Sunday, February 24, 2008

Holodeck Training

Holodeck Program
based on guidance from Alice Woodyard and Jody Baker

BEFORE OTHER TRAINERS ARRIVE

  • Bring high-value treats for Lumi during group work.
  • Both dogs:
    • 32-yard pile work to two birds and two dummies on long line.
    • Bird-foot dril: orange dummy prepositioned at 30 yards, a bir thrown to 15 yards on either side, retrieve the dummy, then the birds.
  • White jacket.
  • Load pockets: pistol, ammo, ear protectors, radio.
WHEN THE OTHER TRAINERS ARRIVE
  • Ask what Laddie was doing when he got to the pigeon crate last week.
RUNNING LUMI
  • No multiples.
  • No blinds.
  • Consider running long gun first, possibly with short guns retired (to be reviewed with Alice and Jody).
  • Cue "mark" before each throw, then send as quickly as possible.
  • If Lumi looks away from the fall before I send her, cue "mark" again.
  • Auto-whistle recall on the first two marks of each training day. Based on how Lumi does, consider switching to contingent whistle for the remaining marks of the day.
RECORD KEEPING PER MARK
  • Attempted break?
  • Head swinging, before or after throws? Which throws?
  • Did dog return uncued? Auto-whistle? Contingent whistle? Voice? Walk out?
  • If the dog did not come straight back, why (for example, RG, parading, Super D, zoomies, diversion)?
AFTER GROUP TRAINING
  • If possible, borrow a crate of pigeons and run both dogs thru a distraction-proofing drill.
  • If that's not available, run both dogs on wagon wheel, bird foot, or bail-out drills.
Conditions. Sunny, breezy, temps in the 20s when we arrived at 8:00 AM, in the 40s when we left at 4:00 PM.

Before Group Training. Both dogs:
  • Pile work at 30 yards: duck, pigeon, two dummies.
  • Bird foot drill with thrown white dummy in center (40'), birds on either side (20').
  • Poorman duck at 80 yards.
LUMI: No problem, great spirits.

LADDIE: Inconsistent:
  • Pile: Mild resource guarding on birds from pile (delayed pick-up, head throwing). Then, instead of picking up dummy after both birds were gone, started to hunt. Responded to "give it" with retrieve of the dummy, then no problem on the second dummy.
  • Bird foot drill: Took five tries and major modification to get Laddie to pick up dummy first. Handling grade: D.
  • Poorman: Good but not laser mark, good return until 20' from me, slowed, but then delivered when cued.
From my notes during the session: "Laddie has lost all precision on whistle work. I think that he now needs remedial work on handling, not diversion work."

Series A. Lumi ran as the tenth dog:
  1. 170 yard dead pigeon over scent from pigeon flyers, thrown from keyhole into high cover
  2. 120 yard dead duck, thrown by gunner next to tree into high cover
  3. 260 yard dead duck, thrown on a sharp angle in, by gunner next to tree and in line with sun, into shadowy depression
The starting line was atop a mound. Configuration was pyramid:
  • #1 was 45° to the right of #3.
  • #2 was 30° to the left of #3.
Every other dog besides Lumi running a single or a single plus a double ran #3 first. I suspect the sun was a factor on #3 until later in the morning:
  • Nearly all of the first 20 or so dogs needed help — waving and calling "hey-hey" — from the thrower to find the thrower from the start line.
  • Several also needed help finding the fall.
  • Several of those needed help almost as soon as they left the start line.
I used an auto-whistle recall on every mark, but it did not appear necessary. As in the warm-up work, Lumi showed no hint of resource guarding. I concluded that Lumi was ready for a flyer.

Thrower helped Lumi on hunt for #3. I didn't request it and don't know if it was needed.

At the line, Lumi could not find the #3 station, even with sustained hey-heys and waving, until I called for the throw. She found it when the gun fired and seemed to know the line to the fall when sent.

I had Lumi honor with a loose slip lead. She was steady on the first two throws of the triple that followed us, but tried ot break with the running dog on the flyer.

Aside from that, Lumi was off lead all day — coming to the start line, at the line, and leaving the line — without difficulty.

Lumi did not turn her head off the fall on any of the three throws.

Pigeon Flyer. I asked one of the gunners to shoot a flyer for Lumi. It was the only cripple of the day, after two dozen clean kills. Lumi chased it down and brought it back without any sign of resource guarding.

1000 Pleasures Drill. Between the two group series, I borrowed a crate that still had a pigeon in it in order to run a diversion drill that Alice had designed for Laddie:
  • The crate 30 yards in front of the start line
  • A pile of dead birds 50 yards from the start line, 30° to the right of the crate
  • A pile of dummies 35 yards from the start line, 5° to the left of the crate
  • A pile of dummies 70 yards from the start line, 30° to the left of the crate
In terms of learning to deal with the crate, Laddie seemed to do fine. He took casts off it to the nearest dummy pile a few times, and eventually took lines directly to the pile.

In terms of the overall drill, Laddie did badly: poor lining, poor responses to sit whistles. In addition, when I accidentally placed a dummy in the pile where birds had originally been placed and sent Laddie to that pile, he took the line but ran past the dummy, instead beginning to hunt for a bird. After a couple of unsuccessful "give its", I ran out and tossed the dummy in the air, then cued Laddie to pick it up again. This time, he picked it right up.

So in addition to needing remedial work on the whistle sit, Laddie also needs remedial work on picking up a dummy over bird scent.

Series B. Like many of the other dogs, Lumi ran this series as a double:
  1. 160 yards, a duck thrown into a stand of trees (memory bird)
  2. 140 yards, a pigeon thrown into low cover (go bird)
The start line was atop a mound. Lume needed to hunt a little for the memory bird, but aside from that, had no problem with the double. In addition, I used no auto-whistle and no whistle was needed.

Lumi did not turn her head off the fall on either of the throws except when I turned from #1 to #2.

No comments:

[Note that entries are displayed from newest to oldest.]