Friday, February 8, 2008

Private Training

Once again today, we had two sessions. Today, it was a morning solo session at a neighborhood ballfield, and an afternoon session at Cheltenham with Renee as thrower.

The morning session (Series A and B) was wagon wheels, mixing dead birds and dummies. The afternoon session (Series C thru E) was alternation drills, alternating short poorman marks of birds, with long thrown single marks of dummies, plus a final single for Laddie.

Only black and white canvas dummies with streamers were used today for all drills. The birds were dead pigeons and ducks in various combinations. I reinforced the dummy retrieves with food and each session with food, happy dummies, and tug.

Series A. Two dummies alternating with two birds at 20 yards, separated by 90° angles. I sent the dogs to both dummies first, then both birds. Both dogs were 4 for 4.

Series B. Three birds alternating with two dummies in a semicircle, separated by 45° angles. The birds were at 20 yards, the dummies at 25 yards.

Laddie was 4 for 5. He took a whistle sit and cast off the bird when he veered off the send to the second dummy.

Lumi was 5 for 5.

Conditions for Series C thru E. The afternoon sessions were run at Rover's Content in Cheltenham. The day was sunny, with temps in low 50s and variable winds. The rolling terrain had low, clumpy cover with many strips of high grass and occasional pools of standing water.

Series C. Alternation drill, alternating short poorman multiples of birds with long thrown marks of dummies:
  1. 20 yards, dead pigeon into high grass, first throw and memory-bird of a poorman "double"
  2. 20 yards, dead duck in front of a mound, second throw and go-bird of the "double"
  3. 180 yards, canvas dummy thrown in front of a mound after gunshot
  4. 30 yards, dead duck into high grass, first throw and memory-bird of a poorman "double"
  5. 25 yards, dead pigeon behind a mound, second throw and go-bird of the "double"
  6. 290 yards, hard white dummy with streamers thrown into high grass after gunshot
LUMI: I used an auto-whistle on all marks except #4 and #5. Lumi's performance was flawless. She pinned every mark, picked up every bird and dummy uncued and unhesitatingly, and returned to me at an excited gallop.

LADDIE: I used an auto-whistle on all marks, and reinforced all retrieves with food, plus happy dummies and tug at the end of the series. Laddie's performance was wonderful, except that we ran #6 twice.

#6 was a traversal thru standing water, and on the first return, Laddie stopped to drink, then play. I walked out, cued "sit", picked up the dummy, and walked him back to the start line on a leash. We then reran the mark and he ran it beautifully, never slowing in either direction. He didn't stop on any of his other returns the rest of the day.

Renee believes that Laddie stopped because he was thirsty, and I agree that I should make sure he always gets plenty of water. But possible thirst aside, I believe that Laddie has a gap in his training to date, namely inexperience with land-water-land, even shallow water. Lumi had the same problem last spring. Now that I see the issue, it's something I hope to work on with Laddie in the next few weeks.

Series D. Alternation drill, alternating long thrown marks of dummies with a short poorman mark of a bird. This series was run from on top of a mulch mound:
  1. 100 yards, hard white dummy with streamers thrown into high grass after gunshot
  2. 30 yards, dead duck into high grass thrown as a poorman single
  3. 220 yards, hard white dummy with streamers thrown into high grass after gunshot
LUMI: I used an auto-whistle only for #2, and it seemed unnecessary. Lumi's performance was again flawless. She pinned every mark, picked up both dummies and the bird uncued and unhesitatingly, and always returned to me at an excited gallop.

LADDIE: Had to hunt a short time for both dummies, and needed a whistle to get oriented on his returns (he may have been parading for the thrower Renee), but he needed no help finding the dummies and responded instantly to the recall whistles.

Series E. Because Laddie had shown a problem traversing standing water, I had him run one more single before we quit for the day:
  1. 100 yards, last 30 yards through knee-deep standing water, hard white dummy with streamers thrown on other side of the pool after gunshot
Laddie slowed slightly as he approached the water, then plunged in and swam across, came out and picked up the dummy on the run. He shook off and pranced around for five seconds while I tried a recall whistle and then shouted "here" several times. At last, he turned toward me, swam back across, and ran excitedly all the way back to me. Once I saw he was well on his way, I turned and ran away from him. In a few seconds, he caught me and we played fetch and tug games for some time.

General Remarks. Neither dog has "stalled" or exhibited any resource guarding of birds in weeks. Today was a continuation of that pattern.

Both dogs are now generally run without slip cords. Neither attempted a break all day.

I reinforced all retrieves with food, plus happy dummies and tug at the end of each series.

This was one of Lumi's best days of training in some time. She was essentially perfect all day.

Both dogs showed great enthusiasm for today's wagon wheels in the morning as well as the afternoon work at Cheltenham. While both dogs clearly have a genetic predisposition for retrieving, my impression after comparing many sessions with and without food is that intermittently reinforcing retrieves with food provides a markedly improved association for the overall game.

I think this is more true for Lumi than for Laddie, who only has one speed, but even for Laddie, his returns, especially the last few yards, seem more focused than ever since we began intermittently reinforcing with food again.

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