Saturday, May 31, 2008

Bye Bye May - Weekend Update

Most of our agility training this weekend focused on contacts. We've been working here & there & everywhere on dynamic downs with big improvement. (Back to that balancing act of keeping things "topped up"). We played on our balance stuff last night during a movie, "Penelope the Pig-Faced Girl".

In obedience we're putting a lot of focus on heeling & straight sits but only worked a few minutes today, then ran errands for fresh paint for the equipment and a new cell phone - mine died. The greatest thing happened, when we didn't find a phone we liked I inherited someone's almost-new iPhone. (same number) Such a score!

Back to heeling - stillness at the start, in heel position, is still a sore spot. Clearly Bungee does not understand what to do, or notice how much I dislike what she does instead, as she's just looking at me with the happiest face ever as she does it, every time, (insert heart melting moment here :-). But back to business, she just loves to put in that one little super-short scoot of anticipation, not quite a hop - maybe a hup or even a "hp". Good thing I'm NOT using a clicker there- she'd have nailed me a bunch of times. But not to worry, we'll solve it.

Any ideas on this one? I'd love to hear them!

Being the positive training "zealot" that I might have a tendency to be at this stage of the game, I would only be true to my stated purpose to add this bit of a rant...


The training challenge described above is a prime example of why I am so happy that I've given up training with punishment. In the past this would have certainly been an opportunity to use punishment as a lack of knowing how else to train it properly.

"punishment as a lack of knowing how else to train it properly".
(which is the ultimate bottomless pit of training with punishment!!).

Far too often corrections are PURELY A CRUTCH for what the trainer does NOT otherwise know how to teach or fix. Not a very lucky dog that belongs to that one! If I've learned anything about positive training at all (and I have! quite a lot actually), I can assure you there is always a way.

The hidden beauty of purely positive training, that which is rarely mentioned, is how much you learn as a trainer along the way. Having to apply lateral thinking that does not include force or other punishments to solve teaching problems makes you grow and learn things you would NEVER have learned otherwise.

Better put my soap box away now before I start perching on it and waiting for a click! :-)))


It's been a rainy weekend up here, complete with an ear-splitting thunderstorm about 4 this morning that woke us all up like a shot. Plenty of lightening again this afternoon with hours of torrential downpour. Great for our new grass! Lousy for the mowing we needed to finish. Not complaining! We're really lucky to have this beautiful rain. Now that we've had our 1st really big spring thunderstorm, everything will be extra-green, in fact I think it already is. I love that!

The DH is loading up "3:10 to Yuma" off our AppleTV. Better start the popcorn! Doggies will be doing lots of tricks tonight with a big bowl of that floating around and dog-loving company, eager to be made their own personal treat vendors (suckers), due any minute.



Friday, May 30, 2008

Bungee's Neighborhood

A Few Photos

It surprised me to see the many similarities between the Kvarkin neighborhood in Finland and ours here in Canada. Here are a few shots of places we walked the other evening.



It is a long hill, my camera does not do it justice.


The other side, leading to a forest.
This place reminds me so much of the path to the forest at Tuorla, Finland.



Almost twilight, looking east:


Also, to the east:


Looking north, a neighbor's farm



A look back to the Niagara Escarpment (the mountain in the distance)and a few houses, almost twilight, barely any sun left in the sky.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Canine Multidrug Sensitivity



Bungee -
MDR1 GENE: normal



A New DNA Test for Dogs
I'm going a bit out of the norm on this one to share about a new DNA test that could save a dog's life.


Our vet told us in mid-December this new test for multi-drug sensitivity in dogs had just been released and was available to Canadians. We were thrilled to hear this news.

We had Bungee promptly tested, her result was normal, registered with the HealthGene DNA Bank, and a Certificate of Registration issued.

What this is about is some dog breeds are more sensitive to certain drugs than other breeds. Drugs such as some types of anesthesia, Ivermectin (h
eartworm medication), to name only two from the list, are dangerous for affected dogs. Unfortunately, the consequences are often fatal.

A simple blood test can tell if your dog is at risk or not.
Our cost for the testing was about $75.00, (prices listed on HG website), and the results were returned to our vet in about a week.

Collie-type breeds and dogs with white in their coats have long been suspect, and so it has always been a bit of a gamble to give certain drugs to these dogs.

