Sunday, February 10, 2008

Holodeck Training

Holodeck Program
based on guidance from Alice Woodyard and Jody Baker

BEFORE OTHER TRAINERS ARRIVE

  • [Because Laddie seems to have been learning some incorrect lessons from group training, he will not be training with the other dogs at this time.] Before and after group training, work on wagon wheel drill. If someone happens to offer to throw for us, run bulldogs or alternation drill.
  • Don't work Lumi too hard while waiting for group training to begin.
  • White jacket.
  • Load pockets: pistol, ammo, ear protectors, radio.
BEFORE FIRST DOG
  • No birds until we've had some good sessions with dummies; therefore, make sure the gunners have dummies with them when they go out:
--Hard white dummies with streamers, running midway thru group for 2-3 weeks. [This will be our first week not using canvas dummies, and our first week not running first, since establishing a baseline.]
--After 2-3 weeks, combinations of dead birds and dummies until dogs ready to try a flyer.
RUNNING LUMI
  • No multiples until Lumi has had some good series running singles.
  • No blinds with the group, since that would let Lumi continue to practice hunting for the article rather than responding to a whistle.
  • Run shortest mark first, longest last.
  • Auto-whistle the first two marks of each training day. Based on how Lumi does, consider switching to an only-if-needed whistle for the remaining marks of the day.
RECORD KEEPING PER MARK
  • Attempted break?
  • Lumi returned uncued? Auto-whistle? Contingent whistle? Voice?
AFTER SESSION

Purchase some dead birds if available.

Training Day

As planned, only Lumi ran with the group, Series A and B. But both dogs also participated in some solo bird foot drills at the Rover's Content property, and one of the other trainers was kind enough to throw four short marks for Laddie, Series C, when the group training was over.

All the marks for Series A, B, and C were run thru several strips of high grass. The day was cold, breezy, and overcast.

I brought both dogs to the start line off lead for all series, and ran them without a slip cord. Lumi did not break on any of her marks, though she was highly excited especially on Series B. Laddie did break on his first two marks of Series C, but with a duck in his mouth for the second two throws, he did not break on those.

All of the sessions are described below.

Series A

I had planned to run Lumi in the middle of the pack with white dummies, but with other dogs retrieving ducks, two of the other trainers insisted I should run Lumi first, so that she would not have to pick up a dummy over duck scent. We've practiced that considerably over the last few weeks, but I didn't want to argue and proceeded to run Lumi first.

We ran three singles:
  1. 100 yards
  2. 160 yards
  3. 210 yards
#1 was 30° to the left of #3, #2 was 30° to te right of #3.

NOTES. #1 was thrown from behind a tree, and Lumi apparently didn't see the throw. The first time I sent her, she went out a few yards and then began to prance around. I called her to heel and sent her again, and this time she ran toward the thrower, then hunted for awhile. Eventually she left the area and the thrower called hey-hey. She raced back, found the dummy, picked it up, and galloped back with it on my whistle.

Lumi pinned #2, and I auto-whistled as she picked up the dummy. She seemed distractted by the thrower's bag of ducks, but I whistled again and she brought me the dummy.

On #3, Lumi hunted the area of the fall, then got out of range and the thrower called hey-hey. She found the dummy, picked it up, brought it toward the thrower, spit it out, and seemed to be looking around for a duck. The thrower said "fetch!", which Lumi somehow understood even though I use "give it". She picked up the dummy, I whistled, and she brought it back to me.

It seemed evident that Lumi really wanted to retrieve a duck. I decided to give her a shot at one in the next series, which came some time later.

Series B


Lumi ran as the second dog. We ran the course as three singles:
  1. 80 yards
  2. 110 yards across a watery inlet
  3. 160 yards through a deep hollow
I had sent out white dummies with all the throwers. When I brought Lumi to the line, I used the radio to tell #1 to throw a duck, and that I would let the others know whether to throw a duck or dummy after I saw how Lumi did on #1.

