We ran the following series, first Lumi, then Laddie:
- Mark #1 - 30 yards, dead pigeon.
- Mark #2 - 100 yards, dead pigeon, 90° to left of mark #1.
- Pinball drill - 90 yards, four poles (spaced 30-30-30 yards), no articles, duck scent on two tracks between poles 2 and 3, and on two more tracks between poles 3 and 4. The pinball course was 90° to left of mark #2.
- Mark #3 - 220 yards, dead pigeon, 45° to right of mark #2.
All marks were thrown after a gunshot.
Dave said he was excited about both dogs' performance, especially Lumi's, which was not only error-free but was unusually enthusiastic.
Laddie broke twice on mark #1 and once on mark #2 and ignored my recall, and each time, Dave picked up the bird. Obviously I'd have preferred that Laddie not break, and I'd have preferred that he come when called, but as Dave pointed out, it was cool to see Laddie's steadiness improve so visibly when he saw that breaking was fruitless.
Considering that Laddie hasn't had a chance to run around since Saturday, I suspect that if he'd had some play time before today's training, he wouldn't have had quite so much bundled up energy and would not have broken. We're working on his recall, but I guess the gunfire and the dead bird, combined with all that energy, were too much for him today. We'll keep working on it.
I id not see the breaks as too significant, since they declined rather than increasing. By comparison, seeing both dogs responsiveness on picking up birds and racing back to me with them was thrilling.
Neither dog seemed to have any trouble with the duck scent on the pinball drill. Soon we'll try a more advanced handling drill with duck scent that Alice has also suggested.
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