My own vet, told me when we were drawing blood on Bungee that they recently had one affected dog in hospital, without white in it's coat, in no w
ay typical to the "collie-type" breed. The dog did not survive and was tested post-mortem. It was found to have been carrying the mutated gene, with cause of death, drug sensitivity. It was unheard of in that breed, but the lesson is clear, genes do "get around".

Border Collies are not yet listed on their list of "official" breed
s which some find odd. However the test is new.

To learn more click on the name: HealthGene.
I will also keep H
ealthGene listed in my links section.
They offer many other DNA tests.


~In loving memory of the marvelous "Eddie" Hastings~ ~Forever in our hearts.~


I am not affiliated with H
ealthGene in any way. I share this information strictly on behalf of the dogs and the people who love & share their lives with them.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Last night's class

Obedience Class notes

Bungee did so well in last night's obedience class, she definitely redeemed herself from going zero to "ewww" in under 15 minutes time, earlier in the day. In fact, the instructor told us that with a little clean-up to her sits & downs she would be ready for a CD soon. I was a little shocked actually as I didn't think we'd worked nearly enough, but her heeling is nice and her skills are coming along. CD stands for Companion Dog and is "Level 1" of our obedience system. This means I better get moving on acquiring her CKC registration this week.

Her focus for me is really improving. I think her heeling could be a lot better but all things considered, she is really doing well. Poor Bungee, in heeling, most of the work to improve is mine. I do all sorts of things I shouldn't such as dropping my shoulder on her sit and poor footwork in the turns. There is so much emphasis on handler's carriage & form that I never learned properly. I'm afraid I've never cared for all of that much either, but I am now eager to get on with it correctly for her sake. I am also learning to find the best pace. If I am the right pace for her she holds a beautiful position.

Sits on leash, particularly at the start are a little hard for her as she would like to move a bit. Not as in move far, just as in fidget around. First it's the front feet, then it's the bum. Rarely both at the same time and she doesn't break her position completely either, but it is unacceptable. We have to do a lot of reinforcement for stillness & not shifting about & ruling out moving before a cue. Not a problem.

Sits during heeling are sometime a little crooked but her feet stay still when we come to a halt during heeling. If she is not straight in her sit then it's usually her rear that has swung out a little. So we have some homework for that one. During the long sit she holds her feet & body nicely still and maintains her position.

She is not too keen on "down", so just to say: "down" she is not quick to drop wherever she is, and some time she doesn't wish to go at all. However when we go over and do the long sit & long down she does both on the 1st cue every time and holds them nicely. I did not bother to tell the instructor how she can drive into a down in the crate game or table game like a flying jet coming in for a landing, as this is not agility! But this is something else for us to fix.

She does a very nice long down so far. Last night was really a challenge as the agility field is next to the obedience building, and there was a class of puppies on the field during our obedience class. The large barn doors to the field were wide open for the nice fresh evening air and Bungee and I wound up right in front of the giant open doors in the line-up! But she kept her position nicely. I was really proud of her. She got lots of cookies during that one!

I came home with all sorts of walking homework patters to practice for myself and the regular homework stuff for her, with emphasis on still feet in positions. I noticed she anticipated me a bit on the 1st recall, but the drive back to me is beautiful. I started out teaching her "Front" (obedience recall) from a chair and she is driving eagerly back, sitting nicely and close too. Stand for exam is going well.

Pirjo wrote to me about the Finnish Level 3 that her and Fun are working on and it really encouraged me to work hard too.

Lots to keep us busy this week plus agility skills, hiking & hill climbing too. Everything already needs mowing again as well so that will take up lots of time too. Spring growth amazes me every year. You'd think I'd get used to how often we must mow by now.






Monday, May 26, 2008

The Little Furmaid


Happy Birthday X 2!


Guinness & I share a birthday party, Bungee's definitely invited.

Guinness's favorite kind of fun is swimming & going to the lake, (us too), so a swim party & camp out at the lake it was. Only one minor detail to work out, Bungee needed to learn to swim to join in all the fun. As we quickly found out, no problemo!

Where are you going Bungee? Come on, the water is this way.


Hey the water is pretty awesome! Am I swimming yet?



How are you doing that Guinn? Where are you going?


Come on! I'll show you!



Listen, once you can swim really well, they'll throw you some bumpers too!



See Bungee, you bring them back like this.



Piece of cake! I can definitely do that!



