Kim_MacMillan
Posted : 11/16/2010 8:32:25 PM
Thanks for your response. I'm not making assumptions, I think I said that. I'm interested in looking at the whole performance and the dog's reaction to different things, from the experience of somebody in another, different obedience sport. I like understanding the sport better. I'm not judging the training methods behind it, because I don't know what was used, therefore it's easier to discuss as there is no preconceived idea of what went on.
I guess I'm just trying to compare the schutzhund obedience with traditional obedience to see why the dog may show enhanced anxiety for a drop out of motion or stand out of motion in schutzhund obedience, whereas you don't see the same heavy panting/breating reaction out of traditional obedience dogs. I wouldn't expect or want a totally closed mouth either, that's much more tension than panting. There are a lot of components of schutzhund that are surely more intense, but I don't see the obedience routine as being all that intense. In schutzhund, are different events (protection, tracking, and obedience) directly back to back? That would definitely explain it better. I would understand that most dogs don't thoroughly enjoy being left alone, on the out of motion exercises, but I train a lot of distance work, and stationary distance work, between agility and obedience exercises, and I don't see that type of reaction in my own dogs. And with dogs that are trained in a sport where they are supposed to be pretty stable, if it was anxiety is that included in the judging of it? That's why I'm interested in it, to understand the differences.
The overloaded in drive idea interests me, because the behaviours the dog is showing reminds me more of dogs that are showing anxiety about agility and being in a fast-paced, high-adrenaline environment, and you see a lot more high-drive dogs in agility. I would expect to see those behaviours in the protection side, or the tracking for sure, but again the actual obedience portion is not actually that intense or from watching different videos of it. But again, if they were all back-to-back and the dog went from one to another within a short time, it would make a lot more sense to me.
Just trying to figure it out a little more. I'm an analytical person, so while I love to watch to see the strong training, it's natural for me to have a deeper look to see just what it's all about, to the dog and to the sport.