Saturday, June 28, 2008

Bungee!


Some photo "ops" are just too good to pass up!




Here are a few shots of our beautiful Kvarkin's Princesse, Bungee, just relaxing & soaking up some late-afternoon summer sun.

Enjoy!




This was the first time either of us had discovered Bungee perched on this picnic table "just relaxing". If there's anything going on, she's usually under it ready to spring into action!



Not just a beauty queen, Bungee is the full package: brains, talent, drive, speed, sweet as can be and a Heart of Gold!



Happy Training! and remember: It's About Love :-))

Friday, June 27, 2008

Do It Anyway

Dedicated to our big-hearted friends in the sport...
A very special poem called:

"Do It Anyway"

People are often unreasonable, illogical,
and self-centered;
Forgive them anyway.

If you are kind, people may accuse you
of selfish, ulterior motives;
Be kind anyway.

If you are successful, you will win some
false friends and some true enemies;
Succeed anyway.

If you are honest and frank,
people may cheat you;
Be honest and frank anyway.

What you spend years building, someone
could destroy overnight;
Build anyway.

If you find serenity and happiness,
they may be jealous;
Be happy anyway.

The good you do today,
People will often forget tomorrow;
Do good anyway.

Give the world the best you have,
and it may never be enough;
Give the world the best you’ve got anyway.

You see, in the final analysis,
it is between you and God;
It was never between you and them anyway.

This poem is engraved on the wall of the Home for Children in Calcutta.
It is thought to have been written there by Mother Theresa.

There is now some opinion that it was written by Keith Kent as the "Paradoxical Commandments". That poem is similar to this one but there are many differences.

as ever, Happy Training & remember...It's About Love!

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Focus Forward vs. Attention


No Compromises Necessary
Bungee has really caught on to the FF work in Agility nicely. She has done this in spite of a great deal of attention work of late in the obedience setting. So I'm really pleased.

I'm also thrilled the way she has caught on to her job in agility, in the continuum of transition from flat work to equipment. Once it clicked in her mind what to do, it's as if there was never any concern to begin with.

No Fear
I'm happy to move forward with both agility & obedience in confidence. Through a clear and solid foundation, allowing 1st for good understanding of whatever it is we are teaching, Bungee will have no trouble distinguishing which behavior is needed at which time.

The Joy of Training
I'm also so happy I chose to learn to train purely positively a long time ago. I never went into it to become a zealot, but only for my own professional growth. I knew it could be done, I wanted to learn how too.

I can't imagine what the training experience would be like for myself or my dog, if my only joy was the end-picture of the competition result. For me, the joy is very much in the process, and seeing what we have learned come alive when it's happening in the ring, when it counts :-)), and rarely the competitive result (which is almost always great!).

But the pay-off now, is that unlike so many other dogs we see that are immersed in obedience with correction-based methods at Bungee's young age, and then have trouble finding the mental freedom they need to do agility well (fast & fun as our friend Lynda says!). I can say with full confidence, this will not be an issue for Bungee!

I remain in such gratitude to the ability of training with purely positive methods. Bungee will not be stifled, fearful, or inhibited about learning or running in agility, nor suffer any ill-effects in learning her obedience skills either, on the contrary she is going through the learning stages of both with the joy we all want our dogs to know.

Happy Training! Hug your dogs!
...and remember: It's About Love!

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Monday Night Obedience Class

What a difference a little homework makes!
We have good news to report on Bungee's Mon. night obedience class. My personal goal for the night was attention first, and sticking to my plan of breaking things down for better quality work second. Success on both counts!

As has been the case, distractions abounded with the Gamble workshops still taking place outside the doors, barn doors open, the other dogs in our class, plus heavy rain and a bit of hail on the building's metal roof on & off all night.

Attention
One thing I did when she first "lost me" for the excitement she could see outside, was simply leave her. Some people might consider it wrong, others right, but whatever, it worked and I didn't resort to jerking her off her feet with a choke chain.

My attitude was if you don't want to pay attention to me I'm not paying attention to you. If I started out to get into heel position and she locked her gaze to the agility outside instead, I simply stepped quietly away behind her, dropped the leash silently and slipped away. I did this twice, once leaving the building and going to a window where I could see her looking for me, the other time going to a boring corner where nothing was happening of any interest to her, other than me waiting there, (but it had a mirror where I could watch her). Both times she held her position of sit while craning her neck all around, looking for me and not taking her eyes off me or the direction she last saw me leaving.

Each time I returned to her quietly & calmly picked up the leash, started over, with a much better result. At the same time, when we were back to work, and she gave me attention she got rewarded, fast, again and again. That recognition (reward) was really good information from me to her that this was just what I wanted her to do. For the next half-hour she was keeping at least one eye on me at all times and usually both. Though she had many breaks in that time, I never once lost her interest again when it was our turn to work.