You carry them like this, right?


WooHoo!! You got it now sister!


Guinness & mom have great birthdays & Bungee learns to swim!

11 months old & Bungee is retrieving bumpers like a pro. Best of all she turns out to be a terrific new swimming buddy for "brother" Guinness!
He really needed that!! Thank you Bungee!
& Happy Birthday all around!


The time it took to read these captions down to here is about the same amount of time it took for Bungee to get in the water & start swimming! Of course she had the help of a true master with our fabulous little Border Terrier, Guinness to show her how.

P.S. Wow! I almost forgot! The coolest tests of our dog's left & right skills have sometime come in the water, quite by chance when they are retrieving/looking for bumpers. This weekend's swim was no different! Quite unplanned, when Bungee's bumper was floating off in a strong current, I tried giving her a "left" command and boom - she cracked off a left turn, and "Oh! there it is!" saw it, and made a beeline straight for her bumper. Later on I had a chance to successfully use her right command when a poor throw & the currents had sent everyone in a snarl of wrong directions. Sometime with currents & winds it can take some doing to keep each dog swimming toward their own mark. Imagine our delight to see some recognition that Bungee is already understanding her directionals too, not once but several times. Just brilliant!

That's NOT Dirt!


Note to self...It is a blog about a dog.


They must like it too if they're taking a picture, right?



What kind of blog would it be if it didn't include the ups & the downs of life with a dog?

Well we weren't home from our camping holiday
more than 15 minutes when Bungee discovered "essence of unknown droppings" (doggie perfume don't you know?) to roll in on her first trip out back to inspect "her" backyard!

Now it's been my previous experience that a dog usually feels this need to seek out their own special perfume, the night before their first really big conformation show. But Bungee had an opportunity on an ordinary day and clearly wasn't going to pass it up for something she might not experience for a long time to come.

The actual order of events went something like: arrive home, park the rig, release the dogs for a run, open the house, send eager dogs through & out back, humans return to RV, unload stuff, get it all back up to the house and put away, and Oh Yes, "let the dogs in please, they're out back."

Bungee enters the back door, but wait, she's got something on her back, "what's that brown stuff?", as I notice a strange, vile, musky odor building in the room. Husband over in kitchen says: "What's that smell?" It takes a moment to fully realize that Bungee is covered in a truly awful, crusty, brown, mystery substance. <
Insert screeching, human EWWW noises here.> Back outside for a better look (only) exclaiming: "WHAT ON EARTH IS SHE COVERED IN???!!! ACK!!!" ...while at the same time knowing that I don't need to know any more. (possibly not entirely accurate quote of what was being said, but pretty sure you can't write such words on wonderful syndicated blogs like ours anyway).

That's definitely not dirt!


Bungee's very thorough - she didn't miss many spots!

...but I guarantee you she didn't anticipate what ha
ppened next :-))

...what is with you two & that camera?

Poor little Border Collie~

SO hard done by


Good thing it was 27 degrees! The hose reel was baking in the sun at that time of afternoon so the 1st half was warm...sorry Bungee! T
hat's not going anywhere near my bathtub!

Probably thinking: I hate you both right now.



Isn't this against a Dog's Bill of Rights?


When does it end with you people?


Are you happy now? That makes one of us!


Just goes to show you life with a dog is never boring and not always predicatable either. How'd you like that smooth blog transition from precious puppy moments to busy little Border Collies rolling in poo? :+>> Just typical around here out where we live too... Away for 4 days, the neighbors away too, and being out in the country & forest as we are here, who knows what was comfortable roaming through the backyard with it all so quiet. Perhaps it was a very bad elf!

Here I thought our 1st post back would be all about the two birthdays we celebrated, or all the fine homework we did, or the fish we caught, or Bungee learning to swim (!!), or anything but this! We did get lots of pictures so something to look forward to.

Time to get going for Bungee's Monday night obedience class. I'm sure Bungee is very disappointed to be attending class without wearing the fine cologne she had picked for herself instead of this stinky vanilla shampoo her mother selected.

Bungee's Family Album #2

Aino & all the puppies!

Left to right: Bungee, Ogin, Spice, One, Chili & Mia, with their proud mama, Aino.

A moment in time - captured successfully! How lucky are we to have such precious moments recorded in these lovely photographs? We are also very fortunate to have such a talented photogr
apher in the "family"!

