[Fortunately, the three Oaks areas have been mowed. The terrain is now low cover, uneven footing covered in the cut grass. Apparently this field is occupied by an unusual amount of wildlife, because both dogs have always acted highly distracted when we train here, including today.]
Series A. Left to right within a 90° angle:
- #1: 130-yard blind, OD/SF
- #2 (memory-bird of double): 100-yard poorman mark, duck thrown left to right from a stickman
- #5: 250-yard blind, OD in front of large boulder; line to blind had a stand of trees on the left, and a fenced parking area plus a stand of trees on the right
- #4: 210-yard blind, OD in front of a tree set back from trees flanking both sides
- #3 (go-bird of double): 60-yard poorman mark, duck thrown right to left from a stickman over the line to #4
Laddie fell apart on #4. On the first send out, after much handling, he spotted #5 and retrieved it. When I sent him back out, it took dozens of WSCs to direct him to #4. He was nearly 100% reliable on his WSs, with two walk-outs when he didn't sit. But he repeatedly interpreted left and right backs as left and right overs or angle backs. I tried many variations but never found one that he would cast him correctly. Eventually, I walked up 100 yards and was able to handle him to the blind from there.
Lumi did fine on #1 and the two marks. On #4, she was responsive on every WS and required only 3-4 angle-backs which she interpreted correctly though a little off on the angles. Lumi fell apart on #5 as Laddie had on #4, again requiring dozens of WSCs before she got on the correct line. In Lumi's case, she was also nearly 100% reliable on her WSs, but she had her mind set on a target to the left. Every time I'd cast, she'd start in the direction I cast her, then veer around toward the left. I used quick whistles the moment she'd veered, and I tried partial come-ins, complete come-ins, using Over instead of an angle-back, and so forth, but she made little headway on the correct line before she'd veer again. It took many casts before she finally got on the correct line and stayed there.
Series B. Because both dogs had had problems with blinds in this highly distracting field, I placed another OD for each of them in front of one tree in a line of them, and ran the dogs to that blind from 180 yards away on the other side of the field. The dogs were running approximately the opposite direction as they had for #5 in Series A.
I tried Laddie first and again he fell apart. After about three poor WILs each accompanied by poor responses to my casts (though good WSs), I put him in the van and ran Lumi.
Lumi did fine on this blind, taking two WSCs responsively and accurately.
I then took Laddie back out of the van and walked up 80 yards toward the blind. When I sent him, he lined it. While that's always nice to see, we still didn't get any high-quality practice casting at distance in this particular session.
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