Kim_MacMillan
Posted : 3/18/2010 6:58:46 PM
Having trained both, I personally am more fond of agility than Rally. While this is just me, I found working in agility helped Gaci's impulse control so much more than Shimmer's Rally class helped her with her dog fears. Rally is so laid back compared to the arousal levels of agility and schutzhund. Gaci actually worked the first three months from her kennel. She would be released from the kennel to do the exercise and then released at the end of the exercise to "Go kennel". It was the running joke for a while that the training group would getting little wheels for her kennel so she had a mobile home. LOL.
In terms of what will benefit you the most, I would think that you will get more bang for your buck from agility, in terms of teaching self control in a stimulating environment - if you have the skills and know-how to do it from foundations. Also, it's a lot easier to learn Rally-O moves at home than it is to do agility at home. You don't often get the chance to do agility outside of class unless you build all of your own equipment - and it's not cheap. Whereas you can teach, and practice, all the skills at home but just need to work in distracting environments for a while to proof it all.
To be honest the Rally class I took is for me and me alone. To teach me, the silly human, how to follow a series of signs appropriately without geting lost. LOL. I taught all the behaviours outside of class, and just used class to teach myself how to work with my dog and the signs (although part of this was because I used a clicker to teach the behaviours and the instructor uses collar corrections and rewards so it was easier for me this way - I just stayed ahead of the class). I will be taking a second class, from the same instructor, for the same reason in hopes of getting both Gaci and Shimmer their titles this summer and fall.
But I don't know where I'd be without having had a group to train agility with. I have the "big group" that I trained with all last summer, and a smaller group that we train with each week here at home, and you get huge benefits in discussing tips, techniques, how to run a course well, and watching other handlers doing their thing to learn what to do, and what not to do, because agility is much more subjective where you have to make a lot of decisions on your own as to how best to run a course.
In the end though you really just have to go with what you are most comfortable with, what you will benefit most from, and what you will enjoy most of all. Even though I love agility so much more I still do Rally and am actually entering a match tomorrow to see how my, and their, skills are holding up. The dogs are going to do so much better than me.