They go underneath to find him
After lighting the thicket on fire, the smoke drives Ralph out into the open where the hunters spot him. Loving the chaos and the thrill of the hunt, the hunters quickly realize where Ralph is trying to hide and surround him.
As "boys with sticks."
jack takes the hunters and creates their own"tribe".
That he thinks his hunters are incompetent at what they do and that Ralph is not a proper chief because he talks like piggy.
Ralph stabbed two boys with his spear, while evading Jack's hunters in the final chapter of the book: chapter 12: Cry of the Hunters.
Jack and his hunters try two strategies. Jack first had a boulder from the top of castle rock sent crashing into the thicket with the intention of either killing Ralph or driving him out of hiding. When this failed Jack then lit a fire, hoping to smoke Ralph out of the thicket.
If you mean 'what are the strategies formulated by Ralph's oppostion to get Ralph out of the thicket' then there were two strategies. Jack first had a boulder from the top of castle rock sent crashing into the thicket with the intention of either killing Ralph or driving him out of hiding. When this failed Jack then lit a fire, hoping to smoke Ralph out of the thicket.
If you mean 'what are the strategies formulated by Ralph's oppostion to get Ralph out of the thicket' then there were two strategies. Jack first had a boulder from the top of castle rock sent crashing into the thicket with the intention of either killing Ralph or driving him out of hiding. When this failed Jack then lit a fire, hoping to smoke Ralph out of the thicket.
because they saw the beast and he wants to hunt it down and thought Ralph said that his hunters were not hunters
No, when Ralph is hiding from Jack he hides in a thicket (a dense group of bushes or trees). The enclosed bower is where Simon went in the forest to observe the nature and be peaceful. It is also where the head of the pig was put by jack and the hunters for the beast, and when Simon was having a seizure and hallucinating the pig was speaking to him.
From their voices Ralph identified that Jack, Roger and at least one of the twins were outside the thicket, as he heard Roger and Jack question either Sam or Eric, to confirm that the thicket was Ralph's intended hiding place.
In chapter 8 of "Lord of the Flies," Ralph characterizes Jack's hunters as primitive and barbaric, with an emphasis on their violent tendencies and detachment from civilization. He sees them as being consumed by their bloodlust and becoming more savage as they embrace their roles as hunters. Ralph is disturbed by their descent into savagery and the way they prioritize hunting over maintaining the signal fire and runway.