A unique website dedicated to fishing information from Florida's Northern Big Bend. This includes the area from the Econfina River west to the Apalachicola River
This is my Otterhound Bramble, at just over 7 months.
She is standing 21" at the shoulder and weighing close on 70 pounds.
Eventually she should be about 28/29 " at the shoulder.
In the top picture she is just rising from "stalking mode", she is fascinated by the skylarks.
mjsigns wrote:We don't see that breed around these parts. He sure looks good Cran
According to the International Kennel Club, there are less than 1000 registered in the World.
A very endangered pure English breed, only five pups were born here last year (and I got one of them).
When otter hunting was banned over here in 1969, a lot of hounds went to the US and Europe,( many were destroyed), some were then interbred with other breeds and the original lines were lost.
There are some purebred otterhounds in the US still. http://clubs.akc.org/ohca/
The breed is very laid back and confident, with a typical hound outlook on everything.
Very affectionate and imbued with the "pack mentality", protective, but not aggressive.
Good with livestock and children, they are not sight hounds and so don't want to chase things.
Once their nose is on a scent, you have a hard job to shift them.
Very, very strong swimmers, they are the only dog with truly webbed feet.
They grow big, they can climb fences, dig great holes and also lay around and sleep all day.
When a few otterhounds get together and "sing", it can bring tears to a hunting mans eyes.
Our otterhound is a female and we may let her have a litter in a few years.
My only concern then, is persuading my wife to part with them.
They sound like a great breed of dog. I have the same problem with my wife, she can't sell or part with any of the four legged nondependents at the house.
In the words of the great Doc Holliday, "I'll be your huckleberry"