That tactic may not have worked for another dog but it worked for her. I took a gamble that between our good relationship and the fact of her being a Border Collie, it is more important for to her to know where I am than to know where anyone else is, and my actions forced the point.

The Power Of Jealousy
At one point about 45 min. later in the class she got a little gawky again out that barn door to the agility class. The class had gone on a little long, and bless her heart, she really would prefer to be out there. I am happy to see that she loves it so. But that moment I lost her to the action outside again, I walked her quietly off the floor without hesitation, crated her in a strange crate (one of the instructors) facing away. I then went directly over to an instructor's dog I knew in another crate, released that dog (with permission) and played with it, out of sight to Bungee but well within earshot. She protested with a little whine, I waited until she was quiet. Returned to her & released her. Played with her a few moments and went back to work. After that I kept her attention completely.

Once we had attention, everything else went smooth as silk.

What I Didn't Do
At no time did I ever say her name to ask her to pay attention to me, nor did she receive any punishment, jerks, sighs, snide remarks or hint of frustration from me. She either did pay attention or she didn't and when she didn't the consequence was lose/lose to her, you don't get to keep on working, you don't get to be with me.

I simply created a desire within her to keep a closer eye on me and what we were doing together, which allowed a win/win, especially when I had upped the ante with a much higher RR for the thing I wanted most - attention!

Rewards
Fried chicken gizzards & hearts for bite-sized food treats (that I cooked & cut at home before class). A small Planet Dog "Old Soul" ball carried in a side pocket. A cow milker toy on a rope, carried out of sight in the back of my waist band, and a loop tug that I can carry over my shoulder and hangs almost to perfect heel position under my arm for nice placement of reward for heeling. I mostly used the loop tug throughout the whole class but mixed it up with a surprise a time or two. Each of these toys was chosen because they are somewhat thin and low profile, easy to carry in pockets and best suit us for heeling rewards.

Loading Value In Her Name
At home on Sunday & Monday, I also decided to "load" her name "Bungee" and the word "ready" by simply pairing them with a reward many times in a row. This really paid off as even when the instructor would say: "Are you ready?" smart little Miss Bungee would look at me on the word "ready" from him! So, when I said "ready," I really had super results!

For me this goes back to quite a long time ago when we had some family staying with us that were constantly saying Guinness's name around the house. They were overusing his name for everything. After they left I spent the next week putting value back into his name. What a difference it made!

I did this by doing 2 sessions a day of simply saying his name, click/treat, (C/T), saying it again, C/T, etc., and getting in about 30 repetitions each time. Easy exercise for very big pay-off.

The benefit then with Guinness was visible and immediate in improved responsiveness, especially when we were working. As expected, the benefit to Bungee was equally beneficial. In this case, I don't believe her name was "over-used" by either of us, but I was not getting the response for saying it I like to see.

However it happens, a dog's name can lose some value in the casual environment once in a while. I personally really dislike having to call a dog twice, or say their name more than once to get them to turn their head in my direction, much less come to me.

I don't know what the big training brains think of this concept, but I do know that it works really well in a short time to re-establish that nice, cracking responsiveness we all want from our dogs, especially in training, and it worked with Bungee last night!

One a separate note, now when family comes we know better. If you say our dog's names you need to have a cookie in your hand to give them.

Getting into Heel position
I have not yet put "heel" on cue. But I have now put "Ready" on cue. She has also stopped hopping an inch forward in anticipation on her sit at heel when I say "ready", or even when I don't!

Heeling needs a little fine tuning, as expected. At the present she tends to forge a bit creating a wide rear end. She's also moving in very close to me and will bump my left thigh with her head in this position. Placement of reward does improve this but circling large circles to inside left really puts her in the perfect spot and beautifully straight if I move into a straight line immediately after that.

The "Magic" Mirror
Last night I think Bungee discovered mirrors for the first time. There are full-length mirrors on several walls of the school. So U-turns presented some new challenges once she figured out they hold big reflections to look into! I actually saw her in the mirror as we were approaching at the moment I think she realized there is a lot to see in there! Her eyes got wide and she had this look on her face like: "oh my gosh, there's another place!". You should have seen her head go back and forth from the dogs on the floor to the mirror, as we rounded that corner the 1st time she spotted it! I wish I would have had a camera for those high speed double & triple-takes!

The next few times after that she approached that mirror eagerly and smiling, (and in total disregard of heel position!) just trotting around wide as could be, head going this way & that trying to put it all together, kind of like a kid seeing a carousel of horses at an amusement park for the first time - next to a big life-size mirror! But I just let her work it out and continued to be consistent with my method, rewarding her when she was correct. I also didn't avoid the mirror, instead walking by it more frequently as I was able.

