- Series A. A drill for casting into cover (both dogs)
- Series B. Return shaping drill (Laddie)
- Series C. Marks and blinds (Lumi)
- Series D. Another return shaping drill (Laddie)
- With Dog at heel, I throw dummy into cover. I walk 10 yards away in opposite direction, turning Dog to face me. "Back."
- Before bringing Dog out, I pre-position dummy (no lining pole) in cover. I walk Dog to edge of cover 5-10 yards from dummy, with dummy not visible to Dog. With dog in sit/stay, I walk 20 yards in opposite direction, turning Dog to face me. "Back."
- I also pre-position three lining poles with three dummies and three SLs (or use the same SL if possible). The blinds are at 30-50-70 yards. Dog runs the blinds in that order, handling as needed.
Series B. This was a series of single marks thrown for Laddie by Nate, intended to enable Laddie to practice high quality retrieves, especially returns and deliveries.
In previous sessions, we started at distances as short as 20 yards, then ran longer marks later in the series. For this series, I felt Laddie was ready to start at 50 yards.
The series was as follows:
- 50 yards, dummy
- 50 yards, dummy
- 50 yards, bird
- 70 yards, dummy
- 90 yards, dummy
- 110 yards, bird
Laddie had excellent deliveries on all marks, and excellent returns on all except #6. On #6, he briefly ran toward Nate, then turned and ran home as soon as I called "no here".
Series C. This was intended as a relatively easy blind-mark-blind series for Lumi:
- 90-yard blind (orange dummy), surveyor's flag as marker
- 70-yard mark (bird)
- 100-yard blind (bird), no marker
- #2 was 30° to the right of #1.
- #3 was 30° to the right of #2.
- The extra stickman was 30° to the right of #3.
Series D. This was another retrieve shaping drill for Laddie, consisting of three single marks thrown by Nate. After starting Series B at 50 yards, Series D increased the starting distance by another 20 yards. The series was as follows:
- 70 yards (bird)
- 90 yards (bird)
- 130 yards (dummy)
Bird-in-Mouth Marking. As part of Series B and D, I tried one of Alice's recent suggestions. I had Laddie keep the article from one mark in his mouth while watching the next mark thrown, then took the article (in Series B always a dummy, in Series D always a bird) and sent him to the new mark.
We used used bird-in-mouth marking for #2, #3, #5, and #6 of Series B, and #2 and #3 of Series D. I felt that it was beneficial in further reducing anticipatory response for "out" of the article and would therefore help reinforce a high quality hold. It also seemed beneficial for conditioning Laddie's steadiness, since he neither crept nor seemed on the verge of breaking while holding the previous article.
Since Laddie was already showing a good hold and steadiness, it was difficult to measure how much difference bird-in-mouth marking made, but I believe it provided additional conditioning for both behaviors.
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