux
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sábado fev 14, 2004 11:41 pm

:o :roll: :o :roll: :o :o :roll: :o :roll: :o :roll: pequenino, não há maiores?????
CindelP
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domingo fev 15, 2004 2:22 am

pequenino, não há maiores?????
Há, há maiores e também há mais pequenos. Mas em geral, os outros tamanhos são para os tais amantes dos "cãozinhos". Porquê ?
Good friend Vs true friend: A good friend will come bail you out of jail....But a true friend will be sitting next to you saying "... WE screwed up! BUT WASN'T IT FUN!!!
KROZ
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segunda fev 16, 2004 2:12 am

Vocês ainda vão ver o meu Spotinho a fazer busca e salvamento e depois digam mal dos cães de colo :lol:
Já faltou mais tempo... ainda o vêem num local de sismo... esperem...
CindelP
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sábado mai 29, 2004 2:25 am

Mais uma para quem sofre de insonias ou para quem gosta de uma boa historia ;)


It was a great hunt; I am sorry my words will not make justice to it. Here it goes, anyway.

“He who doesnt’t know, is like he who doesn’t see”.

This old saying applies so much when it refers to hunting. And I would like to add a personal variation...“He who knows so much, can see so much”.

It is Sunday afternoon; May 23rd, 2004. The day is beautiful, cool, but sunny. We decide to do a late afternoon hunt. We will be hunting a very thick and difficult area near the river, in the 30.000-acre Estancia that Luis’s works.

We go out to hand-pick the dogs we will be taking. It will be a treacherous hunt; very difficult terrain, chances of night falling…we decide to leave pups like Ata and Cumpa at home. We choose Jingo, Pial, Falucho (all young –2 year olds- but already experienced and reliable dogs); veterans Antu, Tigrero and Fiel, and 2 new dogs Ricardo has brought from La Pampa, to test, Facón and Pistola. The latter 2 are supposed to be already hunting dogs. At the last moment Luis decides to bring Domingo, a very young dog whom he wantes to see working.

We load the truck and off we go. We are 6 hunters (Luis, Leo, Ricardo, Marito, Guido and myself) and 9 dogs. Two of the hunters are riding on the rooftop of the truck; the other 4 of us are crammed in the cabin. It is a 7-mile ride towards the place where we will leave the truck and start the walk. We ride almost silently, thinking about the hunt ahead.

Once at the place, we unload the dogs. Ricardo plays with his newly acquired toy (a Garmin Rhino 130 transmitter with GPS), fixing the truck’s position…he really loves the toys. The forest here is so dense that even experienced hunters can easily get lost (specially with night approaching), except, that is, when you go with Luis, the “human GPS”.
We start walking; dogs going back and forth, entering the brush and coming back all the time. We are walking on a waist-high brush, bordering a huge and dense forest of 5 meter-tall “olivillos”, as well as othe different thorny plants, like alpataco, and the worst of all, chañar. Wind is blowing against us (which is why we have chosen that route, in the first place), and the dogs would look intently at the brush, scenting frantically. After a few minutes, Luis turns back to me and points a finger towards the forest. Luis almost never talks a single word during hunts (we neither), and also never makes any particular gesture. But this time I could see he had clearly sensed something which neither of us had. “There is one after the forest”, he says. I look at the dogs, and except Jingo (Luis’s current leading dog), I see nothing abnormal. Jingo, on the contrary, looks concentrated. He is looking towards the impenetrable wall of vegetation, scenting almost franctically and turning towards Luis in a strange kind of begging manner. It is clear he is scenting something, but yet he doesn’t move. We do hear some cattle moving inside the forest, but I know it can’t be that, because as a genuine product of Luis’s training, Jingo would never catch a cow….then, it sinks in: Jingo is cattle-proof, same as all the rest of the dogs, except….we are carrying 2 brand-new dogs: Pistola and Facón. Although his owner in la Pampa has said they do not go for cows, Luis will not risk it until he is sure of that. I know if Luis decides to “send” Jingo in, the dog will go (that’s the reason he is looking at his owner, basically begging for permission) through the cows without even touching one; but I also know the rest will follow suit, and if Pistola and Facon catch one, it will be very difficult to prevent the others from joining the frenzy. Upon realizing all this, I am amazed at the self-control Jingo is showing. All his instincts push him to go into the thicket and search for that hog we cannot see but he can smell…yet he whines softly and stays in his place.
We keep on walking. We have been walking for over an hour when I realize we are doing a huge U turn, circling the forest, leaving the river on our back. The dogs are working downwind now (upwind is the river), so we make lots of irregular movements to try to allow the dogs to catch at least some diagonal breezes. “Son of a b###h”, I thought of Luis; we have circled the forest to put the hog in the middle, between the cows and us. We haven’t seen anything yet; just hear some cattle noises, but Luis thinks the hog is probably walking among the cows to try to hide himself from the dogs. That’s why we’ve done the whole circling. To try to catch him with the cows safely away from the 2 new dogs.