Bungee being the fabulous & smart girl she is, she quickly accepted this strange mirror business and was right back in step with me like a pro.

Front
Recalls to "Front" were great! Backing up and breaking it down was the key to success, as always! I was not a flyball box on the 1st recall attempt!! Each practice got her in nicer and nicer and always straight and we were able to keep our criteria moving away about 10 feet. :-))

Everything else is really nice, just continuing on building up from where we backed up to.

Training Plan for Class
I did stick to my plan, made notes, if I broke something down and backed up at home I backed up there. I started at that same point in class that WE were working on at home. This is a little bit different than what the other students are doing, but we are shaping, they are not. This has always worked for me and last night was no different. I would much rather have a perfect 1/4 or 1/2 of an exercise than a sloppy whole exercise, because I know the whole exercise will come. The instructor knows this about me too and couldn't be more helpful or supportive.


I also used my clicker in class this week. What an improvement that made too! Dogs just need a certain amount of communication until they get it right. In our case we benefited from the extra "Uumph" the clicker adds, I suppose like boosting a cell signal if you will.

The DH went along with us and gave me all his pointers on the way home, as well as much whispered, face-twisting & contorted motions of criticism during class! You should see the sign language he's invented for my in-class heeling improvement :-0`!! Between the mirrors and his antics from the chairs, we could have made quite a comical video!

Hug your dogs & Happy Training!
...and remember It's About Love!






Monday, June 23, 2008

Reunion Mistake

I interrupt this blog to advise each of my email contacts to please ignore any email from reunion.com supposedly on my behalf.

In fact, I would encourage anyone not interested in this "social network" to run like the plague from that site!

This weekend I was in the process of trying to find a long, lost relative. I found a supposed link to information about that person on reunion.com. I had to "register" to see what information was there, which was free, but I was soon caught up in a a tricky question, obviously answered incorrectly since the site immediately started to download the contents of my entire address book! ACKK!!!!!!

I knew in a moment what had happened and tried to stop it, but it was too late.

As it turned out, I did finally locate the the "long, lost relative" (not through any help of reunion.com) and what do you know if they didn't wind up being listed on reunion.com the exact same way that I did - by an unwitting mistake.

Pretty shabby way to do business in my book, but some people like social networks and think it's just great. I'm not one of them.

Many apologies for any inconveniences or questions as to the legitimacy of this event and the emails to my contacts this site has generated. Kindly disregard.
Thank you.

Monday, Monday

Bungee through the iPhone lens.


The weekend flew by and another week has already rolled around. We continue to spend a good part of every day dodging severe thunderstorms and complete deluges of rain. All still great for our field, still not complaining & still no sign of the weather pattern changing any day soon.

I spent a lot of my training time this weekend working on obedience. Evenings I spent catching up with some dog-related reading and working through a small stack of borrowed books. It's nice to see what some of the latest titles are about, and to catch up on older ones that escaped you when they were new.

While every piece of information may not be useful, or even agreed with, it is delightful when an idea or solution sparks in your mind, even if it is about something other than the one you are reading about at the moment. That's most often what happens to me.

Meanwhile, with Bungee's obedience training I am backing up a bit on a few exercises. I am re-examining which exercises are still being shaped and which are rightfully on cue. Also, what I'm expecting of Bungee in class, which typical in our area, obedience is not a clicker-based class. Nevertheless I gave my word I would not put Bungee into lure-based training situations, and I continue to work to my own standards on that point, with the full cooperation of the instructor.

For those behaviors on cue I am reminding myself to insist on rewarding only excellent behaviors. This is called Differential Reinforcement of Excellent Behavior's, DRE's.

After beginning actual record-keeping again (tracking # of rewarded & unrewarded responses and rate of success), I also increased my RR (rate of reinforcement) by a lot. It was quite obvious I was not rewarding enough as soon as I started tracking on paper. In fact, we are just about back to hand-feeding one full meal a day so that we can work our obedience. The improved results in our sessions are like night & day.

Lastly I'm going to try some new little tips regarding focus & attention in class, via a couple of exercises Dr. Deb Jones & Angelica Steinker write about. One thing about such tips is you know right away if they work or not. My interpretation of them is sort of an "It's Yer Choice" situation where I'm the hot item, at least that's how I'm going to use them.


Obedience
Distractions - looking for simple basics in the presence of distractions, does she look to me when I say her name, does she change her gaze to me and come immediately when I ask? Very meaningful rewards when the answer is "yes". If the answer is "no", she does not respond to me, she does not turn her head to me and come instantly when called, we relocate and try again. Keep in mind - she always comes, but she may take what I call her sweet time in doing so, depending on the distraction. At
one point last week I was changing her nickname from "Sweet" to "Sweet-Time"! Back to those DRE's, with the one catch being the recall is not optional.

