Skinny Little Buddy\'s Animal Rescue Inc.
Putting Smiles On Faces One Puppy At A Time.

Home|Adoptable Dogs|Happy Tails|Adoption Application|Foster Application
SLBAR Logo
Main Menu
 
 
 Home
 Dogs
 Adoptable Dogs
 Happy Tails
 Donations
 Applications
 Adoption
 Foster
 News
 Topics
 Event Calendar
 Stories Archive
 Submit News
 Content
 Content
 Dog Breeds, etc
 Staff Bios
 Surveys
 Animal Feeds
 Info
 Contact Us
 Recommend Us
 Search
 Sitemap
 Journal
 Private Messages
 FAQ
 Legal
 Your Account
 Contributors
 Discussions
 Forums
 Members List
 Live Chat
 Downloads & Links
 Downloads
 Interesting Links
 

 

 

Chat Box
 
   

 

 

Content
 
   

 

 

Take Me Home
 
 

 

 

 

     
     
  Hog-Baiting

Dogs

Hog-Baiting

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia, by MultiMedia

Back | Home | Up | Next


Hog-baiting, aka Hog dogging, Hog-dog fighting, or Hog-dog rodeo is a bloodsport involving the baiting of a hog or boar.

Background

In a typical match the hog, tusks removed, is released into a pen with one or more dogs who attempt to subdue it. In more violent versions of the sport, specially trained "catch dogs" try to bring down the hog by biting and dragging. Occasionally the dogs are outfitted with chest armor, but major injuries to both animals are common in any case.

Hog dogging as a sport developed from the training of specialist boar-hunting dogs. Typically a hunter's pack of dogs is divided into "bays" who corner the hogs and "catch dogs" that try to bring them down. The development of this training into a competitive spectator event is believed to have first taken place in Winnfield, Louisiana at an event known as "Uncle Earl's Hog Dog Trials." The Trials were first organized in 1995 as part of the celebration of former Governor and well-known hog hunter Earl K. Long's 100th birthday. The annual event is known as "The Super Bowl of Hog Dog Baying." In these trials, a group of five judges score the dogs' skill at baying the hog (cornering it and causing it to stand still.) Events are classed by the age of the dog and the number of dogs attempting the bay.

According to the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) most active pens are found in the U.S. Southern states, with the highest current concentration in Alabama. Louisiana passed a bill in 2004 to prohibit hog dogging contests in which either animal could be hurt or killed. The Winnfield event, which is officially recognized by the Louisiana legislature, is exempted from the ban because only bay dogs are used and if a dog "catches" or clamps onto the hog for more than five seconds it is pried loose with a "break stick" and disqualified from competition. The organizers consider their event to be a "family-oriented" spectacle that preserves aspects of Louisiana's traditions and culture.

Already such contests can be prosecuted as animal cruelty, though only the dogs' owners are punished, often with a fine or short sentence. Several states, including Alabama, South Carolina, and Tennessee are considering specific laws to set penalties for breeders, promoters, hosts and spectators who participate in these events. Crafting such laws is complicated by organized resistance from breeders of fighting cocks, whose long-established, though technically illegal, industry still has enough power to discourage broad new legislation against all animal combat. The proposed legislation in Alabama would also exempt the use of dogs in hunting wild boar (which are considered nuisances and can be hunted year round) or for herding hogs on a farm.

References

See also


Home | Up | Badger-Baiting | Rat-Baiting | Bear-Baiting | Bull-Baiting | Dog Fighting | Hog-Baiting | Human-Baiting | Lion-Baiting | Polar Bear-Baiting

Dogs, made by MultiMedia | Free content and software

This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

 
     

     
     
 
All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner.
 The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2008 by
Skinny Little Buddy's Animal Rescue, Inc.

Skinny Little Buddy's Rescue is a  Non-Profit Private Charity, Animal Rescue Group
Located At:02324 Co. Rd. F Edon, Ohio 43518 Google Map Directions
WebMaster:webmaster@skinnylittlebuddysrescue.org
Email:mail@skinnylittlebuddysrescue.org
Phone:419-298-3576 or 419-212-5557
 Website hosting by Omnis Network.
Run by RavenNuke CMS (Credits)

(Original PHP-Nuke Code Copyright © 2004 by Francisco Burzi)
Page Generation: 0.17 Seconds