Liesje
Posted : 10/18/2010 9:37:03 PM
I'm not quite sure what is meant by "anxiety method" but I'm guessing the dog was taught to track using some form of pressure/compulsion/escape? If so, I think it makes sense the dog gets anxious at corners, since the dog understands that getting off track = punishment and at the corner there is going to be some uncertainty of where the track goes.
I don't like training to track using compulsion. I will use it for working on very specific aspects once the dog has learned all the pieces of tracking and is doing trial type tracks, but I do all foundation with positive methods (typically food on the track and either a food pile or toy reward/game at the end depending on the dog, also I train article indication off the track again using freeshaping and food rewards). Tracking is natural for any dog, all dogs scent better than humans, it's just a matter of training the dog to track in the fashion that you want with the attitude you want. I want a willing tracker that is focused and maintains speed (I'm not real picky on THE speed, but the dog has to be consistent, not get more hectic toward the end or fizzle out). I want the dog to show calm focus and control. Nose must be on the ground, no air scenting, corners very precise (no slowing down or pausing to check, just turning the corner maintaining the speed and rhythm). I do the foundation work with food on the track but the dog's temperament and drive will determine what food, how much or how little, how random, how soon it's faded, etc.
Since I do SchH and basically footstep track, I teach corners just like other parts of the track (with food), except I might leave more scent and/or more food on corners longer than straight legs or easier sections of the track. It takes more practice to fade the scent and food off the corners. Our corners are very sharp 90 degree corners, at least that is how I train them mostly (my corners are like three steps, not an arc). I like the dog to stay directly on the track than have to check off the side in order to make a corner.
The handler might have to work corners off tracks for a while, if that makes sense. The dog basically needs to re-learn them and associate corners with good rather than get anxious and hectic because losing the track for a split second = bad. Sort of like when we have a dog that is trained to indicate articles with compulsion and then shows too much avoidance on the track, we re-train the indication off the track and don't put articles back on or do article training tracks until the indication behavior is exactly how we want, consistently.
No matter the dog or the method I *never* allow circling. Again maybe that is a SchH thing, but if I think the dog might circle, I shorten the line or even stand directly behind the dog or on his right to "steer" him gently and prevent circling. To me, while tracking the *only* option is moving forward. If there is a big problem and/or the dog is really stressed, I will down/platz the dog, figure out what is going on, maybe give the dog a breather, toss a handful of food on the track right there, and re-start.