Sunday, October 5, 2008

Land-water-land Marks, Blinds

Summary

Laddie: No marooning today.
Both dogs: No slipped whistles, no refused casts.

AM: Cheltenham


Series A. LWL, 70-yard swim, duck. Laddie ran first, then Lumi.

Series B. LWL, 30-yard swim thru stick pond, duck. Lumi ran first, then Laddie.

Series C.
LWL, 40-yard swim thru narrow channel between island and clump of reeds, duck. Laddie ran first, then Lumi.

Series D. LWL, 90-yard swim, duck. Lumi ran first, then Laddie.

Series E. Triple blind, 50-70-200 yards, OD, no markers (I noted placement with respect to nearby trees). Lumi only.

Series F. Triple blind, 40-140-190 yards, OD, no markers (again I noted placement with respect to nearby trees), same SL as Series E. Laddie only. Laddie seemed to be sucked toward the lines that Lumi had run in Series E, but responded to my WSs and casts.

Series G. LWL, 60-yard water blind including 20-yard swim. Laddie ran first, then Lumi.

Midday: Oaks Area 3

Series H. Triple blind, 80-60-60 yards, OD with no markers, the course dotted with trees and unmaintained shrubbery (Lumi only)

Series I. Triple blind, 40-60-60 yards, OD with no markers, same SL and same general area but all Series I blinds to the right of the Series H blinds (Laddie only)

Both dogs performed well. Laddie seemed drawn to the left, where Lumi had run, but responded well to every WS and every cast. Lumi's motivation was 6 on a scale of 10, Laddie was his usual over-the-top exuberant self.

Midday: Oaks Area 2

Series J. 180-yard blind, duck with no marker (Lumi only)

Series K. 160-yard blind, duck with no marker, same SL as Series J but line to the left of the Series J blind (Laddie only)

The course was mostly open field, but both ducks were placed in parts of the field where trees grow, though not in front of any tree. I placed the birds at least 20 yards off to the side of the closest tree because I don't want the dogs learning they'll always find blinds in front of a tree whenever they're running in the general direction of that tree.

The fields at Oaks are considerably more difficult than the ball fields we sometimes train at. The grass here is thick and inconsistently maintained, it's covered in thick cuttings from previous mowings, prominent tracks from the mowing tractor tend to draw the dogs in the direction of the tracks, the footing is uneven and includes shallow standing water in places, and perhaps most significantly, the field is home to deer, birds, groundhogs, rodents, and other wildlife, resulting in what is apparently a highly distracting environment for the dogs.

Both dogs performed well. Laddie, again running after Lumi, seemed to experience some suction toward Lumi's line, but noticeably less than he had in Series F or I.

No comments:

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