Holodeck Program
based on guidance from Alice Woodyard and Jody Baker
- To reduce likelihood of zoomies, run Laddie on pinball drills and cold blinds before the other trainers arrive; let Lumi rest
- No birds until we've had some good sessions with dummies; therefore, make sure the gunners have dummies with them when they go out
- No multiples for either dog until that dog has had some good series running singles
- Go back to running shortest marks first until we've had some good sessions; then we can work on running a long mark first occasionally
- Always use a slip cord to prevent a break, but watch the dog and try to remember and record whether the slip cord was needed
- Auto-whistle the first two marks of each training day; based on how the dogs do, consider switching to an only-if-needed whistle for the remaining marks of the day
- No blinds with the group, since that would let the dogs continue to practice hunting for the article rather than responding to a whistle
- Use no sub-$100 cues: better to let the dog run to the wrong station, parade, etc. than to call the dog and be ignored
- Use a walk-out only if the dog digs in and won't come, not for the dog running around; if a walk-out is needed, run the dog on another mark even if that was supposed to be the last mark of the series; hopefully, no walk-outs will be needed for dummies
- General rule: arrange it so that the dog can never prosper (get to a dummy or bird) by blowing me off, then let the dog make unprosperous mistakes
Solo: After airing both dogs, I ran Laddie on the following both as a warm-up and to take some of the edge off his energy:
- Pinball drill, 90 yards, four poles (30-30-30)
- Target blind (pole, no dummy): 140 yards, 30° left of #1
- Cold blind (dummy, no pole): 50 yards, 30° left of #2
- 50 yards (dummy) into high cover
- 150 yards (streamer dummy) 15° to right of #1, at base of mulch mound
- 240 yards (streamer dummy) 30° to right of #2 into high cover
The advanced dogs also ran a second series made up of two blinds on a tight angle to one another.
General: Marks thrown as in Field Trials
Terrain: clumpy grass with strips of high grass
Sunny, 20°F, winds gusting to 30 MPH
Location: Rover's Content, Cheltenham, MD
Notes: Of about 20 dogs, Lumi ran around 4th, Laddie around 9th.
Both dogs marked well on all three marks, but except for Laddie on #2, both dogs blinked all dummies and refused to pick them up without a great deal of help from the throwers. For both dogs, this included running all the way to other stations. Apparently, the presence of duck scent from previous throws made my dogs think that a duck must be lying around somewhere, so they were determined to keep hunting until they found it.
With help from the throwers, Lumi would eventually pick up each dummy and bring it back to me.
On #1 and #3, Laddie also eventually picked up the dummy, but then he continued hunting while carrying the dummy in his mouth. He didn't respond to a whistle or voice recall, and didn't come to me until I walked about halfway out to him. Then he'd come running.
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