Archives
 By  Staff Reports Published 
6:56 pm Thursday, March 11, 2004

More than just a squirrel hunt

By By Otha Barham / outdoors editor
March 5, 2004
Most of us who love hunting will try to squeeze in last minute hunts for given game at the very end of the season. One day you look up and you are in the last week of the season and something tells you that you didn't schedule enough hunts to carry you over until next fall and a new opener.
This year, when the deer season closed, I knew I had some making up to do in the squirrel hunting category, and my situation was urgent. Doug Marshall graciously volunteered to relieve my anxiety. He and his squirrel dogs help control squirrel populations hereabouts.
Three of us took off for some Lauderdale County cutovers where hardwoods had been left along Alamucha Creek. We were Doug, myself and his dog Lady.
Now Lady is a friendly little squirrel dog who turns all business when she is cast into squirrel woods. But there was a fly in the ointment here. You see, Lady, on her last hunt before this one, had, during the course of her squirrel treeing, accompanied another of Doug's dogs in taking off on the fresh scent trail of a deer.
Bad Dog
Such action is frowned upon mightily by squirrel dog owners. Typically and understandably, Doug was unhappy about the deer chase, which cost him worry and time in the search and recovery effort.
In the course of correcting Lady's behavior and venting his frustration with her transgression, he had expressed his feelings to the little dog when she got through chasing the deer. Our hunt would be her first chance at redemption.
Doug wondered if his corrective communications had gotten through to Lady and Lady wondered if Doug was through with his hands-on lecturing. It turned out that she had learned her lesson well and had decided that her true calling was to tree squirrels and ignore deer scent. There were fresh deer tracks all about on our hunt, but Lady skipped over them without so much as a sniff. She spent her time checking at the base of every squirrely looking tree in sight.
It so happened that the combination of my poor shooting and the fact that the first squirrel treed was half a football field high in the tree resulted in a squirrel on the ground that had not yet expired. The squirrel dashed for a nearby hole and Lady beat him there. The feisty little dog grabbed the squirrel in her jaws, and as his last act, he bit her on the nose.
Good Dog
This turn of events caused Lady no small amount of dismay, as well as considerable bleeding. Then and there, she embraced revenge. And she began to thrive on it. Deer scent long forgotten, she started treeing squirrels with blood in her eye, so to speak. She treed eight or nine squirrels and we got abut half of them. All were in very tall trees, one in a pine with all its main limbs up where a squirrel could hide far above the surrounding treetops. That squirrel could not have been in a safer tree.
As with every dog squirrel hunt I can recall, this one was loads of fun with plenty of action. Tired legs, some empty shotgun shells, a warm .22 rifle barrel and a sack of squirrels are cures for arthritis and many other human ills.
I can't know what ailments that plague squirrel dogs are subdued by a squirrel hunt. But as Doug snapped a leash on Lady's collar at the last tree and headed for the truck, I thought I saw a smile on her face.
Much more than being your everyday squirrel hunt, this one was a story of a squirrel hunter and his dog emerging from a serious encounter of sin, punishment and forgiveness, to find each other in a strengthened relationship of mutual purpose.

Also on Franklin County Times
Roberts pleads not guilty to 106 counts
Main, News, Russellville
By Brady Petree For the FCT 
July 8, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — A Georgia woman facing 106 counts ranging from possession of child pornography to first-degree sodomy has pleaded not guilty to the cha...
Ex-mayor Oliver, 82, dies
Franklin County, Main, News, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
July 8, 2026
Former Russellville mayor and retired U.S. Army National Guard Major General Troy Oliver, 82, a 1961 graduate of Belgreen High School, died Saturday. ...
Patriotic banner donated to Tharptown VFD
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
July 8, 2026
R U S S E L L V I L L E — Lottie Coan, who has served as secretary- treasurer for the Tharptown Volunteer Fire Department since 2015, was sitting in h...
Miller Family Dairy opens processing facility
Features, Main, News, ...
By Addi Broadfoot For the FCT 
July 8, 2026
CROOKED OAK — Miller Family Dairy unveiled its new milk processing facility June 30, bringing the business one step closer to bottling its own milk, p...
Great Pretenders take stage July 16
Columnists, News, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
July 8, 2026
Each summer, the W.C. Handy Music Festival brings outstanding music and entertainment to communities across the Shoals. For more than four decades, th...
DAR chapter unearths patriot’s story
Franklin County, News
Chelsea Retherford For the FCT 
July 8, 2026
In a forgotten patch of woods on a farm near Cloverdale, history had lain hidden for generations. It took a determined group of local historians, gene...
Hartley shares her ancestor’s legacy
News
By Chelsea Retherford Staff Writer 
July 8, 2026
Patricia Hartley has always felt a strong sense of patriotism and duty to community and family. It was only recently that she discovered those were fa...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *