Sunday, November 16, 2008

Marks and Blinds

AM: Cheltenham

[Today, the dogs and I went to Cheltenham to train alone. But as we were running Series B, several trainers from the FT group we used to train with showed up in another part of the property and began training together. After we finished Series B, I drove the dogs over to the group and asked if we could possibly run with them. They were kind enough to consent, so we than ran their three series, which I've called Series C, D, and E below.]

CONDITIONS:
Temps in 40s, wind at 15 MPH with stronger gusts. The lines to every retrieve today were thru several strips of high cover, usually at a diagonal, and in most cases also included running thru standing water in low-lying segments of the run. Most blinds and falls were also inside a strip of cover.

SERIES A.
Two blinds and a mark, left to right within a 90° angle:
  • #1: 100-yard blind, OD with no marker
  • #2: 150-yard mark, RL/stand-in/duck
  • #3: 180-yard blind, OD with no marker, almost into a headwind
SERIES B. Three blinds and two marks, left to right within a 135° angle:
  • #2 (first launch, memory-bird of a double): 170-yard mark, RL/stand-in/duck, diagonally across a road
  • #4: 200-yard blind, OD/SF, with a tree 20 yards to the right of the blind and a road meandering along the left of the line to the blind
  • #5: 200-yard blind, OD/SF, thru a keyhole formed by a tree on the left and a mound on the right
  • #1: 120-yard blind, OD/SF
  • #3 (second launch, go-bird of a double): 100-yard mark, RL/stand-in/duck
Both marks were in open field with no markers, so #2 functioned as a retired gun.

I usually use blinds for the outer retrieves on marks-and-blinds set-ups, so today's setup, with all three blinds inside the two marks, was unusual. Given the scale I wanted to run and the particular terrain at the SL I selected, that seemed a good arrangement, and I'm assuming it's good for the dogs to get the variety even if today's setup was unusual.

SERIES C. Group land series with a hip-pocket double opportunity on the right two birds. Since we have not trained with the FT group in several weeks, I thought it better to run the series as three singles, hopefully minimizing difficulty even if not maximizing training benefit in this case. Left to right within a 90° angle:
  • #3: 150-yard mark (pheasant)
  • #1: 50-yard mark (dummy)
  • #2: 100-yard mark (pheasant), with the line to the fall in the narrow angle between the two throwers for #1 and #2
SERIES D. Group double blind, left to right within a 30° angle:
  • #2: 160-yard blind, OD with a nearby tree on the left, with the line to the blind past another tree on the left and across a road
  • #1: 120-yard blind, OD in front of a tree
SERIES E. Group triple, left to right with a 120° angle:
  • #3: 100-yard mark (pheasant), thrown last, retrieved first
  • #1: 130-yard mark (pheasant), thrown first, retrieved last
  • #2: 100-yard mark (pheasant), thrown second, retrieved second
The set-up looked fairly risk-free, so I thought I'd take the opportunity to have the dogs run it as a triple. Both dogs did well, running the memory birds accurately except possibly for Laddie on #1. He ran to the wrong side of the gun, then raced around to the other side to pick up the mark. I'm not sure whether that was because he forgot there was a bird out there and just played it by ear when I sent him, or remembered the bird but forgot the line to the fall.

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