Ray don't leave me hanging here. Are you going to get a Redbone or not? If you do let us know how it works out. My uncle probably didn't weigh 100 pounds. He had to put the redbones on a leash to get them in his truck. They would drag his butt all over the place. With the black and tans he could let them loose and say truck and they would jump right in.
bobg
Sorry I haven't posted in a while. I got involved in some other things and....
I don't know yet if I will be able to get a Redbone. If I do, I'll let you know. To be frank, while I would like to have a red hound to hunt, I would also like to have one to breed to a female that I have--a chocolate, red-nosed Pit Bull. I picked her up from a Creek guy, a friend of mine. He had had her for years but was intending to put her down because she was in such bad shape. I intervened, took her home, and nursed her back to health. I would like to have a pup or two from her to make into squirrel dogs. A Redbone is my first choice for a male for her.
She will hunt. My friend, when she was young, would take her fishing with him. He just turned her lose to run the woods. There's not much that she didn't catch and kill and bring back to him. Once, when he turned her loose, she spoted some geese on the lake near the shore. She dropped into a belly crawl and crept toward the birds. When she reached the edge of the water, they spotted her and lifted off. She launched into the air some four feet and grabbed one.
I had a Pit/Lab crossed dog once that was a good squirrel dog. The only problem with him, as far as hunting squirrels was concerned, was that I had to fight him for the squirrels: if he got a chance, he would eat them.
He would also eat people that messed with him.
I'm going to get back into looking for one of the red hounds. We have lots of 'coon on Eagle Chief Creek where it spends a mile on my land out in Alfalfa County, Oklahoma.