Sunday, May 25, 2008

Blinds, Alligator Drill

Summary
  • Series A. Blinds at Rolling Ridge (both dogs)
  • Series B. Continued work on alligator drill at Black Hills (both dogs)
Series A. Three blinds in extremely uneven terrain, ankle-length, stiff dry grass and thorny underbrush, orange dummies, no markers. The set-up, left to right within a 30° angle:
  • #3: 120-yard blind, diagonally across a one-lane paved road, blind placed in front of a large tree in the underbrush for a woodsy line screening us from an adjoining property
  • #1: 80-yard blind, diagonally across a one-lane paved road, blind placed 40 yards in front of a large, prominent, dead tree trunk
  • #2: 110-yard blind, diagonally across a one-lane paved road, blind placed in front of a large tree in the underbrush for a woodsy line screening us from an adjoining property
Except for Lumi lining #1, both dogs required 2-4 WSCs for each blind. At one point, Lumi slipped whistles or refused casts repeatedly on #2, but a moment later, she stopped to eliminate, and then became responsive immediately afterwards. It appeared that her refused casts were because she had selected a specific spot to eliminate, rather than that she was being diverted the wrong way by some landscape feature on her way to the blind.

Series B.
In the afternoon, on a sunny day with temps in the 70s, we returned to Black Hill for continued work on Laddie's alligator drill. Laddie had two sessions, sandwiching a session of open water retrieves and games of tug for Lumi.

After sending Laddie out for an open water retrieve to get him acclimated to the lake water, I placed Laddie in a sit, entered the water, called Here, and threw the dummy over his head. He ran to it, picked it up immediately, and came running and then swimming out to bring it to me. The ease with which he did it was a distinct improvement from yesterday, so I knew that we were continuing to make progress.

In the remainder of that session as well as all of the next one, we ran a number of retrieves, some like the first one, a few easier, and a few representing the next incremental stage. As I see it, the next stage is Laddie coming out with me into the water and then swimming and running back onto shore to retrieve a thrown dummy and bring it back out to me. During the course of today's work, Laddie did several of those, but some were not confident.

Yesterday, some of Laddie's returns when retrieving a dummy thrown over his head as he was coming to me in the water were not confident, but today Laddie was confident each time we ran such a retrieve, or something from earlier in Laddie alligator training.

Perhaps tomorrow, what was possible but difficult for Laddie today — retrieving to me in the water starting from the water himself — will become comfortable in that same way. If not tomorrow, soon. And then we will be ready to return to Cheltenham to use a channel and further extend Laddie's development into a full land-water-land retrieve.

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