Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Lining, Handling, Land Series, Hunt Test Training

Summary. At Cheltenham, before Bob Hux and his other Hunt Test trainers arrived:
  • Series A. Lining drill (both dogs)
  • Series B. Handling drill (both dogs)
  • Series C. Land series (both dogs)
With Bob and our HT training group:
  • Series D. Land series (both dogs)
Series A. As a lining drill, we used Alice Woodyard's birdfoot drill:
  • #1 and #2 to orange dummies laying end to end (less visible from SL) 24' from SL.
  • White dummies as diversions 12' from SL on either side of the line to #1 and #2.
Laddie ran first, then Lumi.

Series B. MTD with no Q1/Q3 and no WSOR. Two happy throws with ducks after #4. The set-up:
  • #2: 60-yard blind, orange dummy atop a mound.
  • #1, #3: 50-yard sight blinds, white dummies marked by lining pole.
  • #4: 70-yard blind, orange dummy marked by surveyors flag. The van was sitting to the right of the line to the blind.
Laddie's grade: A.

Lumi's grade: Mostly A, but repeatedly refused casts to #4. This may have been because of the van with Laddie barking at the partially open windows.

Series C. This was a relatively long poorman double, left to right within a 75° angle:
  • #2: 100-yard mark (duck), thrown as bridge into high cover on a point of land across a channel, thrown from a stickman next to a tree. The line to the fall was 30 yards over marshy terrain, a 60-yard swim to a neck with a point on the right and an island on the left, and another 10-yard swim to the fall at the end of a point of land on the left. A goose decoy floated in front of the island on the left, and three duck decoys floated on the right where the land curled in, narrowing the passage past the island. My dogs are not usually confused by decoys, but they were this time.
  • #1: 200-yard mark (duck), thrown from a stickman on a mound into heavy cover, with the line to fall thru marshy terrain.
The SL was also on a mound.

Series D. This was Bob's land series set-up, left to right within a 180° angle:
  • #4: 100-yard blind (duck) in high cover marked by lining pole, with the line to the blind over the crest of a hill, past a tree on the right and along big water on the left
  • #1 (thrown first, retrieved second): 60-yard mark (duck) thrown from behind a tree and a holding blind with a winger, with the line to the mark across a ditch and thru a grouping of decoys
  • #2 (thrown second, retrieved first): 70-yard flyer (duck)
  • #3: 50-yard blind (duck), with the blind next to a mound and the line to the blind over the crest of a hill and thru high cover
I ran Laddie first, then Lumi.

For both dogs, Bob winged the flyers, who soared over the SL into the water behind us. Both dogs had very long swims but eventually got the birds. After they'd gotten the birds, in each case we returned to run the series and both dogs did great on their doubles and their blinds.

Escaped Ducks. Both dogs broke from the SL when the ducks soared over them and chased them into the large pond, then had a long swim to get near the ducks. Laddie's duck repeatedly dove and came back up some distance away, but Laddie persisted until the duck was worn out. Lumi's duck repeatedly sprinted away along the surface of the water whenever Lumi got near, and I finally called her to shore. Bob then shot and wounded the duck, then called for me to send Lumi again. The duck again sprinted away a few times, until Lumi finally caught it.

Later in the week, one of the other trainers sent me email saying that she felt the experience had been cruel to the ducks and counterproductive to the dogs' training. To me, this was a case of the dogs chasing down cripples, something field dogs are often required to do on marks, though I can see that the prolonged chase may have made it worse for the ducks. I agree that the dogs shouldn't have broken from the SL when their flyers glided overhead instead of falling to the ground.

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