Sunday, April 6, 2008

Holodeck Training

Holodeck Program
based on guidance from Alice Woodyard and Jody Baker

BEFORE OTHER TRAINERS ARRIVE

  • Bring birds for solo training.
  • Bring high-value treats.
  • Both dogs: Short poorman marks to two birds and two dummies over bird scent.
  • A few poorman marks including walks-offs for Laddie.
  • White jacket.
  • Put collars on both dogs.
  • Load pockets: pistol, ammo, slip cord.
RUNNING LUMI
  • Key question: What is the best way to run each series in terms of benefit to Lumi's training?
  • No triples until we have practiced triples in private training.
  • Try Lumi on blinds that are not difficult, but only if she remains responsive. Not necessary yet to challenge the blind.
  • Run long gun last.
  • Use slip cord for flyers and honoring.
  • Cue "sit, mark" before first throw of each series.
  • 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.
RUNNING LADDIE
  • Key question: What is the best way to run each series in terms of benefit to Laddie's training?
  • Do not run Laddie unless confident that he will not rehearse any incorrect responses.
  • If running, auto-whistle early.
RECORD KEEPING PER MARK
  • Attempted break?
  • Head swinging, before or after throws? Which throws?
  • Could Lumi find the long gun?
  • Did dog return uncued? Auto-whistle? Contingent whistle? Voice? Walk out?
  • On blinds: Slipped whistles? Refused casts? Hunting by scent or sight?
AFTER GROUP TRAINING
  • Pay for flyer if used.
  • Purchase birds if available.
Conditions. When the dogs and I showed up at Cheltenham for training, a steady rain was falling and temperatures were in the 40s. The rain continued throughout the training session, while temperatures warmed into the 50s. Because we've had a lot of rain recently and because of the property's terrain, we had many pools of standing water, and the ground around the thick, clumpy grass cover was soft and muddy.

Although I had brought a duck along, I decided not to use it because of the wet conditions. All marks today were run with white dummies, and all blinds were orange dummies.

Two of the blinds for Series E, and one of the marks for Series F, included water crossings. I asked whether anyone had measured the water temperature and was told it was 51°, which made me think it was OK for Lumi to run those retrieves. But after seeing her behavior in the open water during the third blind in Series E, I realized that she was not comfortable swimming, so I suspect that the guy who said he had measured the water temp was joking, and that it was actually in the 40s or possibly even the 30s.

General Notes on Both Dogs' Performance. Both dogs were off lead the entire day, for moving to and from the start line (SL) as well as for running the marks. While Laddie did not heel with precision, both dogs remained in control for moving to and from the SL. Also, neither dog broke on any mark, though Laddie crept forward on some of them when the gunshot fired or while the dummy was in flight.

On every mark except one, both dogs ran straight to the fall. The exception was Lumi's double in Series F, where she never saw the memory-bird (dummy) thrown because she turned her focus to the second thrower too soon.

On every mark, both dogs picked up the dummy immediately and returned to the SL without hesitation, though on two of them Laddie looped around the thrower and the patch of cover in which the dummy had fallen before turning toward home.

Every delivery from both dogs was excellent, with no resource guarding behaviors (such as snaking, head tossing, or teasing), no anticipatatory loosening of grip, and no dropped dummies.

The comments above apply to all of the series described below, so only exceptions will be noted.

Warm Up. We arrived early and drove to an isolated part of the property to air the dogs and set up some warm-up drills. While I was setting up, another trainer pulled up to check out what was happening. I ran some quick poorman marks for Lumi and Laddie (Series A and B), and then the other trainer and I set up some Hunt Test-scale marks to warm up our dogs together (Series C and D).

SERIES A

One poorman single for Laddie with Lumi honoring, then one for Lumi with Laddie honoring.

SERIES B

One poorman double for Laddie with Lumi honoring, then one for Lumi with Laddie honoring. Laddie broke when I first sent Lumi. I stopped them both and sat them with verbal cues, then walked to Lumi and sent her again from where she was sitting. Laddie did not break again.

SERIES C AND D

For both Series C and D, the other trainer wore white, fired a pistol, and threw from positions marked by stickmen.

SERIES C

For Laddie, I positioned the SL so that the marks were at 30 yards and 50 yards.

For Lumi, I positioned the SL on a mound so that the marks were at 50 yards and 70 yards.

SERIES D

For both dogs, the long mark was set up so that the thrower was seen thru a keyhole framed by trees, and the fall was in the middle of a patch of tall grass and was also seen thru a keyhole framed by trees.

For Laddie, I positioned the SL so the marks were at 60 yards and 80 yards. Laddie's only problem was that he ran the wrong way out of the longer mark, looped around the thrower, and ran to me without running thru the tall grass he had entered to pick up the dummy.

For Lumi and the other trainer's two Labs, I added a blind tight to the shorter mark by placing orange dummies on the ground just inside a nearby treeline, beside a tree and with no marker.

I then re-positioned the SL for Lumi onto the mound, so that she ran a mark at 90 yards, the blind at 90 yards, and the keyhole/high cover mark at 110 yards.

