Friday, October 3, 2008

Blinds, Drills

AM: Oaks Areas 1 and 3

Series A. Triple blind with OD, no markers. Left to right within a 90° angle:
  • #2: 160-yard blind, concealed until close in low, thick cover atop a ridge, with a tree 10 yards to the left and a hedge 10 yards to the right
  • #3: 230-yard blind, with a fence line along the left angling slightly in toward the line to the blind, and a tree 10 yards to the left
  • #1: 60-yard blind, concealed until close in low, thick cover in an open field
I managed to make these blinds sufficiently difficult that neither dog was able to line any of them, giving both dogs an opportunity to practice handling.

Laddie handled well on all three blinds.

Lumi handled well on #1 and #2, then started well on #3 but slipped a whistle at 170 yards, resulting in me walking out. When I then sent her again, she handled well all the way to the blind.

Series B. Pick-up speed drill: short poorman double with ducks. Laddie was excellent on both birds. Lumi was slow on first pick-up, resulting in me walking out. She was then excellent on both birds.

PM: Neighborhood Lacrosse Field

Series C. Pinball drill in the shape of a crankshaft, 200x60 yards, five SFs with an OD on the last one. Lumi, running first, did fine. Laddie, however, was uncharacteristically and inexplicably erratic. His motivation seemed high, but he overran his WSs repeatedly, then took inaccurate casts. When his casting didn't improve after 4-5 WSCs, I called him in, put him on lead, and walked him around the field to pick up the flags and dummy, and then to the van. I left him there while running Lumi on Series D.

Series D. Pick-up speed drill, a short poorman double with ducks. Lumi's pick-up on both was excellent.

Series E. I set-up a second crankshaft shape on a different part of the field, this time shorter, and tried Laddie on it again. He heeled well as we approached the SL and seemed anxious to perform, but he overran the first flag before sitting, then refused a cast (that is, went a different direction). I called him back to give him one last chance, and he immediately took a WIL. I called him back, slipped on his leash, walked him around the field to pick up the flags and dummy, and terminated the session.

The contrast between this evening's behavior and this morning's is so stark that I'm mystified. When we returned home, I tethered him to my belt to see if we can get better into sync.

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