Pheasants and a Porcupine

stubblejumper

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Yesterday myself and a friend joined another friend and his three Pudelpointers for a day of pheasant hunting. The rooster were running, the dogs worked hard, and they found us some birds, and every bird that flew died and went home with us. Unfortunately the dogs also found a porcupine, and two of them needed quills removed. Lucky one dog only had three quills in it's nose, which were quickly removed, but the other dog had quills in it's nose, and inside and outside of it's mouth. With the owner holding this dog, my friend removed the quills until were were satisfied that we had them all. Then it was back to hunting, and the dogs seemed to have forgotten the entire porcupine incident. At the end of the day, we were tired, the dogs were happy, and we had pheasant to take home. With about a week to go in the season, we have done very well on pheasants this year, and the 28 gauge has killed every pheasant that it has been fired at.
 
I think you got really lucking with the porkie-pine.
Didja put it out it's misery?

Ask Jay 'bout misery and the dints caused to his bank 'count.

Been a long while since my oven seen a pheasant............:wave:
 
Just "one of those days" with the dogs .... ;)

Been there, done that and all I can offer is probably better a somewhat mild encounter with a porky than a full on skunk experience !
 
Yes, dogs and porcupines don't mix well. I can remember as a kid, our weimaraner getting a snoot full of quills. He would usually kill the porcupine and then wait patiently in our van for my dad to take him to the vet.
 
Nice job on the Pheasants, with 28ga, gotta love the Pudels!
Tip for the quills, a 1.5" diameter stick about a foot long held by a helper crossways in the dog's mouth in the molars with a hand on each side will help to keep the dog's mouth open and keep the dog from biting down and pushing the quills in the roof the mouth in deeper and in getting them out of the tongue.
 
Nice job on the Pheasants, with 28ga, gotta love the Pudels!
Tip for the quills, a 1.5" diameter stick about a foot long held by a helper crossways in the dog's mouth in the molars with a hand on each side will help to keep the dog's mouth open and keep the dog from biting down and pushing the quills in the roof the mouth in deeper and in getting them out of the tongue.

We were pretty lucky, that no quills made it inside of the teeth, or into the tongue. They were just in the inner and outer lips, the nose, and a few into the gums on the outside of the teeth. As for the 28gauge, it is my absolute favorite gauge for pheasants and upland birds. Using the Fiocchi Golden Pheasant #6 loads, the birds just fold up in the air.
 
Yesterday myself and a friend joined another friend and his three Pudelpointers for a day of pheasant hunting. The rooster were running, the dogs worked hard, and they found us some birds, and every bird that flew died and went home with us. Unfortunately the dogs also found a porcupine, and two of them needed quills removed. Lucky one dog only had three quills in it's nose, which were quickly removed, but the other dog had quills in it's nose, and inside and outside of it's mouth. With the owner holding this dog, my friend removed the quills until were were satisfied that we had them all. Then it was back to hunting, and the dogs seemed to have forgotten the entire porcupine incident. At the end of the day, we were tired, the dogs were happy, and we had pheasant to take home. With about a week to go in the season, we have done very well on pheasants this year, and the 28 gauge has killed every pheasant that it has been fired at.

:needPics:
 
Porkies are pretty rare in central and northeastern BC in recent decades. Some sort of disease wiped them out and they really haven't recovered. So my dogs haven't had an encounter yet. My previous lab did have a run-in while hunting sharp-tails and huns in central Alberta 10+ years ago. I thought it strange to find a porky out in the prairies - not a tree in sight! We pulled the dog off quickly and he only had a couple dozen quills, which we pulled out without too much fuss.
 
Did ya take the porcupine home to eat. They are tasty. They taste like roast beef. At least the one i ate did. Just got to be careful skinning it out. After that easy.
 
Did ya take the porcupine home to eat. They are tasty. They taste like roast beef. At least the one i ate did. Just got to be careful skinning it out. After that easy.

I have eaten a few porcupines... and they taste nothing like roast beef... more like a cross between lamb and a pine tree.
 
Another great pheasant hunt today, with plenty of roosters, and no porcupines. The birds were running again today, but once again the three pudelpointers tracked them down and pointed them, so we could kill them. With luck, I might get one more hunt in, before I leave on my elk hunt.
 
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