Suddenly the dogs stampede into the brush…time for action. I am standing still, cold breeze filling my lungs with each breath. Luis is standing besides me, as well as Mario and Leo. Ricardo and Guido have walked farther away and we can see them, standing at the perimeter of the forest but about 500 yards ahead from us. Soon we loose sight of Guido and Ricardo, and a couple minutes later we hear an unmistakable “torido” (short, deaf bark of a dog about to catch); sounds to me like Falucho; Mario thinks it can be one of the new ones, Facón. The three of us hushed, almost at unison…“ahí está!”. The sound is VERY distant, which we expected because more than a couple minutes had passed since the dogs left. We can’t see Ricardo or Guido, so we conclude that since they are nearer to the sound, they must be running. We decide to wait; the advantage they have over us is so big that running now doesn’t seem to be necessary…they will reach the fight before us could ever do. Luis pulls-out a cigarette, and is about to light it when we see Ricardo standing almost at the same place we had seen him before…“fu-k!!” we hushed at the same time….“what’s the hell with him!”. Luis throws the unlit cigarette and we start running, full speed. I run behind Luis and think to myself “Jeez, this is going to be a VERY long one”. After about 400 yards of full speed we reach the border of the forest; although I am a regular runner (and a fairly good one; I can run 3.75 miles in 23 minutes), I am already feeling tired; it’s amazing how much the long brush can take away from your stamina). We start the usual drill of dodging, crawling on all-fours, dragging, standing upright again, and then all again the same routine. Dusk is settling fast; I hit a branch and lose my beret; screw it, I am not coming back now. I keep running, trailing 20 yards behind Luis; it is almost 1 km now. Every time we leave heavy forest behind (it is scattered in patches, with areas of long and thorny brush in between where at least you can run upright) we try to accelerate as much as possible, knowing how easy it can be to break a leg by putting a foot inside a “mulita” tunnel (armadillo-type rodent). After about 1 mile (these distances where later checked with Ricardo’s GPS) and feeling almost out of breath (the race has been absolutely frantic; we have some bad feelings about this catch) we reach an open space surrounded by impenetrable forest. Suddenly, like a slow-motion camera, the scene unveils in front of me.

I am always amazed at how the human brain works. When you have the experience necessary to understand what’s happening in front of your eyes, the brain has the capacity to gather so much information in such little time that is almost shocking.

With the little light that’s left (it is almost 7 PM) I see Luis, 20 yards ahead of me. Almost at the same time I see a brown shadow, running perpendicular to both of us, crossing our path at an unbelievable speed, 15 yards ahead of Luis. Behind the big brown shadow, I see three smaller ones, in pursuit. I recognize a hog in the brown shadow, and 3 of our dogs trying desperately to get to it. Even in the fraction of a second in which I see this, I can see, or I can almost FEEL, that the dogs are almost done, exhausted. I also see them pushing harder the moment we appear, which suggests they must have seen us and felt encouraged. The whole group of shadows passes by us, from right to left. I simply can’t believe that after all this running the hog is loose!! I had expected –hoped, would be a better word- to see him stretched to the limits by the whole pack….and now I realize we have to keep running and that we will most likely loose him if he manages to reach the thicket again!

I see Luis turning to his left and sprinting full speed with whatever energy he has left; I do the same, and while doing it, from the corner of my right eye, I see Guido, about 200 yards at my right, coming towards us, running from where the hog has broken the catch. All this must have happened in less than 1 second. I turn my head towards the left, forget about Guido, and sprint behind Luis with whatever I have left.

