Monday, October 13, 2008

Blinds

AM: Oaks Area 3

SERIES A. Triple land blind with DM, left to right within 120° angle:
  • #3: 130-yard blind, OD, no marker
  • #2: 100-yard blind, OD, no marker
  • #1: 50-yard blind, OD, no marker
  • Thrown before #1, picked up after #3: 40-yard poorman mark, duck
Like all three Oaks areas, the terrain here is thick, clumpy grass and uneven footing, with many distracting scents from resident wildlife. In addition, Area 3 has several stands of trees, unmaintained hedges, and ridges dotting and crisscrossing the field.

For Series A, I ran Lumi first, then Laddie.

AM continued: Oaks Area 2

SERIES B. Triple land blind with DMs, left to right within 120° angle:
  • Thrown before #1, picked up after #1: 40-yard poorman mark, duck
  • #1: 100-yard blind, OD/SF
  • #3: 170-yard blind, OD/SF
  • #2: 120-yard blind, OD/SF
  • Thrown before #2, picked up after #3: 50-yard poorman mark, duck
Oaks Area 2 has similar terrain to the area we used for Series A, but it's flatter and has no trees in the main area of the field. An additional difficulty factor in Oaks Area 2 is the mowing tractor's tracks, which tend to suck the dogs along those tracks. I always try to set up blinds at diagonals to the tracks, neither in line with them nor straight across them.

For Series B, I ran Laddie first, then Lumi.

PM: Fair Hill

Triple land blind, 60-130-130 yards. ODs, no markers. I ran Laddie first, then Lumi.

Running Two Dogs on Same Course. Although running two dogs on the same course gives the second dog the advantage of being able to scent the first dog's tracks, and possibly even see them in the disturbed grass, I've decided that it's appropriate to run both dogs on the same course, at least at times, for these reasons:
  • In an event , the probability is low that a particular dog will be the first dog to run. Therefore, dogs need to be able to run blinds that other dogs have already run.
  • With multiple blinds down, the dog has several scent trails in front of her. One training challenge is being able to pull the dog off one of those trails, when the dog veers to the wrong one, and get the dog going in the correct direction, even though no scent trail may exist from that position.

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