Saturday, December 13, 2008

Handling Drills

AM: Brook Knolls

SERIES A. No-target drill combined with blind (both dogs)

Distances were in the range 100-200 yards. For Series A, I pre-positioned a duck at 200 yards, ran two no-target send-outs in different directions, then sent the dog to the duck. On the no-target send-outs, I blew WS and cast the dog in various random directions 1-3 times before calling the dog in with Here.

Despite the distance to the duck, both dogs veered toward it on both no-target outruns and lined it when sent to it.

Both dogs showed good to excellent response on all WSs. Laddie's casts were also excellent, whereas Lumi's were inconsistent, evidently influenced by suction from the duck.

SERIES B. No-target drill combined with blind (both dogs)

Identical to Series A except for placement of the bird and orientation of the send-outs.

SERIES C. Conflict drill at 20 yards (both dogs)
SERIES D. Conflict drill at 20 yards (both dogs)
SERIES E. Conflict drill at 50 yards (both dogs)

Description of conflict drill follows.

Conflict Drill

Watching Lumi's difficulties with the no-target drills again today, I came to the conclusion that despite all her training, she still does not have sufficient reinforcement history for taking a cast away from a known target in a direction where she cannot see or scent an alternative target. Although my focus the last few days has been on the WS, I decided that for Lumi, solving that underlying problem was also a high priority.

So for the second half of this morning's sessions, I set up some simple conflict drills, as follows:
  • Place a bird some distance from the SL. Today, we did two series at 20 yards and a third at 50 yards.
  • Place the dog beside the bird, at a distance of about five yards to the left or right of the bird.
  • Return to the SL, face the dog, and blow WS to get the dog's attention.
  • Cast the dog with an Over away from the bird.
  • As soon as the dog takes the cast and runs a few yards, blow WS, then call Here, and reinforce with a high value reward. This morning, the reward I had available was happy throws with a 2" dummy and a game of tug. Next session, I plan to bring along some high value treats as well.
  • After performing an Over cast on each side of the bird, randomly selecting which side to do first, send the dog to pick up the bird.
I designed this drill for Lumi but let Laddie practice it also, rather than leaving him on the tie-out the whole time.

Laddie: As I expected, this was an easy drill for Laddie at both distances. His only difficulty was that occasionally he interpreted the Over as a come-in, anticipating the games we'd play when he returned. In each case, when I blew WS and re-cast Over or an angle back away from the bird, he took the second cast well.

Lumi: As I also expected, this was a difficult drill for Lumi, but I was surprised at how difficult it was. First she would interpret the Over the wrong direction, and when I instantly blew another WS and cast her away from the bird again, she just sat there and stared at me. For me, this is a an example of the moot distinction between learning and voting. Was Lumi being disobedient, or had Lumi not learned the cue? It's inconceivable that she was misunderstanding my intent, but it's entirely conceivable that she was misunderstanding the value to her of carrying it out, and in that sense, she had not learned the cue. Perhaps that's what disobedience always amounts to.

In any case, Lumi's performance at 20 yards was reasonably good for Series D, and her performance in Series E, despite the added distance, was still better than her performance at 20 yards in Series C had been. Hopefully, a few more sessions of the conflict drill will fill this crucial gap in Lumi's development.

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