About 50 yards afterwards, I see the hog stopping under some heavy brush. Luis takes out his .38 revolver (loaded with my own handloads: 158-grain SJSP’s with 10.5 grains of Hercules 2400 for +P+ energy) and shoots twice, almost point blank. I reach the scene and understand: The dog “Pistola” has reached the hog with his last breath and has grabbed him by the nuts….but other than that, the hog is free. No dog on his ears, head, nothing. He is pivoting and trying to turn back which will put him in fornt of Luis and myself. The shots slow him down, though, and makes it safe enough to finish him off with a quick and fast stab to his neck, in-between his shoulderblade and his right ear.

We fall to the ground, completely exausted. The temperature is about 45 F, yet we are drenched in sweat. We breath heavily. After a few seconds, we get up and look at the hog. A young, very dangerous hog, with short, razor-sharp tusks. About 250 pounds, give or take



A real dog-killer, who had made good use of all he had at hand: An almost impenetrable vegetation, the darkness of dusk, the distance and time it took us to reach the fight, and the splitting of the pack…where the hell were the other 6 dogs?? It was only later that Luis told me he thought the hog had done a short run upwind, and when he was reached by the first dogs, he had done a sharp turn and ran downwind…making it impossible for the rest of the pack to join the catch. They simply couldn’t find him, and got diverted. The three dogs who had managed to reach him where severely affected by the jungle-like terrain, and fought as much as they could, but weren’t able to stop the beast completely. The hog is muscular and looks strong as an ox.
We look at the 3 dogs. Pistola is the one looking worse. He has a chest wound that doesn’t seem serious, but he is bleeding profusely from a hole in the floor of his jaw, almost near the neck insertion. He falls to the ground and turns sideways, exhausted. I grab our pouch-belt and take out the medical supplies. It is completely dark by now. Good thing we have carried a couple flashlights. Guido and Ricardo are already there. I put my finger inside the dog’s wound, and I see it bleeds a lot, but it is not pumping, si it is unlikely to involve an artery. Probably a large vein. I do some compression and then a fast stitching, regular thread (catgut). I try to grab as much tissue as I can (no aesthetic suture, by any means) with the needle, in the hope of collapsing the vessel that is bleeding. It seems to work, and by the time the hog has been field-dressed Pistola is up, walking with some difficulty, but, as we like to say…if he can walk, he can make it.
Jingo has a deep cut in the chest also, but nothing that can put him in danger. Facón, the new guy, has some heavy bruises but no significant cuts that we can see.

We “mount” the gutted boar over a tree (impossible to drag him out for a mile in that terrain); Luis covers some bleeding parts with a sweatshirt to prevent varmints, and slowly and tiredly we head back to the truck. We will come back in the morning and try to push a horse through the brush to drag the hog back to the nearest point we can park the truck (which would be 1.200 meters, but that’s another story). The mile back is also an ordeal, since by now we can see nothing, and we have 2 flashlights for 6 people. All the dogs are with us now, except Antu, the 11-year old veteran. We look for him and call him for about half an hour, with no results. Leo fears the worst (it’s his dog, and his sentimental favourite), but I feel confident he will be waiting for us at the truck. He is just too old and smart a fart to be killed by a hog now….or that’s what I want to believe.

Finally we reach the truck….and yes, Antu is there. I can see the relief in Leo’s face. We put the dogs on the truckbed. They are exhausted. So are we. We head back to Luis’s house, an almost 8 mile drive. While the truck bumps it’s way through some unbelievable trails, I queitly think about the way Luis had silently guided the dogs in a circle to allow them to work safely for the cattle. I think about how he KNEW there was a hog there, although none of us could either hear or see anything (“Jingo was showing it to me, in his demeanour”, he would say). I think about the certainty with which he reconstructed what the hog had done to split the pack and try to run away, even though he hadn’t been able to see it. I think about how many people would have followed him blindly, not understanding anything about the subtleties which were being poised between the hunter and the prey; the chess game being played. And I think how glad I am to be able to know what he does and hence, to be able to see it, and understand it. Yet…“he who knows so much, can see so much”…

I know no matter how much hunting I have done in the past and will do in the future, I will never…“know so much, see so much”.


