CatShooter
OK, right off, I'll say this is a weird thought, but it's not my fault - blame MrMajestic, and his thread, "New trick for Chucks, maybe?"
Here's my thought. Dogs can be very territorial. When I was younger (in my mischievous teens), I discovered that if you made a cardboard cutout of a dog (sideways profile) and put it 50 or 100 feet from a house with a defensive dog, it would make the defensive dog think it's home might be under threat, and they will go nutz to defend their terrtory... (Don't ask me how I know that, but you just had to be there at the time).
Have any of you guys seen woodchucks do defensive behavior when they saw another woodchuck near it's home territory?
Here's what I was thinking... If you had a cardboard cutout of a standing woodchuck, a BIG ONE... and you stood it somewhere that a difficult 'chuck was holed up, that maybe when the chuck saw it's enemy, it would also stand tall to defend it''s home territory... and keep standing there, being bad assed until it got clobbered by a few grains of copper, zink, and lead.
Any thoughts??
Here's my thought. Dogs can be very territorial. When I was younger (in my mischievous teens), I discovered that if you made a cardboard cutout of a dog (sideways profile) and put it 50 or 100 feet from a house with a defensive dog, it would make the defensive dog think it's home might be under threat, and they will go nutz to defend their terrtory... (Don't ask me how I know that, but you just had to be there at the time).
Have any of you guys seen woodchucks do defensive behavior when they saw another woodchuck near it's home territory?
Here's what I was thinking... If you had a cardboard cutout of a standing woodchuck, a BIG ONE... and you stood it somewhere that a difficult 'chuck was holed up, that maybe when the chuck saw it's enemy, it would also stand tall to defend it''s home territory... and keep standing there, being bad assed until it got clobbered by a few grains of copper, zink, and lead.
Any thoughts??