I saw these pictures for the first time when they arrived this weekend, another great In-box surprise. (:-) Helena tells me the photograph above was so difficult to get, they finally had to wait for all the puppies to fall asleep to get the shot. Now that's dedication to achieving a truly memorable photo! Here's another below. Such precious pups, all sound asleep.


Spice, Ogin & Bungee sleeping
(left to right)


Once again our sincere appreciation to Helena Tiainen for these wonderful photos!


Sunday, May 25, 2008

Bungee's Family Album #1


Here are a few new family photos hot out of the In-
box from Finland!

Pictured are Bungee's: Brother "One", Sister "Spice", Parents Aino & Elvis & "Grandma" Jenny Damm


INTRODUCING:


Kvarkin's Dom Perignon, "One"

One, (Finnish pronunciation: "Oh-nay") is Bungee's brother. Isn't he handsome? He looks so much like Bungee to me. Some time I still need help to distinguish who's who in the puppy pictures. Here he is above, pausing for two really, nice head shots and below, enjoying a little spring dip.



A Family Portrait (left to right):
Mama "Aino", Jenny Damm, Brother "One" and Papa "Elvis"
~

At center: Jenny Damm, "proud Grandma" and owner, trainer & handler of Elvis.
Jenny Damm, Lotus Education Of Sweden

Bungee's Dam, at left: Decathlete's Fidus Achates OB4, BH, AG3, VEPE1, "Aino" (Aino -Finnish pronunciation: "Eye-noh")

Bungee's Sire, at right:
All Trade Flower Power Elvis GK Vallh Pr, S AgCh (Jumping), Dk AgCh, Dk AgCh(Jumping), Int AgCh, 2007 Swedish Agility Dog of the Year, "Elvis"



Kvarkin's La Belle Epoche, "Spice"

Spice (pronounced just like it sounds) is Bungee's sister. One of two tri-coloured puppies in the litter, you can now see where she gets both her name and her striking good looks, not to mention that ready intenseness!


Once again, many thanks to Helena Tiainen for the beautiful photographs!

P.S. My apologies for inconsistencies with "visited link" colors, one day I will understand what to do when this glitch occurs.





Friday, May 23, 2008

Bungee Baby!

On The Road Again!

Greetings from our traveling house! We're off again, this time for a long weekend of spring camping to a favorite lake. As we're currently crawling through metro Toronto's rush hour traffic with full signal, I thought I'd put the low speed traffic jam time to good use with the racing fast high speed connection we're getting at the moment.

I received some fantastic "new" family photos today from Bungee's Auntie Helena in Finland. Helena owns Bungee's brother One (new photos of him next!) As you can see she takes the most beautiful photographs! I wanted to attach several of them to my post called "Play". But our family expert on all matters of the net insists I should not go back and add things to a blog that way. OK, a new post then. Here we go...

Baby Bungee - 5 weeks old!

Awwww! How adorable is this? I've never seen this one before! What a sweet puppy, making some plans about sheep I see :-))


Bungee at 5 weeks - already retrieving!

Way to go Mia teaching that puppy all she needs to know early! :->> Mia assures me she put all of her hardest courses and the obedience rulebook under all the puppy's pillows every night and they are prepared to pass with top scores!

Bungee tugging with her new mom at 9 weeks old, while attending her 1st family reunion!

Lots going on behind the scenes this picture does not show. This is more than just "puppy tugging" but puppy tugging in the presence of about 50 other dogs, all busy training obedience and agility, in various areas all around her on the field. This picture was taken at the annual kennel reunion at Tuorla, Finland; a fabulous event the likes of which I have never attended before. Not only is all that activity going on all around us, but I'd known Bungee fewer than 3 days at that point in time. What a big heart this little puppy has had from the beginning!

The point of all that is playing with the pups starts young!

Back to our road trip! The traffic is moving again, the cement of the city is turning to grassy hills now, and we'll be where we're going in no time at all. Time to dig out the camera and get ready for some grilling too.

Special thanks to Helena Tiainen for the beautiful photgraphs!

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Bungee's Perfect!


Great News!

