Sunday, June 29, 2008

Field Trial Training

Summary. Today, the dogs and I trained with the Field Trial training group again:
  • Series A. Water blind (both dogs)
  • Series B. Water series (both dogs)
  • Series C. Water series (both dogs)
Series A. Series A was a blind (orange dummies) run by most of the dogs from a mound, with a 100-yard run on land and then a 40-yard swim up a channel passing points first on the right, then on the left.

With Lumi, I moved up our SL so that we were 20 yards from the water entry. Although Lumi has swum that same channel before with little difficulty, today she needed a lot of handling to stay off the points on the send-out. She required no handling on the return.

With Laddie, who has never run a water blind, I asked another trainer to throw an orange dummy onto the spot where the other dogs were retrieving from while Laddie was watching, then to stay visible. Laddie swam straight to the dummy on his send-out, but cheated around water to the mid-point of the return trip on his return. When he entered the water, he had no trouble with the entry.

Series B. The set-up, left to right within a 90° angle:
  • #2: 200-yard LWL mark (dummy), mostly land but with a slice at the end of a channel and the opportunity to cheat around it both directions
  • #1: 140-yard LWLWL mark (dummy), thrown as a "bridge" mark across a channel and in the opposite direction from #2 (so that the sight lines to the throwers were in a tight angle), with angle entries at both ends of both water crossings and the fall in high cover
  • #3: 240-yard LWLWL mark (dummy), mostly land but with a 20-yard water crossing 40 yards from the SL and a ditch crossing 30 yards from the fall, with the thrower and the fall between two trees
Although both dogs had some problems (see below), overall they both did a good job, better than some of the other dogs in the group. I thought they did especially well considering the fact that we haven't trained with this group in some time and have not been training at these distances.

LADDIE

I had Laddie run first, using #1 and #2 as singles, and not having him run #3, since I was afraid he might maroon at the ditch on the return.

I had the thrower throw #1 into the open channel rather than into the high cover on the other side, again because I didn't want to risk Laddie marooning.

On #1, Laddie had no trouble on the send out, but played a little at water's edge on the water entry during his return.

Laddie started to cheat around the channel on #2. I called him back and re-sent him, and this time he ran it correctly. He made no attempt to cheat around coming back, but again, he played a little at water's edge on the water entry during his return.

LUMI

I planned to have Lumi run this as a double (#2 thrown first, then #1) followed by #3 as a single. But she was too distracted by the thrower for the second throw (#1) to keep her eye on the the first throw (#2). As a result, when she came back from the go-bird (#1), she didn't seem to remember the memory bird (#2). I asked the guy to re-throw #2 as a single.

Aside from that, Lumi did a nice job. I learned later that #1 was considered a difficult and advanced mark for a number of reasons, especially the "bridge" with the thrower on one side of the channel and the fall in high cover on the other side, but Lumi had had no difficulty with it.

Series C. The set-up, left to right within a 60° angle:
  • #2: 120-yard LWL mark (dummy), with 90-yard swim and the fall in high cover
  • #1: 100-yard LWL mark (dummy), with 30-yard swim and the fall across a road and with trees on both sides of the sight line to the fall
  • #3: 140-yard LWL mark (dummy), with 30-yard swim
Laddie, running first, marooned on #2 and #3. I had the thrower take the dummy from Laddie and throw it in the water. Each time, Laddie leapt in after it and then responded to my come-in whistle and/or verbal Here cue.

For Lumi, I again tried to run #2-#1 as a double, with #1 thrown second as the go-bird. Lumi completed that retrieve, then swam toward the thrower instead of the fall when I sent her on #2 as the memory bird. After getting out of the water, she headed the wrong direction and seemed lost, and I decided to handle her for practice rather than getting help from the thrower. She handled well, and I actually liked one incorrect cast she took: I cued Over, and she interpreted that as an angle-in into to the water.

On #3, Lumi did something I've never seen her do before. She became defocused after crossing the water, finally lying down in the grass and starting to roll. I called for help from the thrower, and she was fine after one hey-hey from him.

I believe that Laddie's problems with marooning, and Lumi's problem on #3, might both be at least partially because of the number of retrieves they had today that were longer than they are used to. Both dogs are in generally good condition, but I suspect they're not really in condition, at least mentally, for marks in these ranges of distances. That's something we'll begin working on in our upcoming training sessions.

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