Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Delivery Shaping, Angle In, Diversion Drill, Marks and Blinds

This morning, training partner Barbara and I worked with Deuce, Barbara's Lab, and Laddie at Fair Hill (Series A), and then after Barbara and Deuce left, I worked with Lumi and Laddie (Series B). In the afternoon, I worked with Lumi and Laddie at Sundown Park (Series C, D, and E). The series were as follows:
  • Series A. Delivery shaping using short marks (Deuce and Laddie)
  • Series B. Practicing the angle in on our old double-T course (Lumi and Laddie)
  • Series C. Diversion drill (DD), throw away from line (TAL), left to right (Laddie)
  • Series D. Marks and blinds (Lumi)
  • Series E. More delivery shaping working up to longer marks (Laddie)
Series A. This wasn't a formal series, but rather a couple of loosely structured drills for Deuce and Laddie intended to strengthen each dog's particular weaknesses in their deliveries. I won't detail Deuce's training here, but for Laddie, this consisted of first poorman marks, then marks thrown by Barbara with a pistol shot, varying in distance from 20 yards to 150 yards.

Laddie's delivery has improved immensely, and most of his returns were also excellent. Unfortunately, as I was working up Laddie's distances, I asked Barbara to throw first from 100 yards (where Laddie did fine), and then from 150 yards, where Laddie freelanced for a few seconds before turning toward home for an excellent delivery. I realized after the fact that that 50-yard jump in distance was too much for Laddie on this day, especially with a high wind and a large community of raucous birds making a racket elsewhere on the field.

Series B. Using our permanent double-T course with the 110-yard backline, I put a single dummy at P1, P2 and P3, then ran each dog repeatedly to P. As the dog had his or her back turned while running out, I would throw a white dummy to my left or right. When the dog reached P, I would stop the dog with a WS (whistle sit), then cue an angle-in with a recall whistle and pointing to the ground with my left or right arm. I would reinforce the delivery with a happy throw, then line the dog up and send the dog again. I did about ten send-outs with Lumi (Laddie waiting in the van), then about ten more with Laddie (Lumi waiting in the van).

For both dogs, I also sometimes let the dog see me throw the white dummy, either because I waited until the dog was already sitting, or because the dog looked back over his or her shoulder while running out.

LUMI

Lumi had no difficulty with this drill as long as she had seen the dummy thrown. She was not at all confused by the dummies at P1, P2, or P3, and didn't seem to be at all demotivated by the WSs, none of which she slipped.

However, Lumi was resistant to the angle-in cue if she had not seen the dummy thrown and could not see it from where she was sitting. She would simply sit there and not move. Eventually, I would say "here", and then she'd start toward me, and then while she was moving I'd whistle recall and cue with my arm. That would make her veer slightly in the direction I was cueing, and once she saw the dummy, she'd turn on the afterburners and complete her retrieve.

You'd think that after a time or two, Lumi would begin to believe that a dummy really was waiting for her, but even after a fairly large number of reps, she continued to ignore my initial angle-in cue. "I know what whistle-recall means, Daddy, and I can't do it if I haven't retrieved anything." By the very end, she did have one correct initial response without the extra prompt of "here", so I'm hopeful that with another session or two, Lumi will become reasonably fluent in the angle-in.

LADDIE

Unlike Lumi, Laddie initially confused the angle-in with an "over", but fortunately, he was responsive whenever I had to stop him with a WS to prevent him from retrieving P1 or P3, and would then always correctly interpret my second attempt at an angle-in. Those mistakes only happened twice.

Laddie quickly caught onto the idea that when I whistled angle-in, there really was a dummy waiting for him even though he couldn't see it. We may practice again to solidify the lesson, but I think Laddie pretty much has it now.

Series C. With all the progress Laddie has made on his delivery form, I felt it was now time to resume his work on the diversion drill series. Today, with Nate throwing, Laddie ran the second throw-away-from-line series, as usual with four runs to the 80-yard pile of white bumpers alternating with three marks with birds at 30-45-60 yards from the SL. For today's drill, Nate was on the right side of the backline throwing left to right.

Laddie lined every send-out to the pile, so no WSs were needed. Every mark, return, and delivery was also solid.

Series D. Today Lumi ran another blind-mark-blind series, my goal being to get her comfortable with the idea that even if throwers are in the field, she may be asked to run a blind at any time. The series was as follows:
  1. 80-yard blind (orange lining pole, orange dummy)
  2. 60-yard mark thrown over the line (TOL) to #3
  3. 240-yard blind (orange dummy lying under a tree)
#3 was 30° to the left of the #1, and #2 was thrown left to right from just to the left of the line to #3. Nate, throwing #2, had a chair and a stickman with him. A second stickman was positioned just to the right of #1.

Lumi had no difficulty with #1 or #2, and performed well on #3 most of the time. But at a distance of 150 yards, she became unresponsive to the whistle for some time and would only respond to verbal and hand cues. I've seen this starting to happen for several days now, and I believe it may be worsening. We'll try to repair it by using shorter blinds, and if Lumi remains 100% responsive on those, add distance back gradually over a period of time.

Series E. With Lumi in the van, we ended the day by Laddie running six marks at gradually increasing distances, working back to the 150-yard distance that Laddie had a problem with this morning. The series was as follows:
  1. 50 yards (dummy, thrown left to right)
  2. 70 yards (dummy, thrown left to right)
  3. 90 yards (bird, thrown left to right)
  4. 110 yards (dummy, thrown right to left)
  5. 130 yards (dummy, thrown right to left)
  6. 170 yards (bird, thrown right to left)
To run this series, Nate threw from three stations, laid out in advance with a chair at #1/#4, a stickman at #2/#5, and another stickman at #3/#6. #1, #2, and #3 were run from a close-in SL, then #4, #5, and #6 were run from a second SL further back.

Run in the most distracting venue of all the local fields where we train, this may have been Laddie's most remarkable series ever. Not only did he nail every mark, with the articles landing and burying in thick, clumpy cover and the lines to the articles crossing one or more probable deer nesting sites, but his pick-ups, returns, and deliveries were equally direct, devoid of the playful RG behaviors Laddie has used in the past. Following suggestions from Alice and Jody, I have now reduced my interaction, previously intended to provide reinforcement for Laddie's returns, to a great extent, limiting myself to a recall whistle timed just before Laddie pounces on the article, "good job" and perhaps some slow applause during Laddie's return, some quiet petting before taking the article, and finally some quiet praise before setting up for the next mark. After a week of delivery shaping, Laddie looks like a new dog, closely resembling Lumi in his form except for his faster gait.

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