I'm thrilled to report our fitness efforts with Bungee have had great results! She went for a re-check with the physio Dr. today and she is doing really good! The Dr. said she was now "very strong" and was really pleased with the improvement. A thorough exam found her sound from head to toe. Then Bungee had a 20 minute session exercising in the underwater treadmill with another therapist and myself. I am delighted to report she took it all in stride! I thought I'd have at least one funny story of "wild child meets water" but she was great with the water and the whole treadmill experience, acting like she'd been doing it all her life. We are getting more exercises to keep the great work going, and I'm learning new stretches for her, but in the meanwhile, all the "get fit" work, hiking & steep climbing are really paying off!




Monday, May 19, 2008

PLAY!


How often do you "break it off" and play?


I cannot in good conscience talk about Bungee's homework list without talking about play and how much of it she actually does during our training sessions! In Bungee's mind, work is play and play is work and that's the way we like it.

And so, as I share our giant homework list of fun stuff with you, I must emphasize the importance of rewarding dogs frequently while they work, especially when shaping and introducing new things.

I also cannot stress how important it is to keep training sessions short, giving the dogs regular and frequent play breaks during, and rest breaks (for the brain & body!) in between.

Bungee, like all my dogs, begins and ends every training session with a game of tug. Even when using food, we break off work frequently for a tug game. At one time these breaks were often called "relationship building", and that they are. Now you will hear them called "stress breaks", "play breaks", "break it off and play time", whatever you call them just do them!

"What is reinforced is repeated" Bob Bailey

The reason we reward the dog is communication.

What is rewarded is reinforced, what is reinforced is repeated, simple as that!

If you want more of a specific behavior, if you like what they do, REWARD! That is how you tell your dog you like it - plain and simple.

Rewarding the dog is telling her "that was right!", "do that again", "do it just like that". It is your #1 tool of communication and in positive training, it is everything.

RR
During work I maintain a very high "rate of reinforcement" (RR), particularly with new skills. I am rewarding every piece of correct work I can isolate and reward.

As skills advance, the ratio changes where time between rewards may increase. But this happens little by little as skills grow. Working through an entire performance without a reward is a long time away! Even then she will be frequently rewarded before & after.

Meanwhile, there is a HUGE exchange of information between her and I that must be communicated before I can expect highly reliable behaviors. That exchange only happens by making good use of rewards.

Remember: Rewards are a hotline (communication) to our dogs!

Types of Rewards: Our foundation work is built on the dog learning to accept and enjoy any reward I might ever need to use. Bungee learned early on to retrieve, to tug, to let go of a tug, to accept food rewards, and to have self-control in the presence of food or toys on the ground until released to go and get them. (Self-control skills need regular maintenance just as "food vs. toy" issues may also need regular maintenance with some dogs)

Accepting any reward I choose to give is a fundamental building block of our training success. These early lessons precede other training and make all the difference.

Time
In shaping,
one minute is a long time! On the field, 2 or 3 minutes of steady work is a long time! To keep track of time I use a little, digital, kitchen alarm timer that keeps track of seconds and minutes.

In handling, the value of good rewarding continues to hold true. I am constantly stopping to reward for quick responses, smooth moves, correct moves, rewarding for position, again and again and again.

On the agility field I am breaking every skill down, isolating and rewarding behaviors constantly. This is how I give Bungee the information she needs and deserves. We all need to know when we are correct, dogs too!


This type of teaching creates fabulous results and dynamic behaviors. By breaking things down and generous use of rewards, you can build terrific performances.

Or you can be stingy, withhold rewards, not wanting to take the time or trouble, and wonder why you have slow, unmotivated dogs with mediocre behaviors, easily distracted while they work, or dogs with high drive and plenty of speed, but a very high error rate and lots of confusion as to whether they are right or wrong. At an extreme end you can even see dogs spinning frantically, barking at their handlers, trying to bite at them as they run their moves and more - all signs of frustration. These dogs are begging "please tell me what you want me to do!" Just pleading to know, "when am I right?!!!" All problems that don't need to exist, if the owners just understood the power of communication from good rewards.

In conclusion
"One must take the time to constantly reinforce - reward, reward, reward." Susan Garrett ~ Definitely one of the most important lessons I have ever learned.

Rewarding often, isolating things you like,
breaking work down into small quick sessions, making smooth transitions between rest & training, these are the real secrets to achieving great success in purely positive training.

When you are training, PLEASE remember to play often with your dogs too!

Homework List - Mid-May


Here's Bungee, just looking good, like everyday!








