Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Laddie Test 2.3

Test: Three singles:

  1. 60 yards (dead pigeon)
  2. 180 yards (dead pigeon)
  3. 120 yards (dummy)
Configuration – pyramid:
  • #2 thrown 45° to the left of #1
  • #3 thrown 45° to the left of #2
Poor man marks, with duck call and "hey-hey", all marks thrown downwind

Pigeon was 1 on a scale of 1-10 for usable birds

Lawn

Overcast, wind 8 MPH, temperature 51°F

Location: Sundown Park

Pass:
No

Blind: 230 yard pinball drill with 4 poles (70-70-90 yards) on a zigzag line 90° to left of mark #3, no dummies

Notes: I was very pleased with several things: Laddie raced with all his heart both ways on every mark as well as the blind, and he picked up the two pigeons on the fly, actually rolling over as he fishtailed into a U-turn on #1. He chewed pigeons only slightly as he ran, held them at heel without chewing until I reached for them, and gave them up instantly.

Since he met the primary criteria for this test series — enthusiasm in both directions and unhesitating, un-cued pick-ups — I would like to have passed Laddie. He also did wonderfully on the target blind, once again the longest blind he's ever run. In addition to his exuberance, he took every cue correctly and did not need to be recast once.

However, Laddie's performance on the test had three flaws any one of which prevented him from passing:
  1. He overran #2 and ended up running into some high cover behind the fall. The good news is that he responded instantly when I called him, spinning around, racing straight to the bird, picking it up on the fly and charging all the way back to me.
  2. He ran the wrong line on #3, heading for where I had stood when I threw the dummy rather than toward the fall. He then needed considerable time to find the fall. The good news is that he persevered.
  3. Although he picked the dummy up on #3 unhesitatingly and without being cued, he did not head straight back to me with it. Instead, he headed off to the left. The good news is that he did come straight back to me as soon as I called him, and went on to run the target blind perfectly.

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