Thursday, October 2, 2008

Handling Drill, Marks and Blinds

AM: Oak Area 2

Pinball drill in the shape of a crankshaft (Back from heel, WS-Over, WS-Back, WS-Over, WS-Back). Set-up was within a 210x100 yard rectangle. Both dogs did fine.

PM: Brook Knoll

Left to right within a 60° angle:
  • #4: 160-yard blind, OD/SF
  • #3: 60-yard mark, WD/RL/SM
  • #5: 170-yard blind, OD/SF
  • #2: 120-yard mark, WD/RL/SM
  • #1: 140-yard blind, OD/SF
Laddie ran first, Lumi second, the other dog honoring unattended.

After each dog ran #1, I set the dog up as though we were going to run #2 and #3 as a double, showing the dog #3 first, then showing the dog #2, and finally firing #2. Both dogs kept their focus on #2 until sent, as I wanted them to do, rather than turning to #3 in anticipation that we were running a double.

In general, the blinds in this set-up were too easy for both dogs. They seemed able to see or otherwise sense the placements, and either line them or get on line to them after a single cast.

The exception was Lumi on #5, where she interpreted left or right Back as left or right angle-back repeatedly, zigzagging a few yards at a time back and forth over the line to the blind. Each time she crossed the line, I'd whistle so that she wouldn't go too far the wrong direction. Eventually, it dawned on her to do a straight back and then she completed the blind. Even during that sequence, she responded on every WS and made an effort to respond on every cast, and her motivation seemed to remain good.

My hope is that after Lumi has experienced zigzagging some number of times, she'll recognize the pattern and will use that information, in addition to the fact that I'm cueing a straight back, to cast in the correct direction.

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