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Best Dog Breed for Hunting Mountain Lions

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I’m often asked about dog breeds for mountain lion hunting.  I mostly run Walker hounds. I like them because they’ll generally run faster than black and tans, they have really good noses, they typically have good dispositions, and they’re easy to handle. I have had Plott and blue tick hounds. The two Plotts I had did really well, but I am just partial to Walker dogs. 

I once had a fellow ask if I would like to have his dog, because he was moving from Utah to Mississippi and didn’t want to take the dog with him. He brought the dog to me and said the dog’s name was Bullet. 

I asked the man if the dog had been trained, and the man said, “Yes, he was trained by a professional lion hunter. But the man was mean to the dog, so he was taken away from his owner. My wife and I adopted him, and he’s pretty much been a house dog ever since.” 

MountainLions_day3I said, “I don’t know about this dog, but I’ll go ahead and take him. If he doesn’t hunt, I will send him on a mission.” 

I have never had a better lion dog than that house dog. He could find a lion track on dry ground where we couldn’t even see the track. Bullet was honest as the day was long, and he had a lot of cat sense.

A couple of years ago, we had a mountain lion pull a trick on us. The cat went up a pine tree, walked across a log leaning on a pine tree and then went up a different pine tree. The rest of the dogs in the pack started treeing on the pine tree that the lion went up like they were supposed to do. However, Bullet was treeing on another tree about 50 yards away. 

I said to myself, “I wonder what this dog is doing over there treeing by himself.” 

I walked around and around the tree that the pack was barking under, and I never could see the lion. Finally, I went over to the tree where Bullet was barking, and the cat was about 10 feet off the ground coming down the tree and preparing to jump. But Bullet was at the bottom keeping that cat up the tree. Bullet was one of the greatest dogs I’ve ever had.

Day 2: One of Lynn Worwood’s Most Exciting Hunts

Tomorrow: Treeing A Mountain Lion

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