You don't need a dog; you look for orange snow; and then start looking for big black eyes.
Snowshoes have a 'if I don't move they won't see me' belief system. If they are sitting in a dark bush; they are pretty obvious. I used to stalk them anywhere the snow started turning orange. I did a lot of showshoe hunting around the Charlevoix area- out towards where there was at the time a neuclear power plant. There was a state park; closed in the winter by virtue of snow; Farragut state park? That held a lot of bunnies too. I have hunting dogs; and there are snowshoe hares and cottontails here up high; and jackrabbits and snowshoes and cottontails down low. Here when your into the low flat country; dogs are kinda fun to have; but they will kick up a dozen to a hundred bunnies in a very short time; as in a hundred yards sometimes- and they have a hard time staying on one particular bunny.
I use rubber blunts; and black shafted arrows with black feathers. The neon colored fletches glow under the snow.
I have found the best way to keep arrows in your quiver is to shoot; and if you miss just walk over and get your arrow. Even if I have a second shot; if the bunny moves; I get my arrow first.
Bunnies fried and dipped in ranch dressing .......yum.
If you get a melt and the snow leaves; the bunnies still think they are invisible.. heh heh heh..