November 28, 2005

New Question


How do I figure out Rafe's head?  He
works well in training, then gets to a show and loses

focus entirely—sometimes just wanders off to visit

the stewards or look at dogs outside the ring.

Fortunately it was just practice.  Corrections don't

make a dent, so I don't bother.  Right now my only

idea is to make him start over every time his

attention strays at all. 


 It is clearly not a "lack of brain" problem, since he learns things quickly and

understands the exercises, just seems to have no sense

of responsibility about working.  Being beautiful

apparently is sufficient.


Cheers!
November 7, 2005

Again




Sunday they just have the one-hour pick-up and

drop-off time, so it was busy.  I was waiting for the

dogs to come up front when one of the kennel staff

came out and asked which ones I wanted.  When I said

the shepherds, she replied, "Oh, they are the BEST

dogs."


Well, we knew that.

Cheers!

 
November 3, 2005

Rafe


People who don't know him think he looks

dangerous--and that is good, since he is a big

pushover.  When we walk, those afraid of dogs cross

the street.  I like having a big, dark shape beside me

at night.


On the other hand, the DSM shepherd people had him in

their laps in two seconds.


Re the figure 8, the judge was just shaking her head.

She said something like "he certainly is pulling

everything he can think of today."


Now that it is all over, I am re-thinking.  For all my

previous dogs the solution to heeling problems was to

go back on leash and correct.  And that is what I did

with Rafe, but now I think it was a mistake.  His head

seems to see heeling on leash as something totally

different from heeling off leash, so when I took the

leash off in the ring he was not sure what to do.  We

are now back to trying a bit of off leash work, just

to see.  I am correcting him by walking into him, etc.
October 29, 2005

Another New Title!


Mr. Rafe is now UCDX Mr. Rafe.  I will try to do a new

picture for you, after we get back to d-ville and the

camera.


Onward to Utility!


We can brag about the title, but the performance was

not pretty.  Don't know what happened—in August he

was respectable, but then he turned into a fruitcake.

We are not supposed to end the figure 8 exercise by

standing up on the back legs, kissing the handler, and

then sitting sideways in front asking if that is cute

enough.


My friend Sherry, who saw him at a fun match, says

that watching him herd me around the ring is adorable.

 Is this by any chance hereditary?
August 8, 2005

New Title!


     U-CD Alta-Tollhaus Andiamo CD



He did four trials in two days, this time with

placements:  one first, one second, two thirds.  His

brain is fried:  he says no one ever asked him to do

this much per day before.  He is absolutely flat on

his side.


Don't tell him, but it is onward to Open.


Cheers!
August 1, 2005

MacMonster and Jumps


Just a quick question about Mac and jump training.  We

have started both dumbbell and jumps in his Novice

class (I like this instructor—he assumes everyone is

continuing to Open and probably Utility; last week

showed us the beginning of a retrieve training video

that was very good—turned out to be a TriTronics

tape, so I hadn't seen it, and he turned it off when

they moved to the e-collar part, so this was just on

take and hold exercises).  Anyway, he had the bigger

dogs in class starting with a 16" jump.  Mac had been

doing an occasional 20" at home.  But this morning I

forgot to change Rafe's arrangement, and the Mac

cleared 24" with no problems.  I suspect he could do

the old 36" requirement easily, but we don't have to.


After his quick lesson (much too hot to keep going) we

did a little tennis ball, and now I have to take three

balls out there.  For a while I could get by with two

and do the "trade" routine, but now he just carries

two at all times, so I need a third.  And he has

absolutely no sense about stopping when he is getting

too hot.


Cheers!
July 12, 2005

Rafe the Beautiful



Last night when we were coming back from the late walk

the local K-9 officer pulled up, just because he

wanted to say hello to Rafe.  He says he admires him

every morning when we are out for the early walk—I

didn't even know he saw him, since I think they live

down a street I don't cover on the tour.  He is

currently working a Mal, but clearly is a shepherd

man.  Rafe just posed and gave him that naive puppy

look.  Being beautiful is what Rafe does best.


Cheers!
February 23, 2005

Current Training Levels

I think I am about ready for the 5 a.m. start on the
trek to LA.  The paper is as done as it is going to

get, and I found some clothes that are ok.

Fortunately it is an informal conference.  Anyway, in

case John and I get wiped out by Osama's buddies at

LAX and you get the boys back, this is about where

they are:



Rafe knows all the Open exercises and is anticipating

every single one of them.  He needs more exposure to

the group stays.  Has never wandered off, but once he

did go down on the sit.  He is doing the drop on

verbal command—not yet reliable enough to trust that

he will be watching for a signal.  But his finish is a

swing, on signal.  He is up to jumping 24/48, and we

will take the next two steps up rather slowly.  On the

broad jump I am not yet quite back to standing beside

the jump, still sideways to him but about at the end

of the jump.  He is also started on Utility.  We are

doing signals with me standing about 2-3 feet in front

of him and backing up for the recall.  Articles are

coming—right now I think I have four tied down and he

is picking up the loose one.  Next step is to add a

couple more loose articles.  Glove retrieve is getting

there.  Still occasional mistakes (e.g., the love for

glove 2, or refusal to go to glove 2).  He is doing is

pivot to glove three as a three-quarter pivot in the

same direction as the pivots to one and two—he is too

big to do a neat "back-up" pivot to three.  Maybe we

will get there eventually, but for now he is in a

better heel position if I do it the other way.  Will

work on the Moving Stand after the signal stand is

solid.  He does go-outs to cheese (they teach it that

way in Champaign and I am expecting to be back there

for lessons this summer), and for directed jumping I

am keeping the jumps at 16 inches for now.  He is a

bit slow on the turn-and-sit, and just catching on to

going to the jumps (the left is harder for him right

now).  But he is having fun.


Mackie is just in Basic.  We are doing the

usual—heeling, just started Figure Eight and stand.

His recall is very nice.  Sits and downs are getting

there.  He does not run off but he will go down if he

is bored—does it in the rest of the class when he

decides the instructors have been talking too long.

He is learning the swing finish as a game—he does it

for his favorite food in the world, banana.  And we

have started the dumbbell.  He is very good at Take,

Hold, Give.  And he is starting to learn to walk with

it in his jaws.  Somehow he can carry anything else in

the world for miles, and usually does have something

clenched in his mouth, but the dumbbell is another

matter, as usual.  He will get up and carry it if I

have a hand touching his collar—and he has just done

one or two little performances of bringing it without

the hand.


I think that is about where we are. 


They are off at the doggie spa, called Kenl Inn, and I

am ready to go up and contemplate my packing once

more.  I know there is something major I have not

remembered.


More from LA, if the library will let me get on the

web.


Cheers!