Stand - good improvement here at home and also while out & about this weekend on routine errands. Bungee is offering a nice kick-back stand and nicely planting those front feet and cooperating about doing so in the spot I've put her in. She is almost always doing so with a toy on the ground that given her own devices she would probably choose to stalk. However, she is managing to work through all of that nicely, as she needs to. Success comes back to motivation - what's in it for her? I've apparently succeeded in making it more worthwhile for her.

Sit & Down - working for dynamic behaviors in both.

Sit, Down, Stand - also working for changes of position.

Heeling - DRE's all the way, rewarding much earlier for position, w/ attention ahead or on me and will continue to keep this a very short exercise for a high RR for a while. Her heeling went from excellent to easily distracted and I know it was due to "lumping" and low RR. Right now I'm carrying 2 and sometime 3 toys, (one being a small soft ball) along with food, so able to really up the ante on reward surprises.

Making regular batches of Salmon Brownies for heeling and contacts as they are the only food I can give her that she can get, process in her mouth, (she is a very careful eater), swallow, and almost immediately take a toy without the problem of spitting out or dropping food out of her mouth.

Front - very nice work here from 3' - 6', but it tends to fall apart from 20', where I get her bouncing a foot off me on occasion. So we will just incrementally add distance as we can maintain the behavior we want and keep it varied.

With all - I'm making more effort to ask for the exercises where ever I am. As an example, I have never thought twice about weighing my dogs in the vet's waiting room and asking for a nose touch before they leave the scale, when we're in the heat of training contacts. Or likewise on the curb next to the car when the DH is in a store on an errand. Now I'm making more effort to ask for obedience exercises where ever we are. We'll call it "obedience immersion" :-))

Agility
All the basics continue. Have taken a week off from any jumping since last week's class due to a combination of things, weather, time, other interests to work on.

Contacts - DRE's all the way here too. I had her getting up on her travel plank in 2o2o position for nose touches (NT), or I had her get on her travel plank (or stairs) and on "ok" going into 2o2o position for NT's. Now I'm asking her to get on to her travel plank and go directly into 2o2oNT. We've done a lot more work on the indoor travel plank than the outdoor stairs due to the weather.

Teeter - anxious to put some of the good stuff from "Sizzling See-Saws" back to work. So came home and ordered a 2nd table - finally, should be ready to pick-up Thursday. Going on my 3rd dog that has needed a 2nd table so finally broke down and bought one. Bungee really didn't like my make-shift version of a square board on a recycled steel frame from an old set of army surplus drawers. We'll ought to have some great photo ops when we get back to work on it.

Miscellaneous
I discovered that Bungee cannot sit, take and hold her food bowl for me outside of her crate. She has no problem going into a sit in her crate, picking up her bowl and waiting for me to take it. She also has no problem carrying it to me all over the house. But asking her to stop & sit with it in her mouth, after she's carried it to me across a room, was not in her skill set. That's when I learned even just asking her to sit, giving the bowl to her, (which she will take in her mouth) and then hold it for me was also not in her skill set. Of course, this is on the top of the "must learn" tricks list at the moment!

So, to Pirjo & Fun, it is going to be a little while longer until I can snap that picture and show Bungee & Fun, side-by-side, holding their bowls like twins!
But we're working on it!!!

Happy training,
Hug your dogs & remember, It's About Love!
















Friday, June 20, 2008

Summer Sizzle

Hey Bungee, I hear there's a running frame seminar coming to town, let's go see what all the buzz is about!

Bungee was all for it, so off we went. Yesterday Bungee helped me audit the Skills Day of a 5-day seminar that's become an annual event here called: "Summer Sizzle". (click on the link to read more)

There were 6 different skills workshops yesterday and as an auditor I was welcome to float around and visit each, but, I only watched 2.

Rachel Sanders was teaching her running frame method in the morning, and that was the main reason I went. The workshop was was interesting and content-rich.
I believe I got a very nice overview of training the whole method. It was nice to see an honest presentation that this is very much the ground floor of the system, and they are learning as they go in developing the method. Rachel's was, like all of the workshops, an extremely pleasant and supportive learning environment. Always a bonus!

The key piece of equipment for training this method is a PVC box shown here on the ground:



Same PVC box shown here on the frame as the training advances:

Above you will notice a little black loop on the PVC box, that is a cable tie to use in the corner to anchor it down to the frame, by tying behind the frame with a cord.

However there is quite a lot of work and staging that goes on before the box goes on the frame, and if your dog has already learned stopped contacts, then the box goes on the frame in a different order and onto the frame in stages, literally a different way, step-by-step, than if the dog has never done a 2o2o or whatever else it was taught.

