ABOUT OUR SPORT
Article
written and published courtesy of
"Hagood's
Black & Tans"
Coonhunting is an old
sport, and has long been a part of American heritage and
tradition. Many fathers have spent countless hours
afield with their children teaching them about hunting,
gun etiquette, responsibility, respect of property, and
conservation. Keeping children interested in the
outdoors keeps their interest from wandering elsewhere.
As has all types of hunting, Coonhunting has come under
fire as of late by the anti-hunting activists with their
own political agendas and no knowledge of animal
conservation. That is why I have added this page to
address these issues.
Coonhunting with
hounds involves training hounds to hunt for, trail, and
tree raccoon. Hounds used for Coonhunting are trained to
trail coon and coon only and not to molest any other
game (deer, fox, rabbits, etc.). The hound searches for
the scent of a coon and opens (barks) upon finding the
trail. He then trails the coon giving mouth as track
dictates till the tree coon is in is found, or coon is
forced to take refuge in a tree. He then locates and
trees with a distinctive bark telling hunters coon is
treed. In competition, upon arriving, coon is located,
tree scored, and coon is left in tree. However, in
training, coons are sometimes harvested. This serves to
instill the desire for the hound to want to tree coon,
and to keep him focused on coon alone. It also serves in
conservation in keeping coon numbers in check.
Due to the recent drop
in fur prices because of activist groups attacks on the
fur industry, populations have skyrocketed. Coons have
almost no natural enemies. With the fur price nearly
nothing, hunting and trapping pressure has dropped
dramatically, allowing population to increase to very
high levels. Conservation officials and biologist have
recognized this and extended the season here in Arkansas
to nine months out of the year, only closed during the
time raccoons are giving birth and raising young. They
predate on young duck, quail, and turkey, and their
eggs. Disease, such as rabies and distemper spread
rapidly under these conditions. These overpopulated
conditions cause major die-offs every few years because
of spread of disease. Harvesting coon is a necessary
function in the conservation process for coon, and the
game they predate.
Coonhunters have the
reputation of beer guzzling, indiscriminate killers with
no regard for public property or conservation. This is
not true! Coonhunting, and competition Coonhunting is a
multi-million dollar a year business. Coonhunters only
have it in their best interest to see that conservation
of coon is carried out properly. Coon are only harvested
as necessary for training purposes. Without coon, there
is no sport. Coonhounds are among the most numerous and
popular registered breed in the U.S. today. Much of the
money used in conservation is collected from Coonhunters
by way of licenses and taxes on hunting related
businesses and expenditures. Without hunting, raccoon
numbers will inevitably climb to unmanageable numbers.
Already, professional snipers have to be hired to
harvest deer and coyote because of overpopulation, and
the danger it poses to pets, livestock, people, and the
game itself. Any knowledgeable conservationist will tell
you that harvesting is necessary in the management of
healthy game populations. We, the hunter, are an
integral part in the management and conservation of all
game animals, and contribute the most to the
preservation of game for generations to come.