Friday, May 23, 2008

Blinds, Alligator Drill, Remote Line Handling

Summary
  • Series A. Triple blind at Sundown Road Park (both dogs)
  • Series B. Alligator drill at Black Hill Regional Park (both dogs)
  • Series C. Remote line handling at Milestone (both dogs)
Series A. Triple blind, orange dummies, left to right within a 135° angle:
  • #2: 80-yard blind, in a small alcove into adjoining woods, behind a tree, no marker
  • #1: 60-yard blind, in underbrush at edge of adjoining woods, marked by surveyors flag
  • #3: 110-yard blind, in front of a large, dying white pine with distinctive brown foliage
The field was dotted with diversions: a black trash bag left behind by some previous visitor, a large white and red sports pole, two stickmen, and two white bird houses mounted on metal poles.

The goal of this and other blinds at this time is to make them difficult enough to require several whistle sits and casts (WSCs), but short enough for the dogs to respond with zero latency. Over time, I plan to gradually increase the distances with the intent of continuing to get high quality WSCs.

I ran Laddie first, then Lumi. Both dogs had excellent responses on all WSCs and showed high enthusiasm for the game.

LADDIE
  • #1: One WSC
  • #2: One WSC
  • #3: No WSCs (lined the blind)
LUMI
  • #1: Two WSCs
  • #2: One WSC
  • #3: Two WSCs
Series B. Continued work on alligator drill, as described in previous posts. I worked Laddie, then Lumi, then Laddie again. After each water session, I threw dummies for one or both dogs on the field next to the parking area before packing them into the van.

LADDIE

We started with two static retrieves, the dummy at 10 o'clock and then 2 o'clock. Laddie did fine on those. We then did a couple with the dummy at 12 o'clock. Laddie was hesitant on the first one, not the second one. Today was the first time he's done a 12-oc AD.

At that point, I began some spontaneous shaping, asking for a wide variety of retrieves: For some I was on land, for some in shallow water, for some in water deep enough that Laddie would have to swim. For some retrieves, Laddie started in a sit on shore or in shallow water, for some he was standing or swimming next to me, for some he was standing or swimming some distance for me. Some of my throws were on land, some in shallow water, some in deeper water. Every retrieve was reinforced with a game of tug and one or more easy retrieves.

Laddie's confidence grew during his first session (before Lumi's), and continued to grow during his second (after Lumi's). He seems to have completely overcome his aversion to carrying a dummy from shore into water, and now his only problem seems to be what Alice calls "picturitis", an aversion to a particular picture. In this case, the picture is running to a dummy with his back to the water, then turning to see that he must re-enter the water with the dummy. Although he now has the skill to do that, he has only learned the alligator entry in the last few days, and prior to that, the picture he remains averse to meant that he would need to perform a behavior he didn't know how to do: enter swimming-depth water carrying a dummy.

Thus Laddie's progress needs to be measured in his ability to perform when encountering that picture. By that measure, Laddie had several meaningful successes: five retrieves with Laddie and me starting in swim-depth water and the throw to shallow water, and two retrieves with Laddie and me starting in swim-depth water and the throw to shore. Three of the shallow water retrieves were confident, all the others included some hesitation.

Within the next session or two, I hope to have Laddie making confident, unhesitating retrieves with both of us starting in swim-depth water and the throw to shore. Once Laddie becomes fluent in that skill, we should be able to extend that to a land-water-land retrieve by training the next step in a wading-depth channel (one is available at Cheltenham). We'll begin with retrieves to shore from water as we did a couple of times today, and then we'll back the start line up for a succession of retrieves until we're starting from the opposite shore.

LUMI

Lumi's session was primarily water play: happy throws into the water or along the shoreline, and games of tug. As an experiment, I tried bringing Lumi out into the water with me and throwing the dummy to shore for her to retrieve and bring back to me in the water. Although Lumi is able to do land-water-land retrieves without hesitation, this seemed to be difficult for her. Alice has suggested that the picture of Daddy cut in half by standing in deep water may be so different for both dogs from the normal retrieval picture that it's confusing to them. Seeing that it was difficult for Lumi, Laddie's progress seems all the more encouraging.

Series C.
I stopped at the large sports field at Milestone on the drive back from Black Hill with the idea of giving the dogs some playtime away from the water. We ended up practicing a number of skills in the session, including doubles and honoring, as well as working on a new skill for Laddie, remote line handling.

First, I set up a pole and put both dogs in a sit at the pole, which marked our start line (SL). I walked out some distance out and threw two dummies 45° apart, both about 50 yards from the SL. I walked back and sent Laddie to retrieve both dummies, giving Lumi treats each time she honored a Laddie send out. I then repeated the poorman double, but sending Lumi out and giving Laddie treats for honoring.

Next, working with a single dummy, we did some remote releases. First I walked out some distance, threw the dummy, and called "Laddie". As he ran out to retrieve the dummy, I ran back to the SL to receive his delivery. We repeated that with Lumi.

Next, I had Lumi do a complete remotely handled retrieve: With both dogs in a sit at the SL, I walked out twenty yards, threw the dummy another 30 yards, released Lumi, and then waved her back to the pole, cueing "go on" when she slowed, and "sit" when she arrived at the pole. With enthusiastic praise and high value treats for her excellent performance and happy demeanor, we left Laddie sitting at the SL and I put Lumi back in the van.

I then used about three retrieves to train Laddie to complete the remote "delivery". On the last retrieve, he was able to run past me with the dummy and continue most of the way back to the pole, turning to face me and sit when I cued Sit. With that success, I felt it was a good time to end the session.

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