One Series: Three singles:
- 60 yards (dummy)
- 140 yards (dummy)
- 190 yards (dummy)
- #2 thrown 80° to the left of #1
- #3 thrown 40° to the right of #2
Description of marks:
- Thrower for #1 stood behind a tree, threw to left into high cover. Line was a simple road crossing and low cover most of the way.
- Thrower for #2 stood on right side of a mulch mound and threw to right onto low cover. Line to #2 included crossing a junction of roads but was otherwise low cover. Line back from #2 included two bright white utility covers a bit to the right of the dog's path to the start line. Lumi and Laddie were both distracted by these and stalled there, but none of the other dogs seemed to notice them.
- Line to #3 was thru several trees on both sides and dipped in middle, so that dog could not see either end of the line from the low point. In addition, the dog had to cross several strips of high cover. Thrower for #3 was in shadows but visible from the start line, standing beyond the trees. He threw the mark back to the left and into another strip of high cover. Every dog had a wide-ranging hunt on #3.
Steadiness: With check cord, Lumi was steady on all marks. We did not try honoring.
Conditions: Steady rain, wind 9 MPH, temperature 39°F
Location: Rover's Content, Cheltenham
Blind: 150 yard cold blind, the line over a fallen tree, on left side of same mound used for station of mark #2. The other dogs ran this blind after the triple. Lumi and Laddie ran this at the end of secondary training (see below).
Notes: In addition to running with the group, we did a little training ourselves both before and after the group work.
Before the group work:
We did pile work with six canvas dummies, distance 20 yards, both dogs off lead, steady, and sitting on either side of me, being sent alternately to the pile. We did this four times in different locations, the first two with no cover changes, the second two through strips of high cover.
Lumi seemed distracted or confused at first during the pile work, apparently uncertain whether to pick-up a dummy and return uncued, possibly because of the speed drill we were doing last night, where Lumi was only to pick up the dummy if cued to do so. She also stalled the first time she was to return thru high cover. In both cases, I walked out to her, threw the dummy back with the others, walked her back on lead, and then had her sit while Laddie took his turn. Then I sent Lumi again, and this time she picked the dummy right back and ran all the way back with it.
During the group work:
- On #1, she ran toward thrower rather than to fall, found the dummy, picked it up, but ran toward thrower with it rather than toward me at first. I called her and she immediately turned and ran to me.
- On #2, she ran to the mark well and picked the dummy up uncued and without hesitation, but on return she swerved to the white utility caps and stalled there, not coming when called. I walked out to her, slipped her check cord under her collar as a lead, took the dummy, and walked her back to the start line without saying anything. She did not seem stressed and seemed happy to run another mark.
- The first time #3 was thrown, she did not see it. We never practice with the marks being thrown thru a tunnel of trees. When she heard the gunshot, she looked in the correct direction, but apparently not quickly enough because when I sent her, she took a step and then stopped. I brought her back to the start line and asked that #3 be thrown again.
- The second time #3 was thrown, she was well focused and ran straight toward the mark, but after running thru the cover changes and down into the dip and up the hill again, she had lost her line. After considerable hunting, she found the dummy, picked up uncued and unhesitatingly, and ran straight back to me without slowing. I wasn't happy with the big hunt at the time, but when I saw that every other dog ran the mark the same way, I realized that Lumi had run #3 quite well.
We ran a poor man mark and then the same cold blind that the other dogs had run during the group work. The poor man mark was 100 yards, 45° to the right of the blind, thru a strip of high cover and the dummy thrown into more high cover.
Lumi ran the poor man mark well, having no trouble running the correct line to the fall, picking up the dummy uncued and without hesitation, and returning on the run without slowing as she re-crossed the strip of high cover. On the blind, she stopped and began hunting when she got to the fallen tree. When I whistled, she did not sit, but she took up the line she had been on, jumped over the tree, and completed the retrieve. Although it was a serious mistake for her not to sit when whistled, her work on both the extra mark and the blind was fast, confident, and enthusiastic.
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