Agility at last!

    • Gold Top Dog

    Agility at last!

    We just finished up our first in a series of agility seminars being held by a very well-known agility trainer. We're following the Greg Derret Handling System, and we're having so much fun! In our class are four border collies, a Pap, my Schnauzer, and a Jack Russell Terrier. They are all-day seminars, where the goal is to learn hands-on and practice, then to go home and continue working on it. It's offered seminar-style because where we live there aren't a lot of local trainers or clubs without leaving the province to try and do it (it's just not feasible to travel 6 hours once per week to do it!).

    This first class was all about foundations - shaping with a clicker, nose targetting, body awareness, jump prep, circle work, attention and focus work, restrained recalls, and crate games - all those things you need to develop a strong working relationship.

    We quickly identified where Gaci needs the most work:

    - focus and attention, which we expected. She is as terrier as they come, and wants to sniff, hunt, and explore the world. But she's also a quick learner, so it won't be too hard to gain strong focus.
    - right-side positioning. I never taught her to walk in a focused-position on my right side, and she doesn't care for it. LOL. She thinks the left is the place to be! So we'll have lots of work in walking (eventually running) on my right side with good focus.
    - the crate games. The other thing that's "new" to her, which is a self-control game taught using the kennel. But she already grasps the concept, we just have to make it stronger.

    Anyway, we head back over this weekend for another day! Can't wait, Gaci did superb (especially with her fear issues, the trainer was very impressed). I can't wait, this week we begin working on hind end awareness, 2 on-2 off contacts, and more! Squee! I'm gonna have my agility girl now before too long! LOL.

    • Gold Top Dog

     Sounds great!  I'd love to have you detail what you're working on because I am learning a different system and would love to see how they are different.  :)

    • Gold Top Dog

    Kim_MacMillan

    - right-side positioning. I never taught her to walk in a focused-position on my right side, and she doesn't care for it. LOL. She thinks the left is the place to be! So we'll have lots of work in walking (eventually running) on my right side with good focus.

     

    I had a real hard time with this with Belle too. She was almost 3 when we started agility, and up to that day EVERYTHING was on the left. It was foreign to me too. She got much better with time and practice, however when she gets confused she ends up on my left side everytime. With Teddi I made a point once she was heeling on the left, to turn around and heel her on the right. I don't want it foreign for her. Feels much less weird to me now as opposed to when I started doing agility with Belle.

    Your seminars sound interesting. I hope the method works well for you since agility trainers are so far away. Have fun let us know how things go with the future ones. 

    • Gold Top Dog

    At the second seminar, we continued on with what we learned in the first one, mostly as a warm-up. So more circle work, more focus, etc, more running setups.

    New this week was shaping the jump, such that the dog will jump no matter what angle you are standing at to the jump.

    Beginning work on the teeter. The teeter was stabilized simply as a horizontal beam and the dogs ran across it to the end where they were rewarded in the two on-two off position. Also we were introduced to two games that got the dog used to the teeter. One is called the Bang Game, where the dog jumps on the teeter off the ground and gets it to bang on the ground - getting the dog used to the sound basically. The other is the Elevator game where you place your dog on the end of the teeter and let the dog ride it down to the ground.

     We also did running work over a series of jumps, to help the dog learn to gather itself before it launches, and to collect itself after the jump. The jumps were spaced (based on the size of the dog) so that the dog landed, collected, and launched to the next one.

    We did work on hind-end awareness, which was basically a shaping game to get the dog to stand on a plank with its two front feet and shape turning in circles on the pivot with the hind feet.

    Did work on the wobble board, introducing the dogs to the feeling of it.

    Lots of learning, with lots of practice, without it being too much. I love how she sets up her seminars, she is a great teacher with amazing patience. I can't wait for the next one! We have a barn here only a few minutes away that we are going to practice in every Tuesday night to work on what we learned and to go further. I'm very excited to finally be *in* agility LOL.

    • Gold Top Dog

     It does sound fun and interesting. I am glad you are enjoying it.