Here's a blog I spotted (but have not yet read) on the seminar host's website links about Rachel's running frame method http://www.finchester.org/dogs/dog_diary/2008/01/rachels-running-frame.html

Bungee spent much of her time hanging out in her tent, shown below:

Picture above taken on another (sunny) day as there was no sunshine or "sizzle" to be had yesterday - it was cloudy and rainy and all we could do to stay warm! This tent was a birthday present to me & Guinness, and I was delighted to see how warm it stayed inside with the windows down. I guess it's the silver coating that reflects the dog's heat or the sun as it also stays nice & cool in moderate sunshine with the windows up.

We spent the afternoon with Jen Pinder auditing "Sizzling See-Saw's." It was just right for us and lots more of what we're doing right now, and the only workshop next to a terrific big tent to find a dry spot to crate Bungee under! :-))

Now you have to know how really fun any workshop called "Sizzling See Saws" is going to be with dogs literally sliding in speed over those teeters! We had plenty of that. That's what Yanks of a southern influence (like my dad) sometime call "Rip snortin' good fun"! Yep, some really "slippery teeters" were to be had there! (the only kind we like :-)) and I don't mean they were greased~but you might think so if you didn't know any better!)

Jen did a really nice job presenting this topic. Every really good instructor brings an educated perspective to their presentation to make it worthwhile and Jen was terrific. Any instructor worth their salt, also has a great eye for seeing what the dogs are doing, and it seemed Jen was very helpful to dogs working through some teeter problems too. So again, time well spent.

Most of the see-saw work I remember as right out of my the old SY play book at my 1st Skills Camp. So kudos also to Susan who should be very proud of the tremendous influence she has had on this sport!


Back to Bungee, she was welcome to stay with me at my chair or wherever throughout the day, so that was nice for her and I too. We did lots of that! I was hoping to do some work with her on the lunch break but lucky for the seminar, that's when the sky opened up and really started to pour, so our work was cut a little short. She waited in the warm car while I went inside for lunch.

It was really fun to see so many familiar & friendly faces there. I think almost the entire alumni of my 1st foundation class with Guinness at SY, some 5+ years ago was there. Many folks I hadn't seen in a full year, and few of that crowd had met Bungee. As well, they had new dogs I'd never met, so it was fun catching up and meeting the many new pups. All in all, a great way to spend a day.

The seminar was held at Campaign Dog Academy. Another really nice training center in our area.

Oh - almost forgot, running frame - all very interesting, as are other methods too, but right now we're still training 2o2ow/nt. :-)) Meanwhile, we'll continue fact finding on other methods with an open mind and watching them progress.

A closing thought about seminars, if you can even come home from a day at a seminar with one, new, helpful piece of information, much less several things or even just being reminded about good training habits, then I myself consider it time & in this case $75.00 well spent.

Gem for the day from Rachel Sanders (on shaping):
"I'll never forget one of my best lessons, the note Bob Bailey wrote in my training book: 'Good behaviors come to she who waits'." For me, that might be that one gem of information that I will long remember after this seminar is a faded memory.

As Bob & Marion Bailey always reminded: "BELIEVE in yourselves!"

Happy Training,
and remember...It's About Love! (what is? IT ALL IS !!! :-))

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Homework Update - June 18

Last week's highlight was that we actually did some homework, despite family matters that came up and continue to need attention. What training time I did spend each day was on the agility field, which Bungee & Guinness were delighted about.

Obedience
We had a pretty dismal performance in class Monday night, which quite honestly we deserved, after doing nearly no obedience practice last week. Our poor teacher though! It's pretty bad when you feel sorry for them because you're doing so poorly. Even the things I thought we had down pretty good were poor, if they existed at all. Worse, as far as Bungee was concerned I was no competition for the intense attention she preferred to lavish on the raucous goings-on outside the barn door, with the Gamble workshop taking place on the adjacent agility field.


"Irritation is Motivation" ~ Susan Garrett
So irritated by the results of my own slacking, (despite very legitimate reasons), I headed into this week much more motivated to add time each day for Bungee's obedience practice. But, just because we were doing it doesn't mean it was going smoothly. It still started off kind of tough to get her doing things my way. At least once a day, something would come up in our training where she was absolutely set on doing a thing a certain way and only a certain way, and that way was not what I wanted. I don't really know why things were going awry. But part of it did seem that her herding brain cells had re-energized into a thinking pattern directly opposed to what I wanted her to do.

For instance, one day, she absolutely could not, would not stand in my basement training area, in the place I asked her to stand, with this one toy 10' away on the floor that she was adamant to stare at (herd?). We had worked through her contacts with the toy on the floor no problem, but she had gotten lots of rewards with it and releases to it. When I put her in her crate, put away the contact equipment, and brought her back out for a stand - no way Jose! "Only if I can stand to face THAT toy!" She also did this same sort of thing in class Monday night on several occasions, once being when I asked her to stand in one direction and she only wanted to face the open door and watch the agility class.

