tashakota
Posted : 3/13/2009 8:01:40 AM
KarissaKS
Tashakota -- Do you really find it to be that big of a problem running two dogs? I've been to several two-ring NADAC trials and they are very good about handling ring conflicts. At the beginning of the day they always state which ring takes precidence and if you have a conflict they have no problem going back to a jump height/running out of order/letting you do a walk-through out of order.
I expect to find this out first hand in July. Kaiser's first NADAC trial is a big two-ring event, so I'll be faced with the issue of Novice starting in one ring in the a.m. and Elite running in the other! Thankfully Kaiser runs with small dogs and Luke runs with the big dogs, so that will help the timing issue slightly!
It depends on the dogs. For my dogs, I don't feel like I can take them back to their crates, stick them in and then grab the next dog to run, which I did when I first started trialing. My dogs need a little more wind down time before being put back into crates. I have a friend that runs 2 dogs in everything and she runs her dog, goes back to the crate, sticks them in, gives them a treat and gets ready for the next run.
I think it also depends on the person. I see many people trying to run 2 or 3 dogs in the same jump height at the same level and they have to make sure that they have some dogs in between their own, as well as catch their breath in between. Many of these people that I see, do not run their dogs all that well either. More experienced people seem to have less problems so it just depends on the people.
I know that I did not like running Kota and Tasha in the same classes. I felt overwhelmed kind of, but I had also just started trialing. Since you've already been trialing with Luke, it will be different for you. Kota is in Masters now and Tasha is still in Starters, so that makes a big difference. But with 2 ring shows, at least around here, the Masters levels are in ring 2 and the Starters, Advanced are in ring 1. So you may end up with 2 dogs running at the same time. That's two walk throughs, 2 different courses to memorize, plus running from one ring to the other trying to make sure that you aren't missing your turn. If there are conflicts, they try really hard to work both in, but I have seen instances where a handler has to run one dog in ring 2 and then as soon as they are done, run to get their other dog to run in ring 1. That is not a situation I would personally want to find myself in.