Here's her homewo
rk list,
(...or why we don't get to our blog every day! :-))


Fitness

Hill climbing - walking not running on long, steep hills, alternating days, 40-45 min.
"Dance" - standing up on rear legs, moving forward & back, turning.
Stair climbin
g, again, walk not run - we get lots of this in a 3 story house.
Several of the tricks & turning moves add to the rear-end build-up list.

To bring you up-to-date, when we returned home from 3 months in our RV, Bungee was really flat in the quads. Opportunities for conditioning had we been home over the winter would not have been much better with the snow & ice winter brought. After veterinary consult with Dr. Leslie Woodcock, we came home with a plan to start putting some proper muscle on her for safety in agility. Leslie's clinic has a fabulous physio pool & underwater treadmill but as it is really far and our training schedule was not set at last visit, I opted first to see how well I could do with her improvements from home.

We are going for a re-check, a turn in the underwater treadmill for strengthening and a swim in the pool Wed. evening. As Bungee has not yet learned to swim or been "in water" other than a bath, we should have lots to tell you about by Thursday!


Jump Grids
About once a month I set up puppy-beginner jump grids for Bungee that I've documented and learned at Susan Salo seminars.

When she was younger she would work grids with me one morning a month. Now I generally school her with jumping for 2-3 consecutive days, with about 15-20 min. of grid work spread over 2 or 3 sessions in a morning or afternoon. Then we take a break for 4 - 6 weeks with little to no jumping. It has been 2 weeks since her May grid work. This week we did do some work over a single jump on a low height, while working some handling skills.

Bungee's session this month included these grids:
Set-Point Jump with "Spider"
Even Grid
Progressive Grid
One-Stride Grid
Bend Work

There is one other grid for diagonals we may work on once at about the 3-week point, using jump bumps only. We will do only 2 or 3 two-minute sessions one morning, just to work evenly on different leads (if she is right-footed or left-footed working both helps her become equally comfortable on both leads). Once she is older these are the kind of things I will leave set up for a week at a time, and hit them for about 1 minute every day in warm-ups, start-line practices, etc.

Balance

Four Paws In A Bowl - I use a soft, flexible silicone rubber, water bowl from "Planet Dog". Bungee will stand in any small thing but this is really comfortable for her and rolls up to travel.

Bunge
e started balance work so early, she can balance on just about anything including:
Dyna Discs of all sizes, two small Dyna Discs stacked, Dyna Discs of various inflation levels increase or decrease the challenge to balance, round balance boards, big & little Buja balls, giant peanut ball, big Balance Ball, a step stool, wobble board, a log, a narrow stump, a big pillow, whatever "opportunity" we have around.

I shaped Bungee to get on a single Dyna Disc and on a wobble board about 12 weeks of age, before advancing to other things.

For safety & fairness I help stabilize anything that will roll!

Rear-End Awareness
Perch work - (Bungee's perch work is amazing!)
Back-up - looking for distance with head down
Lifting right rear leg - up & down 10 times
Lifting left rear leg - up & down 10 times
Back-up 3 or 4 stairs to our backyard deck or front porch
Back-up into crate
Back-up over a low board
Back-up around a bend, two bends
Ladder Work - Walking through ladder on ground, carefully using all 4 feet.
New: Back-up thr
ough Ladder on ground, we're at 6 rungs at present.

Note: Backing up through a ladder is Stage TWO of this exercise. STAGE ONE Ladder work is walking through forward, carefully with all 4 feet.


If your dog can back-up on cue, and walks carefully through a ladder using all four feet comfortably, and you decide to try this, here is a tip: start at the last rung and back over one rung only, then two, then three, etc., as the dog can handle it.

Tricks

Tricks are too much fun some time! (we have serious homework to do too you know!) But, they all serve a good purpose, even if it's just for fun, the list is always growing.

Sit Pretty (front paws up), strengthens back, hips & thighs
Dance - (stand on 2 back legs, Dr.'s orders)
Stretch
Take a Bow (also good stretch)
Sit & Wave Right Paw
Sit & Wave Left Paw
Cross Your Paws
Catch It! (catch a ball - pure fun)
Back Up and do any of the above
Doggie Yoga
Say Your Prayers
Find the Keys
Clean up your dishes (bring me your bowl!)
Watch Me - I've always taught this and like having a "watch" command on cue with all my dogs, not really a trick but didn't know where else to put it

Tricks we're avoiding
Any moves that send Bungee to pass behind me
Any moves that require tapping or pushing things with paws such as turning on those battery operated lights you press on-press off (to eliminate ANY confusion in contact position for nose touches and/or risk of "busy feet" at contact position).