Like I said, I would only be guessing as to try to understand why, and the answer still wouldn't provide a solution, so quite the waste of my own brain cells. But I do know from previous experience and consults with Susan Garrett on the subject of distractions, that an interest in distractions is a lack of a motivation (for what you are doing). So that became my big question, how can I motivate Bungee to be as interested in what I want her to do?

"Think, Plan, Do" ~ Bob Bailey
Clearly I had to do something different. To find what that was I went back to the "Bailey Basics" as I call them, (Think, Plan, Do) where you get out pad & pencil, look at what we had done, what rewards we had used, what we got, what we wanted, what we didn't want, what we would reward, what rewards we would use instead, and think through a new plan, then break it down, putting it on paper step-by-step.

With that new plan, a fresh day, and this time clicker in hand, something I have put away from regular agility and obedience training for awhile, I went back out and had an absolutely brilliant obedience session with Bungee. Was it perfect? No. Was she in the same game as me and working in complete synchronization? You bet! Best of all, I did not encounter one moment of anything I would remotely label as "stuck", doing something the wrong way. But I did enjoy seeing one brilliant moment after another. When we hit challenges, we were able to break it down even further and then start building back up on successes.

I don't know about you, but nothing re-energizes my own spirit like having my dog totally on board and loving what we're doing.

I'm going to be using the clicker quite a bit more in our obedience training for awhile. I have more experience with it than many I know, and 6 years of the best clicker-training experience available in Ontario from our many past enrollments at Say Yes. I know I'm not as good with it as Susan (short of Bob himself who is?), but I do know how to use a clicker correctly and have achieved brilliant results with it again and again, so why shouldn't Bungee benefit from this tool too?

Agility
Bungee is taking to agility like a duck to water and the work is going great! I had a little learning curve myself earlier in the month as we made the transition from just flat work and circle work to working the same skills on equipment (jumps).

I have never done the quality of circle work with another dog that I have done with Bungee. With that I also had no experience to go on as to what impact the circle work would have on the early jump work. Specifically, in circle work, Bungee looks to me, looks to her RZ (reinforcement zone) and that is all part of the dog "driving the RZ". But, when I tried to put her in a small speed circle, it was so much like the circle work, that she did what she always does when we run in circle work, she looked to me as soon as I started to run with her, not to mention I was holding a toy too. Guess what happened to the bars? They don't stay up very well when dogs are not looking where they're going!

Easily worried by massive failure I must admit I was quite concerned as we had some rough spots to iron out the 1st few days of transitioning to jumps. But now I know. In the future I will know that there is a little transition the dog has to make from jumps to circle work, and better balancing of the FF (focus forward) work would alleviate most of that struggle we encountered.


So we left the speed circle and went back to full attention on our FF work this past week. It didn't take long at all, (2 days - 3 days) for Bungee to start understanding her new job. With only about a week's work, she is moving correctly through all her little sequences of pinwheels, 180's, 270's, two pinwheels with FC's in between, straight lines, and so forth. I had already witnessed her understanding of the box work, and I still marvel, but I have not gone back to the box since we put our attention on FF work. We finished off the weekend with her able to get through a speed circle just wonderfully. Of course, we have contacts and all manner of other things to work on too. But, the short of it is, I'm really encouraged. The other news is, like any true "worrywart", I was worried for nothing!


Crate Game
Back on a front burner. Like anything - use it or lose it - as Jean Donaldson writes: "behavior falls apart all the time". You just have to get back to it and work on it and it quickly comes back together. All the better for next time.


Signing off, Happy Training!
Hug your dogs & yourselves and remember...

"It's About Love!"
:-))


Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Unexpected Plans


Or a lesson in "maintaining criteria"


I had planned to write about our latest homework today, but after our session this morning, I decided to write about something else that happened instead. It's a typical tale of how the best laid training plans can be changed by unexpected events, that cannot be ignored.

It seemed like a simple enough request.

Like most mornings, we were out on the field, the dogs taking turns working, and resting in their appointed place (crate or cot) in between their turns on the field, picture below.


Notice that the crate door & gate are open, pictures above & below. The cot has no walls, the boundaries of each (crate, cot & gate) are respected as a rewarded choice the dog makes through use of the "Crate Game" (click on game for link) which has long been a regular lifestyle with the dogs here at our place.

Back to my story, the work on the field was going great, dogs taking turns, it had been Bungee's turn to work. After an energetic tug game to finish I attempt to send her back to her crate, through the open gate, and into the open crate you can see her sitting in, below.



Well it seemed like a simple enough request! I had moved both dog's (crate & cot) into the shade of that Birch tree, about 7 or 8 feet back from where they 1st were, when the sun came out. I did this as I let her out to work this round. What a difference 7 or 8 ft. made, at least today!

