Double QQ for Lance and Laura

Sunday Lance (Alta-Tollhaus Par Four BN RE TDX MX MXJ NAP NJP OF) double Q’d meaning he qualified in both Standard and Jumpers on the same day, very important as you need 20 double Q’s to earn your MACH title.  This double Q is especially sweet as Laura has needed to take of life events and has been away from competing.

Thank you Charlene for the video, Charlene (Veri’s owner) also doubled Q’d with her Australian Shepherd, Artemis and is at the half-way point to earning her MACH. The video s are of all Lane and Laura’s runs from the weekend.  Congratulations Laura and Charlene on your QQs!



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Cadence Agility Training

Cadence and Monica agility training. Photos taken by Collin.
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Some puppy loving from Liliana
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Trust is the Name of the Game.

I just re-watched a video from Susan Garrett about mental confidence and the importance of having a premental routine before a big event. Several things she said really hit home with me because, like her, I have learned over the years, that in order to be successful you have to trust your dog.

I find people of this generation of agility are lucky, there is so much more information today then there was back in 2006 when I started competing with my dog Poo-Key. Susan has teamed up with John Cullen to create a great workbook on how to prep for the pressure that comes with stressful competitons, whether for you, it is a local show or for others, a finals run at a national or world event. I highly recommend her new book. It is called , “Without Pressure, We Get No Diamonds.”

Now with that said, I must say several things Susan said in her Vlog a few months ago that really hit home and it reminds me of a story.

When I first started agility back in 2006, like Susan, I was blessed with an incredible dog named Poo-Key. She was a great dog to start with. She gave me confidence and she was honest to a fault. Poo-Key was older when we started and I was only able to do a few shows a year so our time together was short. I took some time off for awhile and when I came back I began again with Nina, a nice steady dog and a little firecracker named Tynan.

Nina gave me my education, meaning I had no idea how to harness the wind and I knew I was in trouble. I knew then that I was going to have to go out and search for help to be able to run her successfully. I found many great handlers that helped me along the way, but for years we still struggled. Then one day I came to the realization that my problem was me. You see, I was not trusting her to do her job. Here I had given her a fabulous, rather expensive, education and I had no confidence in her, or maybe it was I had no confidence in myself.

So, at the next show I decided to run and do my job while trusting her to do hers. Amazingly we ran brilliantly. “Wow”, I thought, I am on to something here. I continued to trust in her and we went on to do great things together.

Then came Tynan. He is the lucky one, mainly because I had it all figured out this time. I told myself when I first starting training him from the beginning, if I did my job and gave him a fabulous education that the trust would fall into place.

The first time I ran him at a show, I did not do that at all and it showed in my video. I came home and told myself that I would not repeat that mistake and moved forward. Well great things happened. Tynan did things that even Nina could not do and yet today he has never let me down on course. Yes, there are things we need to revisit and work on, but as long as I do my job then he is free to do his.

Bottom line, it took me years to understand this and I am glad I am able to share some of that much hard found knowledge with you today.

So my advice of the week is, trust in your dog. Give him or her their job, so you can do yours.

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K9 Nosework for the Fence-Jumping Pooper

One great thing about K9 nosework (tracking) is you can do it at home with minimal set-up and no equipment, except cardboard boxes to start. It also tuckers-out Batman, who today I nicknamed the “fence-jumping pooper” because, while on our morning walk, he jumped over a foot-tall fence and pooped on an enclosed lawn. I cleaned it all up, of course, but it was rather embarrassing. On the upside, I think our pre-agility and Cavaletti training has really paid off — he cleared that fence both ways, no problem, back legs up nice and high.

Here we are in week 3 of K9 nosework practice — we have moved from cardboard boxes to hiding the find in household objects:

Here is how I taught Batman to be a fence-jumping pooper:

And here is Buja-boarding Batman in action (directions on how to make the board here):

 

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Batman-Tested and Approved DIY Agility Cavalettis

As part of our never-ending quest for rear-end awareness, I made a set of Cavalettis for Batman this weekend. Cavalettis are short hurdles most commonly associated with equestrianism. I wanted to buy a set of 6, but at over $30/each with shipping, I decided to make a cheaper version using 4″ PVC pipes and fittings. Cost: $10/each. They’re not the most aesthetically pleasing, but they do the job and are dead simple to make.

Batman, doing quality control over the materials.

 

Just making sure there aren't any squirrels hiding in here!

 

Let's do it!

I like Cavalettis more than the agility ladder for indoor work because the agility ladder I made isn’t very portable and thus lives outside on the balcony, and also because Cavalettis are more flexible. You can arrange them in different configurations all around the house, fan them out, practice doing turns, and other creative things.

Batman is so fun to teach. It helps that he’s so food motivated, and so smart. We just tried this exercise for the first time yesterday. This morning, we came back home from our walk, and he ran into the room, saw the pipes, and tried to run across them, even though I had pushed them all together the night before to get them out of the way. He leaped on top of the pipes and plunked his bat paws in between them.

Luckily I had my camera in my pocket, so I could capture the moment:

Why are these all bunched up? Here, let me space them out for you! Now where's my treat?

Julie, have I told you how this puppy is the light of my life? He makes me laugh everyday.

 

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