Conditions included temps in the 50s, bright sun, a calm wind, geese on the technical ponds, pools of standing water over much of the property, and low clumpy cover broken up by strips of high grass.
We ran from atop a mulch mound. We used no slip cords and neither dog seemed the least at risk of breaking. As I've been doing recently, I used food at various times with the intent of reinforcing good performance, but this was one day when the food seemed entirely irrelevant.
Each dog ran a single long series:
- A poorman double of a duck and a pigeon, 30 yards, open ground.
- 70 yards to a white dummy thrown by Renee standing in a keyhole formed by two trees after a gunshot, the dummy landing to the left of the trees and in high grass.
- A poorman double of a duck and a pigeon, 40 yards, thrown to the far side of a pool of standing water.
- 180 yards to a white dummy thrown by Renee standing behind and to the left of a tree, so that she appeared under the tree's boughs, thrown following a gunshot onto a high hillside.
- A poorman double of a duck and a pigeon, 40 yards, thrown behind a stand of trees, requiring the dog to watch each bird thrown from the right of a tree and land on the left of the tree.
- 250 yards to a white dummy thrown by Renee standing behind a large area of high grass, thrown after a gunshot into the shallows of a pond.
- #4 was 30° to the left of #2.
- #6 was 90° to the left of #4.
LADDIE
On the poorman doubles, Laddie only exhibited resource guarding on one of the six retrieves, requiring a verbal cue to complete that one returns. The other five retrieves of birds looked excellent.
On the long marks, Laddie had no problem at all with #2 and #4. On #6, he got lost trying to run toward me, finally dropping the dummy and rolling on it. I called "here", and Laddie instantly jumped to his feet, picked up the dummy, and raced to me with it.
LUMI
Lumi showed no resource guarding of the birds, and once sent, ran all her marks nicely. On #6, she lost me on the return and started running the wrong way, but responded instantly to a recall whistle.
My primary concern with Lumi was working on her recent pattern of watching a thrown article fall, then taking her eyes off it too soon. The strategy I used today was to radio Renee to pick up the dummy and re-throw it if Lumi took her eyes off the fall before I sent her.
On #2, Lumi needed three throws. On #4, she needed two throws. On #6, she never lost focus and needed only one throw.
Comments. Both dogs showed nice progress working in much more challenging terrain than the ballfields we usually use for private sessions.
Laddie showed nice progress in two areas:
- Retrieving 5 of the 6 birds with no resource guarding
- Responding well to recall after getting lost on a return
- Keeping her focus on the fall after a thrown mark, needing fewer and fewer rethrows as we continued thru the series
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