When I sent her to her crate, newly located in the shade closer to the tree, she raced through the gate and in the direction of her crate like a shot. But when she got as far as the crate had been before, she stopped, turned around to face me and planted herself in a stand. That's as far as she was going.

I was a little surprised. Not wanting to repeat my command I went to her, not saying a word, gently took her by the collar, put her in her crate, closed the door and walked away.

I pretended to do something for a second or two, went back & released her to come back out to the field with me. Again I attempted to send her back to her crate.

But again she did not go in to her crate. Once again, she flew through the gate and into the same area, where her crate had been before, stopped, turned toward me, tail wagging, mouth open panting happily, and flopped into a down on the grass.

Knowing I had some "pressing" crate work to do with Bungee, I again put her in her crate, closed the door and took Guinness back down to the lower field to finish up his stuff and then sent him inside to relax.

Obviously, work on my previous homework plan for Bungee had now stopped as I had no choice but to address this little breakdown of crate criteria. In this case, that criteria being I say "crate" and she goes directly into crate, no half-way efforts accepted, and preferably does so eagerly at a fast pace, too.

Bungee started learning the Crate Game at 9 weeks old, so she has a pretty good handle on how it works at this point, and I was not too keen on backing up into baby steps to get her going in that crate.

So this time, I went to her crate, opened her door saying nothing, walked out onto the field, called her out to me with her release, really revved her up and attempted to send her to crate again. But again she raced back to the same old spot on the grass and laid down. (?????)

I went back to her again, took her to her crate and she went in. Leaving her in with door open, I moved the cot to a totally different location and successfully sent her to the cot, rewarding that. Next sending from the field to the cot, rewarding that, then from the cot to the crate, and back to the cot, rewarding each. After that from the field to the cot, rewarding, and finally from the field to the crate, definitely REWARDING that!!! Bungee eventually worked through everything and from the place we started on the field, directly into her crate in it's position under the tree. But not in time to go back and finish our original homework plan.

Once I got her driving back into her crate once, I could have gone back to our original homework plan. But it was more important to me at that moment to work on that crate success and re-load some value into going into that crate, than it was to go back and finish our lesson. By the time we had done that she was tired and my time was up, we had to wrap it up for the morning.

The way I see it, there is no point moving forward with new lessons if you cannot maintain what you have already taught your dog with your previous lessons.

Maintaining criteria is not just the good habit of a purely positive trainer, this is the smart habit of any great trainer. As we have learned from many examples, both good and bad over the years, it's very easy to teach new behaviors, but the real challenge is maintaining them with the original criteria you taught.

Ignoring a breakdown in a behavior at any point in your training when one occurs, is simply not an option for the purel
y positive trainer with performance goals in mind. It's one thing to decide you no longer want that criteria, it's quite another to just let an incorrect behavior slide, AS IF, it won't happen again. This is where a lot of people get into trouble with some of the simplest behaviors.

The experts probably have a much more scientific definition of maintaining criteria but my understanding is simple: to accept nothing less than the correct behavior from the dog each time you ask for one. So, if you ask the dog to sit, then the dog needs to sit on one command, every time. If your criteria of a sit is also that the dog quickly sits squarely between it's haunches, head up, feet still, then that is also part of the criteria you are expecting when you ask the dog for a sit. If the dog does not sit, then you need to stop whatever else you had in mind to do and get the dog to sit. Depending on the level of difficulty you are have getting the dog to sit, you may need to stop everything, go off to another quieter and less distracting place, where you can get success getting the dog to sit on one command, and work your way back into the flow of training as you can maintain that criteria of you saying "sit" (once) and dog sitting quickly and correctly. Of course you are rewarding the correct choices (sitting) every time the dog is doing the thing you asked, from the first time it does it correctly, and every time thereafter as you move back into the working area. So it goes with each and every command you give your dog.

A view from the dog's side of things...


Below, Bungee driving out onto the field after being released from her crate to a toy, this time a Hollee Roller Ball, a favorite.

Monday, June 16, 2008

Contacts #2 - Targets

Tools of the 2o2o Trade - continued

The "Touch It" from: www.nosetouch.com
(Click on the link to learn more)


Pictured above is the "Touch It" nose target. The "Touch It" is an electronic device that emits an electronic "beep" when the nose target is pressed, telling handler and dog that the dog has touched its nose to the electronic target. Invented by our friend, Mary Lou Hanlon, (website above and to be added to our links section), this is an ingenious little device, that can eliminate a lot of error when it comes to rewarding targeting behavior. You may notice a plastic covering on the touch pad pictured above, this is to prevent any moisture (damp noses, wet grass, etc.) from interfering with connectivity. Any thin plastic will do.

Mary Lou Hanlon's: "Touch It" - showing the whole unit.

In this picture above, you see the nose target on the floor in front of the travel plank, and the battery-operated electronic unit (connected by wire) hidden and out of the way, under the travel plank. This is also the way you would use it on stairs.

