Sunday, January 25, 2009

Steadiness Training: Dummies and Pheasants

Clevenger's Corner

Lumi, Laddie, and I trained with a Pro we haven't worked with before, Dave, and our holistic vet, Carol, for about two hours. Carol has been working with Dave for some time training her own dog, and besides making the introduction, came along to train with us. The focus of the session, however, was on a particular weakness in my own dogs' training, steadiness, especially honoring fliers. The session showed that especially for Laddie, overall steadiness requires a good bit of work.

Although I had come to the session with a particular training plan in mind, Dave suggested something much simpler: All three dogs at the line, Dave throws something, Dave then calls out for one of the dogs (using a code, not the dog's name), and of course that dog is the only one who gets sent.

Though that format has little to do with event format, it had the advantage of simplicity and I saw no problem with it. We ended up doing it in three set-ups, all in a hilly corn field:

(1) Throwing dummies and Dokkens as singles at 25 yards, with the dog crossing a deep, bramble-filled ditch and then climbing back up among decoys to complete the retrieve.

(2) Throwing dummies and Dokkens as doubles at 20 and 25 yards, one mark on our side of the ditch, the other among the decoys.

(3) Shooting live Pheasants as singles at 100 yards at the top of a steep hill.

In addition to those steadiness drills, we also ran one 40-30 yard momma-poppa double (that is, with Dave throwing both marks) plus a 100-yard blind. For this one, we were at the top of a hill and all retrieves were downhill. The marks were Pheasants and the blind was a Mallard. There was no steadiness element to this. One handler held two dogs while the other ran a dog.

Addressing the last segment first, it seemed to present minimal challenge but hopefully it was fun for the dogs. On the blind, Laddie needed one WSC, Lumi lined it.

There was one unexpected and unfortunate event: after picking up dummies, then a pheasant flier, then fresh killed pheasants, Laddie blinked the barely thawed duck when he first found it and wandered away, apparently in search of a tastier article to retrieve. I had to send him back to it. Then he picked it up and brought it back. ("Blinked" means he saw it but didn't pick it up.)

In the segment with shot pheasants, neither dog was steady on the flier, and Lumi was even worse than not steady, breaking as soon as I let go of her tab, without waiting for me to call her name. At least Laddie didn't do that.

On the other hand, to my surprise, neither dog was steady even with the very first drill, dummies as singles. I wish I could say they got better as we proceeded, since of course that's the goal when we go out to train, but I can't really say that happened. However, Dave made some excellent suggestions for private training this week, and if Nate is available at times, I'll also try to set up situations similar to the ones Dave used for the very short singles and doubles with both dogs waiting at the line.

Other points about the session:
  • Retrieving dummies in a corn field turned out to be quite difficult for Lume and Laddie. From what Dave said, the shininess of the old corn husks confuses the dog. Both dogs had trouble finding the dummies among the decoys. Carol's dog, who has practiced in these conditions before apparently, had less trouble, so I guess dogs get used to it. I'm glad my dogs are getting this experience: another photo for the picture album, as Jody Baker has described it.
  • I felt Lumi and Laddie handled well at these short distances, when they got lost on the singles during the steadiness practice.
  • Lumi's pick-ups were unacceptably slow with the pheasants. I brought all four of the birds home with us so we can work on it.

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