Series E. This was the first group training series, and consisted of three blinds run from a mound:
  1. 120 yards thru a keyhole formed by two trees, across a field with standing water and strips of high cover, to a dummy placed to the left of one tree and to the front and right of another tree.
  2. 200 yards onto another mound, with a 10-yard channel crossing at 70 yards from the blind.
  3. 320 yards onto a hillside, with most of the distance across rolling, soaking, grassy field, then a 20-yard water crossing with an opportunity to cheat around the left, a point of land and high reeds, and a 30-yard channel crossing with no opportunity to cheat around but suction from land on the left.
The blinds were at widely spaced angles (more than 90°). No markers were used for any of them since the dummies were visible to the handler from the SL.

Lumi, running as the first dog, ran these blinds as shown in the sequence above, which turned out to be the opposite sequence that everyone else ran it. She started well, running #1 with a single cast.

For #2, I ran Lumi from the edge of the water at the channel crossing. She was somewhat hesitant to enter the water, but I thought at the time that the problem was discomfort with the steep, weedy embankment. Later I thought it might have been that the water was too cold. After she crossed the channel, she became fixated on some trees to the right of the line to the blind and began to slip whistles and refuse casts, though once I got her moved away from the trees, she was easily directed to the blind.

For #3, I tried to run Lumi from the edge of the first crossing but was unable to keep her away from the land to the left. So I called her back to me and ran around the left side with her at my side, then ran from the embankment of the channel crossing. She lined the blind from there and while she was swimming across, I ran back to the other side of the first water crossing. I whistled recall from there and then ran back to the SL while she was swimming back. She did not cheat around the water crossing on her return.

For both of the water blinds, I positioned Lumi initially at the original SL on the mound, then left Lumi there while I walked to the edge of the water and called "here". Lumi had good stays and excellent runs to me both times, showing high motivation.

In retrospect, #3 at the first water crossing was far too difficult for Lumi and if I had realized it, I would not have attempted it at this stage in her development. While she had the handling knowledge to understand my casts that were attempting to keep her in the water, she doesn't have the experience or behavioral conditioning for such a difficult configuration, resulting in a string of refused casts and a generally confused performance. I believe that the cold water made it even harder for her to accept the casts and hold the line I was trying to send her on.

I wasn't worried about moving Lumi's SL up on #2 and #3, though in the future, I might not move it up as far. I decided this week that I will probably never run Lumi in Field Trials, only in Hunt Tests, and in the latter, I believe she would never see such long blinds.

Of course, I didn't run Laddie on Series E.

Series F. This series was set up as a triple in pyramid configuration, with a long center mark that included a water crossing. I didn't have either dog run the long mark, and have not included it in the following descriptions.

LADDIE

For Laddie, I moved our SL to make this an easy pair of singles:
  1. 60 yards with no crossings thru cover
  2. 80 yards with the fall behind a patch of high cover
On #2, for the second time today, Laddie ran thru the cover and picked up the dummy without difficulty, but then looped back and around the thrower to return to me without going back thru the cover.

LUMI

Because I wanted Lumi to have more practice with marks and blinds combined in the same series, I asked the guy who had designed the series as a triple to help me add a blind for Lumi that had some factors but was not too difficult. The series Lumi ended up running was as follows:
  1. 100-yard blind (orange dummy, no marker) positioned inside a small stand of trees and across a dirt road
  2. 160-yard mark (first throw and memory-bird of a double) thrown from an alcove formed by the treeline, with the fall in a depression in front of a stand of trees and the line to the fall crossing two diagonal strips of high cover
  3. 120-yard mark (second throw and go-bird of the double) with the fall on the far side of a patch of high cover and two other strips of cover to cross
#1 was 120° to the left of #3, and #2 was 90° to the right of #3.

The SL was atop a mound.

Lumi lined the blind and had no difficulty with #3, the go-bird of the double. But as I had suspected from watching her when the double was being thrown, she had never seen the first throw, and when I sent her to the memory-bird, she went hesitatingly and on an incorrect line. Since she was going the right general direction, since the thrower was visible, and since the thrower had woods behind him and to his right so that Lumi was more or less funneled into the area of the fall to the left, I let her continue. The thrower later told me that she stepped on the dummy on the way out but did not realize it, and eventually needed help to come back to the area of the fall, find the dummy, and complete the retrieve.

I feel that it is time to stop running Lumi on multiples until she has had a good number of series with all singles and has stopped looking away from the thrower prematurely.

Series G. After the group training was complete, I asked one of the other trainers to throw some singles for Laddie that involved a cover configuration similar to the two where he had run around the thrower and the cover on his returns. We selected a long strip of cover, and the thrower positioned himself behind the cover at various points along the length of it and threw a total of four marks on the same side of the cover as he was, simulating the configuration where Laddie had diverted earlier in the day. Meanwhile, I ran Laddie from a series of four SLs, gradually lengthening the marks. The series was as follows:
  1. 30 yards, one strip of cover
  2. 60 yards, one strip of cover
  3. 90 yards, two strips of cover
  4. 120 yards, two strips of cover
Laddie performed flawlessly and with his usual exuberance on all of these marks. In each case, he pinned the mark, picked the dummy up at the fall, and immediately turned back toward me, running back thru the cover on a direct line to the SL, swinging to heel, and delivering with a firm hold.

My intent in designing this series was that the graded distances would enable Laddie to handle the cover correctly without a repetition of his looping back around the thrower. It appeared to work, and I'll look for an opportunity or two to repeat something similar with Laddie in the coming week, including a series using birds instead of dummies.

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