Tuesday, March 11, 2008

T-drill, Reverse Hip Pocket, Marks

Today we had two sessions, Series A in the morning, Series B and C in the afternoon:
  • Series A. Both dogs: T-drills at Fair Hill with a 90-yard backline
  • Series B. Lumi: Reverse hip pocket drill next to Oaks Landfill for Lumi
  • Series C. Laddie: A double and four singles on the same course as Lumi's reverse hip pocket drill
Series A. The sequence for this morning's T-drills was as follows:
  1. WS, left back to p2
  2. Thru to p2
  3. WS, over to p3
  4. Thru to p2
  5. WS, right back to p2
  6. Thru to p2
  7. WS, right back to p2
  8. Thru to p2
  9. WS, over to p1
  10. Thru to p2
  11. WS, left back
  12. Thru to p2
LADDIE

No wrong initial lines (WILs), no slipped whistles, only one refused cast: Tried left back instead of right back on #7. I responded with a quick whistle, repositioned myself, cued right back again, and Laddie did fine.

Lumi honored while Laddie worked.

LUMI

WILs when I tried for too long a backline (BL) a couple of times. I'd shorten them up and then Lumi would do fine. Progression of ability to line correctly from various distances was:
  • #1 — 70-yard BL
  • #2-5 — 80-yard BL (which Lumi could not do yesterday)
  • #6-10 — 85-yard BL
  • #11-12 — 90-yard BL
No slipped whistles, only one refused cast: Tried "over" to p3 instead of left back on #11. I responded with a quick whistle, repositioned myself, cued left back again, and Lumi did fine.

Knowing that Laddie would break if I tried to have him honor, but wanting him to learn to honor both as good training and to save time, I put him on a tie-out. He sat or lay down most of the time, and received intermittent treats for doing so, but he also tried various strategies to get away from the tie-out. When he tried digging the stake up, I walked over to him and said "stop that" and he didn't do it again. Eventually, he tried barking. As soon as he barked, I put him on his slip lead and walked him to the van for the remainder of Lumi's session.

Series B. This afternoon we ran Lumi's first reverse hip pocket drill, which meant three doubles thrown by the same throwers to the same falls, but with three separate SLs.

The distances were as follows:
  1. Nate at 120 yards, throwing left to right (memory bird)
  2. Bryan at 80 yards, also throwing left to right (go bird)
The three SLs repositioned left to right, resulting in gradually tighter angles:
  1. Bryan 30° to Nate's right, with Nate's fall well to the left of the line to Bryan, throwing birds
  2. Bryan 20° to Nate's right, with Nate's fall still to the left of the line to Bryan but closer than #1, throwing dummies over bird scent
  3. Bryan 10° to Nate's right, with Nate's fall just to the left of the line to Bryan, throwing birds
The first two SLs were preparatory doubles. The third SL was the actual reverse hip pocket.

We also had a stickman 60° to the left of Nate and 40 yards from the first SL, with slightly decreasing angles and increasing distance for SLs 2 and 3.

Lumi had no difficulty with any of these doubles. She did swerve around to the left of the short Gun on each of her send-outs and returns to the long mark, resulting in a fairly wide arc for the last mark.

Her pick-ups of the birds were also slower than they have been lately, which I interpret as mild resource guarding (RG) behavior. I attribute this to the fact that these birds have been in use for some time and may seem more edible than fresh birds, and also to the fact that we were working on dry, clumpy cover in a location that is heavily populated by deer and probably a great deal of other wildlife. Lumi may have found the location far more distracting than the locations we usually train in. It's also possible that the distracting influence of the stickman was responsible to some extent.

Series C. Without moving Nate and Bryan, Series C was a double and four singles for Laddie from the first SL of Lumi's reverse hip pocket drill. The sequence was:
  1. A double like the one Lumi ran from the first SL with birds
  2. Two singles, long gun first (my mistake), with dummies over bird scent
  3. Two singles, long gun first (again, an unintended error), with birds
Laddie's marks were sensational lasers, and it was unnecessary for me to walk out to get him on any of them. But his pick-ups and returns showed a higher degree of RG than lately. I believe the same influences mentioned above for Lumi may have also been responsible for Laddie's increased RG.

I think we should plan on more training sessions at Oaks Landfill over the next few weeks. I'm not certain whether continued practice at Oaks will result in overall declining performance, as the dogs rehearse incorrect responses, or overall improving performance, as the dogs become habituated to the distractions. Hopefully their work will improve, and will help the dogs to deal with the even more distracting and exciting competition venues in the future.

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