Games
Crate Games* (see end of page for more info)
Sit-Tug-Sit ***
1, 2, 3 Go*** a start-line game
The Bang Game*** a teeter game - Kvarkin kids Mia knows this one!
The Elevator Game another teeter game (I think this one has been around forever, I remember breeders doing this with pups back in the 80's, but the name is new & pretty cute)
Two-Table Game*** (also could be a spin-off of Crate Games & 2 crate game)
Two-Toy Game*** teaches handling & understanding motion
Hide & Seek - just like you played as kids only with your dog, this one's our own game, it's great for recalls, laughing when your dog finds you (or laughing silently a tiny bit when they can't!) Great for generally keeping it light.

Agility

Circle work - handling
Contacts - nose touches off travel plank & stairs
Wrap it tight - bend work over one low jump
Side & Close (starting to be a bit out-dated with handling today)
Lining up (hands-free!) in a sit to my right or left (start line)
Front-crosses on the flat
Rear crosses on the flat
Sit stay
Chase Recalls
Release - always & forever...proofing the release
3 Directionals:
1. Left - awesome improvement!
2. Right - awesome improvement!
3. Go - drive ahead
Plank work
Introducing various pieces such as the tire - 6" setting, chute, table
One Jump work** - very limited work at this stage due to Bungee's age/growth, using just a jump bump or a 6" (13 cm.) bar, mainly to put value in jumping
**see One Jump work at bottom for more info

Weave Poles - not yet, but soon! We'll put this one on You Tube from day one. Very excited & anxious but we'll be good & wait until growth plates are closed.)

Obedience
Recalls - for speed & drive
Front - for position
Sit
Stand
Down
Long Sit
Long Down
Heel
Finish (we will do a swing finish so as not to conflict with agility handling)
Attention - and focus (!! our hardest lesson !! :-) Busy little Border Collie, so easily distracted by other dogs in obedience! ...not enough action as agility I suppose!


Is That All?
I have probably forgotten things here & there. Training time is probably only about 15 minutes a day total, usually spread between several small sessions throughout the day.

The important stuff (handing/contacts/strengthening/basic skills) we get to a couple of times a week, other stuff we're lucky to see once every week. I tried to shape one new trick every week for a long time. But now "real" homework has taken over. If you are like me you find that your dog reaches an age somewhere about 10 months to a year, where it seems agility homework increases exponentially. From then on it seems a challenge to keep everything topped up. But, we do it for fun and it is, I'm sure the variety keeps it interesting for both of us.


*Crate Game - You've got to learn this game! No matter what sport you do with your dog, this is perhaps the best, definitely most useful, most all-around beneficial game you will EVER play with your dog! I learned it 1st with my Border Terrier, creating big improvement in speed and drive, both in need of some repair after my earlier training mistakes. I taught it next to my very high-drive field Golden with brilliant results that stayed with her for life, allowing her to have the finest impulse control and start lines as any ever seen. Bungee is now my 3rd dog to learn this game and really enjoys it. The benefit she will know in her competitive career is enormous. Check it out - It is great stuff!


**One Jump
work (a workshop and/or DVD) includes 17 agility handling exercises you can teach your dog using just one jump - brilliant stuff! Click on the name for a link. My "red dog" Ketch, field Golden extraordinaire, can be seen in this video for a brief moment, as we were there for the filming on one of the many times we've been to this seminar. I can't recall if I got in the shot too or not, but Ketchy OF COURSE makes it all worthwhile! :~))

***P.S. To give credit where credit is due, at least 95% of the rear-end and body awareness training, agility games, lots of other stuff mentioned here, plus all of the shaping we do, we learned from Susan Garrett or someone she brought to Say Yes, including Bob Bailey and his band of traveling chickens.

As you can see, we have enough homework to keep us busy about a year if we never took another class anywhere! But we continue to take classes, enjoying them thoroughly and in fact, excelling in them. I find that teaching these things, especially the 1st year of a dog's life before they can really do anything with equipment, keeps my dogs highly motivated, confident, happy, and helps brings me to the start line with a ready dog.