poodleOwned
Posted : 10/30/2010 5:47:01 PM
This is a new context for this column. One of my concerns in the doggy world is that theories get proposed and don't really get tested. It would be great if there was no fall out, but often there is. So if we know tools work, and if there is a lot of evidence to use them then for the sake of our dogs and may be our client's dogs if we are trainers, we should understand and use them.
If we wish to try something new, then we have a duty to undertstand the process well,and be able to support this with solid evidence.
If you look at my signature, i am the rather proud handler of a dog with a UD title. Luci got this title a week ago, but i have been travelling and haven't been posting. That came with a lot of plain hard work and application of the dreaded CC OC and understadning of how affective behaviours may work. Poor Luci developed noise phobias at about the 18 month level. They were really hard to deal with. Many people would have dismissed them and made them worse by believing that "she was putting them on" (I heard that a few times :( ) I stuck to my guns and systematically desensitised her to them over a 8 month period. I listened and worked with a Vet Behavourist, worked with proven R+ trainers and at the end of this period had a dog that just wanted to be in a trail environment and couldn't give a dam about car noise.
One of the things that you DON'T do in this scenario is start waving toys around, or provoking play. Wrong state wrong time wrong place. I can tell you that to do so is to land up with a nasty mess of cross associaited states and behaviours. It is a soluton for nothing.
We were travelling quite well, and then Luci started missing our seekback article and the occassional SD article. It was hard to work out. i guess that if i was more to the trad side i would have read it as her being stubborn or something. What had happened is that we had started using a strong dose of cortisone eye drops which had affected her scenting. Within 8 days of removing her drops, we had a much happier dog and our second pass. I was so confident that i told my wife that she should come to the next trial as Luci would get it and she did.
Our UD is held outside. We onlu use rope barriers. We have a much longer signals exercise , our SD is three articles not two, and we have this dam seekback (An article is placed somewhere in a heelign sequence by a judge and our dog has to find it). We only ever stop for hot weather over about 95 degrees. It is an exception to get a pass in a ring let alone a good score.
I do train Luci "in drive". I don't quite see it as that but that will do. I spend a lot of time even at this advanced level making sure that she thinks the ring is a great place to be and that doing the various exercises is fun. At the other end of the scale i don't allow certain behaviours AND hardly ever get them.
I guess that doing UD is one way that i find out whether what i think works actually does under very testing conditions.