Friday, August 1, 2008

Land Blinds

Summary. Morning at Brook Knoll (overgrown lawn, rolling terrain):
  • Series A. Quadruple blind (both dogs)
Afternoon at Oaks Area 2 (thick, clumpy cover — high in patches — surrounded by woods, highly distracting with deer scent, birds, groundhogs, etc.), with Nate helping:
  • Series B. Marks and offline drill (both dogs)
  • Series C. Offline drill (Lumi)
  • Series D. Offline drill (Lumi)
  • Series E. Offline drill (Lumi)
The Offline Drill. I described the offline drill in a post the next day.

Series A. A quadruple blind set up as follows:
  • #1: 30-yard blind (WD)
  • #2: 130-yard blind (duck)
  • #3: 30-yard blind (WD)
  • #4: 140-yard blind (duck)
Both dogs completed all blinds, but Lumi slipped several whistles on #4. That led to my designing the offline drill, which we used in the afternoon.

Series B. A combination of marks, thrown by Nate, and the offline drill, within a 135° angle:
  • #1: 100-yard mark (duck)
  • #2-4: offline drill with 30-yard segments
  • #5: 200-yard mark (duck)
Laddie's grade: A

Lumi's grades: B on the marks (she needed a small hunt on #5), F on the offline drill (repeated slipped whistles and refused casts)

Series C. Since Laddie had done so well on Series B and temps were in the high 80s, I put Laddie in the van while I worked with Lumi on a some shorter handling drills. Moving to a different location and direction, I tried Lumi on an offline drill with 20-yard segments. Grade: F

Series D. Using another location and direction, I tried Lumi on an offline drill with 15-yard segments. Grade: F

Series E. Using yet one more location and direction, I tried Lumi on another offline drill with 15-yard segments. Grade: D (still unsatisfactory, but showing improvement on responsiveness to whistles and casts)

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