Sunday, November 30, 2008

Drills, Marks and Blinds

Cheltenham

Today's weather was miserable, with temps in the low to mid 40s, a little rain, and continuous rain. For Series A and B, the dogs and I worked alone in one part of the wonderful Rover's Content property. While we finishing Series B, another member of the FT training group we've trained with in the past showed up, and he and I, together with his young black Lab and my two Goldens, trained together for Series C, D, and E. We used the same start lines and lines to our marks and blinds, but different distances and sequences of retrieves. Both the other trainer and I were wearing white jackets, and all our marks for the day were thrown with a blank gunshot and no duck calls.

SERIES A. Offline drill, 70-yard segments (Laddie only)

Despite challenging terrain, including trees dotting the course, diagonal strips of high cover, and a diagonal plunge thru a low-lying marshy area with standing water, Laddie required only the minimum single WSC per offline blind (ODs) and lined the non-handling 210-yard duck retrieve.

SERIES B. Offline drill, 80 yard segments (Laddie only)

Series B was also set up in challenging terrain, this time run from a mound with woods on the right, a small stand of trees on the left, and more trees dotting the course, as well as the pervasive strips of high cover. Again, Laddie required only the minimum single WSC per offline blind and lined the non-handling 240-yard retrieve.

SERIES C. Remote casting drill (RCD) (Lumi, then Laddie)

I pre-positioned a pile of ducks 100 yards from the SL, in open terrain with no marker.

For Lumi and Laddie, I walked the dog along the line to the ducks, stopped 30 yards from the SL, and threw two WDs, one to the left, one to the right, both at 45° angles from the line to the ducks. Leaving the dogs there, I returned to the SL and blew a single tweet to get the dog's attention and straighten the dog toward me if necessary. I then cast a straight Back. Both dogs responded correctly on the first Back cue.

SERIES D. Land double and blind (Lumi, then Laddie)

To set up this series, first we placed a stickman at the first mark at 270 yards on the right of the course. The line to the mark was downhill and then back uphill, with a shallow, narrow, water-filled trench at the bottom. The first mark would be thrown right to left, with the light wind. We also placed a blind (ODs) at 90 yards, to the left of what would be the line to the second, lefthand mark, to be thrown right to left from a tree at 80 yards. The SL was atop a mound.

After we set up the course, the other trainer acted as thrower for both marks as I ran each of my dogs. First he threw the right mark, then got in his Jeep, drove to the tree for the second mark, and threw that one. The dog was sent to the second mark on the left, the go-bird, and then the first mark on the right, the memory-bird. Finally, the dog ran the blind to the left of the line to the go-bird.

I kept the dog's attention on the stickman after the first mark was thrown, while the other trainer was moving around on foot and in his Jeep to get to the second throwing station, with the intention of emphasizing the behavior pattern of keeping the dog's eyes on the last bird down until just before the next bird is thrown.

Lumi nailed the go-bird on her series, and Laddie offline a few yards but homed in on it immediately once he was in the area. Both dogs seemed to have a clear picture of the 270-yard memory-bird, but neither dog ran a straight line to the mark, instead cheating left to avoid the water-filled trench. Lumi simply bowed out and back again. Laddie got offline, stayed on his new line till he was about even with the fall, turned sharply right just before clearing a ridge that would have put him out of sight, and ran straight to the mark.

Lumi was responsive running the blind, which ran thru a complex terrain of variable elevations and cover and diagonnally across two roads. Laddie was responsive on an early WSC, but ended up slipping a whistle 30 yards to the left of the blind, then racing straight to it to pick up the OD and race back to the SL. I assume that would be a DQ in the eyes of many or all judges, but it was hard to know what to do, since Laddie clearly knew where the blind was at the instant that I blew the WS.

SERIES E. Two land singles and a blind (Lumi, then Laddie)

The other trainer threw both singles, then stayed in position as the dog ran the blind. The SL was atop a mound, and the terrain, soaking from the rain, was downhill from the mound, then uphill to complete each of the retrieves.

The first single was on the right at 240 yards, thrown right to left from in front of a large tree and over a road that the dog would have to cross to complete the retrieve. The second single was on the left at 170 yards, thrown right to left across the same road. The throwing position for the second mark was just to the left and behind a stand of trees, and the line to the fall was thru another small stand of trees just before the road crossing. After the singles, the dog ran a 180-yard blind 15° to the left of the second, leftmost single, between a lone tree on the right and then past the same stand of trees the dog had run thru for the second mark, again on the right of the line to the blind.

Both dogs ran both marks well, Lumi pinning them and Laddie requiring minor hunts. Both dogs also performed reasonably well on the blind, slipping no whistles and responding with fair accuracy to the casts. Lumi's whistle sits were better than Laddie's, since his responses were slower and he had travelled further before he sat.

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