Dogoman

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Good friend Vs true friend: A good friend will come bail you out of jail....But a true friend will be sitting next to you saying "... WE screwed up! BUT WASN'T IT FUN!!!
CindelP
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sábado jun 26, 2004 2:39 am

E outra vez algo bonito de se ver:

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Good friend Vs true friend: A good friend will come bail you out of jail....But a true friend will be sitting next to you saying "... WE screwed up! BUT WASN'T IT FUN!!!
jaques_brasil
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Localização: 1 piriquito, 1 cao pit bull, 2 caes SRD

sábado jun 26, 2004 1:19 pm

Quando Portugal colonizou o Brasil custava ao inves de falarem portugues falarem ingles? Assim isso economizaria bastante trabalho nosso tentando traduzir estes artigos :)
CindelP
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sábado jun 26, 2004 1:58 pm

jaques_brasil Escreveu: Quando Portugal colonizou o Brasil custava ao inves de falarem portugues falarem ingles? Assim isso economizaria bastante trabalho nosso tentando traduzir estes artigos )
E agora por 8.73 pode comprar um dicionario ultra.moderno , inglês-portugues :http://www.portoeditora.pt/dol/ ;)
Good friend Vs true friend: A good friend will come bail you out of jail....But a true friend will be sitting next to you saying "... WE screwed up! BUT WASN'T IT FUN!!!
FBC
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sábado jun 26, 2004 7:03 pm

Mais uma vez parabens Cindelp e obrigado pelos momentos que me proporcionou, é que, não menosprezando outras raças que adoro, os Dogos são a minha perdição, Pena é que em Portugal não se cultive mais a caça de javali à faca e sem armas de fogo. Para mim essas é uma forma superior de caçar, onde a luta é mais de igual para igual, há um maior respeito pela natureza e pelas armas de defesa dos animais caçados , etc, etc....

Pena é que o meu inglês não seja famoso! mas lá se faz um esforço

Já agora

http//www.broncomagno.com.ar/index2.htm

http://www.dogosblender.com.ar/

http//www.geocities.com/blancodogo/


ou sobre o alano

http//spanish-alano.com/Cazares.htm



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Francisco Bica
Última edição por FBC em sábado jun 26, 2004 7:47 pm, editado 4 vezes no total.
FAbarm
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Registado: sábado mai 11, 2002 3:56 pm

sábado jun 26, 2004 7:07 pm

FBC Escreveu: Mais uma vez parabens Cindelp e obrigado pelos momentos que me proporcionou, é que, não menosprezando outras raças que adoro, os Dogos são a minha perdição, Pena é que em Portugal não se cultive mais a caça de javali à faca e sem armas de fogo. Para mim essas é uma forma superior de caçar, onde a luta é mais de igual para igual, há um maior respeito pela natureza e pelas armas de defesa dos animais caçados , etc, etc....
Esta pratica em Portugal é proibida e em Espanha apenas é permitida em determinada provincia.

Sobre o resto do seu post, estamos de acordo.

Bom fim de semana

Tiago Fortuna
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FBC
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Registado: sábado nov 22, 2003 12:24 am
Localização: Muitos

sábado jun 26, 2004 7:21 pm

Olá Tiago

[quote=FAbarm]


Esta pratica em Portugal é proibida e em Espanha apenas é permitida em determinada provincia.



Tiago Fortuna
[/quote]

Esta caça tambem pratica em França e Italia, mas por poucas pessoas. Em Portugal sei que é proibida no regime geral mas no regime ordenado tenho as minhas duvidas! já me tentei informar devidamente mas ainda não cheguei a conclusão nenhuma. Mas se é proibida é pena, pois esta é a utilização que deve ter um verdadeiro cão de presa.

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Francisco Bica
FAbarm
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Mensagens: 1348
Registado: sábado mai 11, 2002 3:56 pm

sábado jun 26, 2004 7:33 pm

Por exemplo ao contrario de nuestros hermanos, não nos é possivel caçar com reclamo à perdiz, mesmo no regime ordenado.
O principio que rege a proibição é a mesma.

Espero ter-me feito compreender ;)

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Tiago
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