Hillsboro Hond 



History 
The
Hillsboro Hounds (TN) hosted a performance trial for recognized and
registered hunts in the Mid-South District of
the Masters of Foxhounds Association of America. No entry or capping
fees were charged. Delightful dinner parties and luncheons were given by
generous hosts and hostesses from the Hillsboro Hounds: the Davises, the
Kendalls and the Menefees. This was the first trial run under the recently
proposed Foxhound Club of North America Mounted Foxhound Pack
Performance Trial Rules and Regulations. These rules show the hard work
that went into their formulation. In order to receive the sanction of
the FCNA before a trial is run, the rules require that the Organizer
obtain insurance coverage and provide other documentation.
Seven packs from the Mid-South District
participated, bringing 46 hounds: Camargo, Long Run, Iroquois, Hillsboro,
Mells, Longreen and Oak Grove. Hounds were dyed and numbered with
randomly drawn numbers on Wednesday, December 8. There was an
organizational meeting that night during which Ed Bacon, the Performance
Trial President, was introduced to the judges and participants.
President Bacon, a noted and experienced field trial official, went over
the rules with the assembled group and instilled confidence by
answering all questions put to him in a straightforward and understandable
way, much to the satisfaction of some of the judges who were taking
their first crack at judging a foxhound trial.
The next morning hounds were checked in and
fitted with tracking collars and Hillsboro Hounds telephone numbers
before being cast at 7 am.
by huntsman Dennis Downing of the Mooreland Hunt (AL), acting huntsman
for the trial. A field of 65, including mounted judges and guides moved
off, as did the vehicular judges and their guides. The day was not ideal
for scenting. It was dry, with the wind out of the south, relatively low
humidity of about 77 percent and temperature around 50 degrees. Scent
was rising to heaven faster than most foxhunters can expect to get there.
Although hounds soon struck in
Menefee’s cedar thicket, there was immediate consternation among the
judges as some hounds were running deer. About twenty-five percent of
the pack was scratched, and hounds were widely scattered because of the
deer. After the first two hours those hounds that had survived the
earlier activity began to run coyotes and amass scores for hunting,
trailing and speed and drive until the hunt was called at 10:22 am, due
to the wide dispersal of the pack. Thankfully with the help of the
Hillsboro staff, hounds were all recovered by nightfall.
The next morning produced better conditions
due to an overnight rain, a breezy west wind, and a ten-degree drop in
temperature. The moist ground, which was warmer than the air, and the
humidity of about 90 percent kept scent on the ground. Knowledgeable
hunters were happy to see no drops of water clinging to the thorns and
leaf tips. The earth was breathing out. Hounds joined their huntsman
with enthusiasm — no rolling on the ground this morning. They came to
their business with sterns raised and noses down in an investigative
posture. They were again cast at 7 am, into the cedar thicket where
judges were already waiting. The pack immediately found a coyote, which
ran to Buford Station Road where it
was turned back into the hunt country by vehicular whips. There they
ran on for a long time and were well scored by the diligent judges.
Eventually hounds were re-collected and recast into the cedars where
another coyote was started and accounted for in under 30 minutes with
virtually the whole pack in on the final act. On this climactic note,
President Bacon called the hunt at 10:06 am. The second day produced
tired horses and a very full score sheet, making plenty of work for the
conscientious judges and informative results for the participants. After
two days of hard running there were no injured hounds, horses or riders.
Huntsmen, Masters, and members of the field could be home well in time
for their Saturday fixtures.
After the luncheon and the awards ceremony the judges and
participants were asked to give their suggestions for improvement and
there was talk about various possibilities such as an elimination
tournament among the districts to produce an annual FCNA Champion
Performance Hound. The Organizer suggested that a penalty for run-fling
deer might be written into the rules to be prorated over the remainder
of the offenders’ pack so as to discourage entry of chancy hounds that
detract from the quality of the trial. Charging an entry fee for each
hound might also have the same beneficial result and help to defray the
costs of the host or organizer. Also it
was generally agreed that the four judge minimum in the rules is
grossly inadequate. We used eighteen judges, including the Trial President.
The biddability concept was not deemed suitable to be fairly judged, but
the voice category was judged without difficulty.
Hound
breeders are notorious optimists, especially when encouraged by an
exhilarating day in the field and perhaps a drop or two to
enhance the memory and fire the ambition. Surely some of the stars on
the score sheets can look forward to a spring with its own rewards. I
know this is true of the Hillsboro, which bred two of the top four
Highest General Average hounds. Hillsboro Swift, the overall winner,
and Mells Chelsea, which came fourth, were both bred by Hillsboro, while
Midland Lincoln, a gift from Ben Hardaway to Hillsboro, finished third.
The Mells won the Best Pack and the Best Voice awards.The first ten
hounds with the Highest General Average of points scored in four
categories — hunting, trailing, speed and drive, and endurance —
were, from one to ten, Hillsboro Swift, Mells Bear, Hillsboro’s
Midland Lincoln, Mells Chelsea, Long Run Flute, Iroquois Fickle, Mells
Gambler, Mells Action, Camargo Bounder and Iroquois Courage.
Hillsboro Swift is by Hillsboro Rodney out of Hillsboro Swinger. Typical
of the Hillsboro breeding program, Swift is line bred back to Foxcatcher
Pastor. Swift goes back in tail male four generations to Pastor who also
appears twice — top and bottom —
in the third generation.
As a last word, I would like to extol the sportsmanship of all
the hosts, Masters, hunt staff, judges, guides, and members of the field
who made the event such an engaging occasion. They rose before dawn and
celebrated the chase late into the night. They filled their days with
adventure in the countryside and friendships
not to be forgotten.


Copy right ©
Dutch Kenstaff Staffordshire Bull Terrier ® All rights reserved
|