KarissaKS
Posted : 3/26/2009 2:17:13 PM
Luke was Weave-o-Matics & guide wires -- But mostly just the guide wires because my homemade WOM's were notorious for falling over when he touched them (not very lucrative to training....). Luke and I started agility in the winter, so that meant I had a set of 6 poles in the living room of my apartment. We worked on weaves at least once a day (for like five minutes). I would always cook him an egg in the a.m. and use that for his reward.
I tried to use the guide wires for Kaiser, but he absolutely would NOT go anywhere NEAR the poles when the wires were on. Kaiser learned entirely through luring (which is why he needs such babysitting at this early stage). I used my own copy-cat version of 2x2 as well, mostly just to work on his entrances. He picked it up really fast -- going from 6 to 12 poles was no biggy at all, as he pretty much just keeps going once he's in the poles. It's the entrances that still kill us (thankfully NADAC doesn't penalize run-bys).
Your ground hasn't thawed yet??? Do you live on granite? lol The poles in this video are my stick-in-the-grounds. I pounded them into the frozen ground for a while this winter and finally gave up after the third one broke (Luke snapped one and the other two just broke when I was pulling them out). I live on very sandy soil, so I've been able to use them for a while now.
In regards to your guide wires question -- Start removing them slowly, one at a time -- and move them around so that it's a different one occasionally. Most often, on a set of 6, you'd remove the middle ones first, as the entries and exits are the hardest for the dog. Then you start testing by removing the first & last guide wires to see how the dog does. A certain amount of correcting is okay, but if it's clear the dog still doesn't understand the wires should go back on for a while. Just don't take them all off at once. Luke was pretty solid after only a couple of weeks, but I often kept the wires on to work on increasing speed.