Lumi displayed no sign of resource guarding on #1, so she got to retrieve ducks for all three marks, and brought every one of them straight back on an auto-whistle. She pinned all three marks and displayed a high level of excitement the entire series, from every send out to every delivery.

Bird Foot Drills


The bird foot drill is Alice's name for a lining drill set up and run as described below:
  • Two white dummies, turned sideways for maximum visibility, 20 feet from start line and 12 feet from one another
  • Three orange dummies, end to end and turned away from the start line for minimum visibility, 40 feet from the start line and on a line between the white dummies
  • The dog is sent to the orange dummies. Alice describes the procedure for what to do if the dog does not go to the orange dummies. I followed her procedure with Lumi on the first drill and Laddie on the second.
In spare moments during the group training, I set up this drill four times in different locations, and in each location ran Laddie first, then Lumi.

The results:

FIRST LOCATION
  • Laddie: Went to the orange dummies on his first try.
  • Lumi: Went to each of the white dummies on her first two sends. When she did so, I called her back with "no here". Then I sent her three more times: first from between the white dummies, then halfway back, and finally from the start line again. She went to the orange dummies each of those times.
SECOND LOCATION
  • Laddie: Ran past the orange dummies on his first try, then to one of the white dummies on his second try. I called him to me with "here" the first time, "no here" the second time. Then I sent him three more times: first from between the white dummies, then halfway back, and finally from the start line again. She went to the orange dummies each of those times.
  • Lumi: Ran to a white dummy on her first try. I called her with "no here", sent her again. She ran between the white dummies and almost past the orange dummies, spotted them as she was running past and brought one to me.
THIRD LOCATION
  • Both dogs went to the orange dummies on their first tries.
FOURTH LOCATION
  • Both dogs again went to the orange dummies on their first tries.
Series C

This series was thrown by one of the trainers for Laddie after the group training was completed. It consisted of four marks of 70 yards with dead ducks, thrown after gunshots. The marks were 30° apart.

Laddie pinned all four marks, but stalled at the fall with all, and looked like he would have begun to chew the ducks if left to his own devices. I auto-whistled each pick-up, and when he didn't come, I began to walk out. I had to walk less and less distance with each mark, only a couple of steps on the last one.

Once Laddie began to run toward me with the ducks, he didn't stop again, and delivered each duck nicely. I took the first and last one as soon as he swung to heel and sat with them, but I had him hold the second and third in his mouth at the start line while watching the next mark thrown in the hope that it would discourage breaking (it did), and also in the hope that that would make the delivery more valuable and increase the probability of immediate returns in the future.

Training Group Advice


As often happens, I received some advice during today's training. Today, one of the trainers said that Field Trial trainers have their dogs look for the long gun first, as soon as the dog comes to the line, and if you're running singles, you'd run the long mark first.

I think it makes sense to look for the long gun first on a multiple, especially if that's going to be the first mark thrown. Often, however, that will make the long mark the last mark retrieved. When running singles, if you run the long mark first, you're actually running the opposite order that the more advanced dogs will typically run.

In discussing this with Alice some weeks ago, she recommended that at Lumi's and Laddie's current stage of development, they should be running singles with the shortest mark first, the longest mark last.

Conclusion


Although I had planned to have Lumi retrieve dummies for a few more sessions before trying her on ducks again, it appears that she may be ready to retrieve ducks from now on. I don't know how soon they will have flyers again, and I would be reluctant to have her retrieve a flyer yet. But as long as they're throwing dead ducks, or even dead pigeons, I'm comfortable with letting her continue to retrieve them as long as she does not begin to display signs of resource guarding again.

Although Laddie has been retrieving ducks well in private training, today showed that he is not yet reliable retrieving ducks under group conditions, even the subdued conditions of short marks and a single thrower. Alice has recommended that he not run with the group until he has a rock solid whistle sit, so that is our current training objective. Once that feels solid, he'll retrieve dummies for 2-3 weeks before we try having him retrieve ducks with the group.

Both dogs exhibited nice progress on the lining drills.

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