Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Hunt Test Training

Today the dogs and I trained, as we usually do on Tuesdays, with Bob Hux's Hunt Test training group at Cheltenham morning. We had a land series, a water series, and then a difficult water blind to try.

Land Series. The land series, left to right within 180°:
  • #3 (go-bird of a double): 100-yard mark, flyer duck, with fall in high cover
  • #2 (memory-bird of a double): 40-yard mark, duck, with fall in open area inside of high cover
  • #4: 100-yard blind, LP/duck, diagonally thru several strips of high cover
  • #1: 150-yard blind, LP/OD, over a road and thru variable cover
#2 and #3 were within a 30° angle;. #4 was 60° further to the right. #1 was another 90° to the right, the opposite direction of the flyer.

LUMI

Lumi was the first dog to run. The first time I sent her on #1, she kept veering to her left, apparently convinced that I was sending her the wrong direction since all the action, especially the flyers, were to our left. I finally called her back to heel and re-sent her. This time she handled the blind easily.

I should have run this series as singles, since Lumi isn't likely ever to have trouble turning to a flyer when it's thrown as the go-bird in a double. As has happened before, the problem she has instead is taking her eye off the memory-bird too soon. In this case, the flyer circled around Bob before he could take a good shot at it, and when it went soaring off, Lumi broke and went after it. I'm afraid I don't remember what happened at that point, other than eventually we got back to the SL to try the series again.

The second time we ran it, Lumi turned her head after #2 was thrown, so even though I planned to run it as a double, I sent her immediately. With some confusion — I may have had to call her to heel and send her again — she got going the right direction and pinned the mark. Then she finally got to retrieve the flyer.

Her only problem on the marks was taking too long to pick up the birds. Considering the work we've been putting in on that skill, that was disappointing.

She had no trouble handling on #4.

Next came the honor, the one weakness in Lumi's skill set that I've felt is preventing us from having any chance of Lumi qualifying in a Senior test. I'd prearranged for the team behind us to be one that was getting a flyer. After Lumi completed #4, we took a position to the side of the new team's SL and, following a recent suggestion from Alice Woodyard, I had Lumi down as soon we took our place.

This was one of the most remarkable turn-arounds in Lumi's training history. It was as if a switch had been thrown. I didn't want to rely on having to talk to Lumi while she was honoring, even though it's permitted in Hunt Tests, and there was no need to. I simply stood at her flank as she lay there and watched her. Completely relaxed, she watched the birds thrown and the other dog sent as though from a gallery. She showed no hint of breaking.

The contrast from her previous efforts at honoring, when I asked her to honor from a sit and she was always on the verge of breaking when honoring a flyer and usually did, was dramatic. If honoring from a down always works this well, Lumi is now ready to honor in competition.

[Although Laddie also ran the land series, and both dogs ran a subsequent water series that Bob set up for the group, I didn't have time to record the details at the time and was unable to remember them later. I do recall that, despite the excellent practice LWL retrieves Laddie has performed lately, he marooned on the long mark in today's water series.]

No comments:

[Note that entries are displayed from newest to oldest.]