Series A. Pinball drill, six SFs in question mark pattern in rectangle 120x80 yards, OD at last SF. Both dogs handled well.
Series B. Speed drill for Lumi picking up birds. Progress during session, but Lumi apparently needs more sessions before she will perform well on first pick-up of session.
PM: Glenwood Middle School
Series C. With new training partner Chris throwing, left to right within 120°:
- #4: 140-yard blind, SF/OD, with line to blind passing close to a building and trees on the right, and across a road-width strip of land covered in straw that dogs were reluctant to cross
- #2: 120-yard mark, RL/SM/WD
- #5: 180-yard blind, SF/OD, very tight to #2 on left, past chain-link fence on right
- #3: 40-yard mark, duck thrown by Chris, location marked by chair and whichever dog wasn't running on lead with Chris
- #1: 60-yard blind, SF/OD
- Dog ran #1.
- I showed dog #3 with Chris standing to wave, then sitting.
- I lined dog up on #2, launched the dummy, and sent dog. The goal was for dog to stay focused on #2 even though dog was aware of Chris, other dog, and ducks at #3.
- Chris threw duck for #3 and dog ran that mark.
- Dog ran #4.
- Dog ran #5.
Lumi needed more handling on the blinds, but she handled well on her WSs and her casts. She swung her head on #2, then veered toward #3 even though it hadn't been thrown when I sent her to pick up #2. I called her back to heel and sent her again, and this time she nailed #2. On #3, she had a slow pick-up so I walked out to bring her back to the SL without the bird, then sent her again and she had an excellent pick-up.
I didn't feel Laddie needed more work and it was almost dark, but I wanted to work on Lumi's head-swinging and pick-up speed a bit more. I moved the chair to the other side of the line to #2 and repeated the singles, again having Chris stand and wave, then sit, then sent the dog to the long mark, and finally had Chris throw so the dog could run the short mark. We did that sequence twice, and both times, Lumi kept her focus on #2 rather than swinging her head.
I also gave Lumi a few short poorman marks with a duck to work on her pick-up speed, walking out and not letting her retrieve if she played with the bird instead of picking it up immediately. When she was performing well on those short throws, we ran the marks and she had excellent pick-ups on those as well.
Lumi makes progress on her pick-up speed each session, but reverts by the next session. We'll know we're making real progress when even her first pick-up of the session is fast repeatedly, especially in group training and hopefully, eventually in events.
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