Thursday, February 7, 2008

Private Training

Today, we had a solo morning session and an afternoon session with two throwers. As usual, we'll also work on "give it"/"hold"/"out" indoors at dinnertime, but this post is about our outdoor training.

For the morning session, we ran two series of wheel drills (Series A and B). For the afternoon, we ran two sets of marks (Series C and D).

For the wagon wheels, I used prepositioned dummies and all were in plain sight. I only had the dogs retrieve the outer ring of dummies. I used praise, food, random tosses of a dummy, and random games of tug as reinforcement for retrieves.

Although I believe that lining skill is enhanced by using a whistle sit and recall if the dog goes to the wrong article, I was curious to see how the dogs would do if I used a whistle sit and the cast them to the correct dummy instead.

Series A. Three rings:
  • Four 3" white dummies at 5 yards
  • Four 2" white dummies at 7 yards
  • Four 3" orange alternating with four black & white canvas dummies at 10 yards
Laddie was 8 for 8, Lumi was 6 for 8.

Series B. Three rings:
  • Four 3" white dummies at 10 yards
  • Four 2" white dummies at 15 yards
  • Four 3" orange alternating with four black & white canvas dummies at 20 yards
The first time I tried this set-up and ran Laddie, he took off into an adjoining farmer's field and rolled in something disgusting. I cleaned him up a bit, put him in his crate, and set up the same course elsewhere in the same park. I ran Lumi first, then Laddie on the new set-up.

Both dogs were 4 for 8. Lumi was 0 for 4 on the orange dummies, 4 for 4 on the canvas. Laddie was highly distracted by something in the woods or a nearby field, and was 0 for 4 running toward the distraction, 4 for 4 running away from it.

Neither dog attempted to pick up the wrong dummy when whistled to a sit or when cast, even if the dog was standing right over the wrong dummy. Both dogs were 100% responsive on whistle sits and casts, and in all cases but one, needed only a single cast to the correct dummy. Both dogs were also 100% responsive in picking up the dummies and coming straight back.

Lumi seemed to be distracted by something on one of her sends and needed three casts. She went the right general direction on all of them but took slightly wrong angles the first two times and had trouble homing in on the dummy.

In contrast to some of yesterday's practice, both dogs showed a high level of enthusiasm on both of today's wagon wheel drills. Weather may have been a factor. Yesterday, the temperatures reached record-breaking highs for the date, while today temps were in the 30s with gusting winds, conditions Goldens seem to find invigorating.

Series C. Three singles:
  1. 30 yards, as a poorman mark, dead duck
  2. 100 yards, B&W canvas dummy with streamers
  3. 160 yards, B&W canvas dummy with streamers
Lumi: I used an auto-whistle for #1, no whistle for #2 and #3. Excellent work.

Laddie: I used an auto-whistle for #1, also needed to whistle #2 and #3, with Laddie responding instantly to all whistles. To go straight on #3, Laddie had to run over the side of a hill and across a corner of pavement, which he did, maintaining a laser line.

Series D. A double with B&W canvas dummies with streamers:
  1. 140 yards
  2. 70 yards
Laddie: Again needed whistle, again Laddie responded well. This time, the throw for #2 required Laddie to run thru a wooded section to maintain a straight line to the mark, and he did so.

Lumi. No whistles, again excellent work.

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