The "Hit It" also from: www.nosetouch.com

The "Hit It" board, also invented & made by Mary Lou, (website above), is another electronic training device that can be used for training of running contacts, advancing stopped contacts, and/or any other creative use you may think up. The "Hit It" also emits an electronic beep when a dog steps on the yellow board. The picture above shows the wired connection, with on/off switch, and the electronic unit the board plugs into, (identical to the "Touch It). The electronic unit is battery operated. Not only have people I've known used this device to train running contacts, but I have have seen some nice results using it to build drive into a release command, and getting a food-motivated dog to drive away from a contact as quickly as he drove into position.


Targets

Targets pictured above from sizes 4" square and round to 1" square.
Clicker shown for size comparison. These targets are cut pieces of clear Plexiglas. Some were purchased from agility supply store: Clean Run
(click on the link, go to: "store" to learn more). Targets as shown above are used at the ends of contact trainers and stairs as a target for the dog to nose touch.

The Palm of Your Own Hand

The place where the nose touch training begins - the palm of your own hand. Many people would rush past this step, thinking it the least important, the least "fun" with all those attractive training tools I just showed you above. Don't be lulled into skipping this step. Without a good hand touch, you will only short-change the dog when it comes to getting good, reliable nose touches.

This is one place I really saw the "Princesse" in Bungee - she only wanted to touch my hand with the most delicate, soft, little nose touches possible. It took a long time of working this to get her pushing my hand firmly. We'll talk more about that later.


Clickers of various
shapes & sizes (also the most dangerous tool in the arsenal!)

The 3 clickers shown above are each a little different, the two on each side have raised buttons that make it easier to use when wearing mitts or gloves. The black one at the right is an early version of Karen Pryor's "I-Click" It's greatest feature is how easy it is to click, making it ideal for a person with limited dexterity. Both raised clickers greatest danger is making it too easy to click accidentally!
To the left side you see another shot of a stack of Plexiglas targets.

Why would anyone call a clicker dangerous? Due to the degree of accuracy required in timing a click (to train correctly), it is very easy to time your click incorrectly, telling the dog it is correct when it is wrong.
Use clickers with caution!

While I still use clickers for many different things, they are NOT necessary to train great nose touches or contacts and this time around, I won't be using one for nose touches. In fact, if you are not well-prepared with your mechanics, they may just be an extra piece of equipment to fiddle with, get in the way, and mess up otherwise really good contacts! If you insist on using them to train your nose touches, it would be ideal to keep a video camera running to double-check your timing for accuracy, making sure your click is precisely as the dog pushes the nose to the target. It is also perfectly acceptable to start the behavior with the clicker and eliminate the clicker quickly after that. But it is definitely not necessary, and can just be risky business all together. This seemingly simple behavior is actually a very precise behavior, making much room for error on both your parts with the smallest of mis-steps - such as an ill-timed click.

Happy Training!




Friday, June 13, 2008

Happy Birthday!





Happy 1st Birthday


Bungee, Spice, One, Chili, Mia & Ogin!!!


Best Wishes to All!!


Thursday, June 12, 2008

Bungee's Place


One of Bungee's favorite places...


above ~ a view of part Bungee's agility field

This is where we have been spending most of our time, I think Bungee would like to spend all her time there! Family matters have had us to keep up with our lessons at home without the benefit of many of our classes this week. We did make it out to Bungee's agility class last night and it was really fun with lots of good work. We worked on all the usual stuff: equipment skills, contacts, control & early sequencing. Bungee brilliant as ever :-) of course(!), and extremely keen for the work. The more we do, the more she wants to do and growing more intense by the day, in fact I would say "pushy" to work, work, work all the time. But that kind of pushiness is definitely OK!

Here are some more views of our backyard, our agility field and our trails into the bush beyond the field.
("Bush" = Canadian-speak for: forest)



Elbow room, peaceful settings, a naturalists dream, safe places for our dogs to run, views like this in our own backyard... this is why we live in Canada.


Only about half our equipment is up on the field so far. The rest of it is on the lower field, not pictured, or set up in the basement for inside lessons when it's a downpour outside, but mostly to help give the turf on the main field every chance to re-establish fully - we're still in lawn restoration mode. But the frequent rain has been perfect and very welcome to our cause! Of course now its time to move it all off both places and mow again. My favorite job!!

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

A big week for the "champagne kids"

What week is it?

It's birthday week for the "champagne kids" of course! Bungee included! She will turn the big 1 year old this Friday! We already have part of a birthday plan in mind for her but we will save that for later.

Some Homework Updates:
Ruff Love - going great at a modified level, Bungee doesn't know she's on it, and is being much more respectful of my time with Guinness. They've had many more lessons together on the field with no more negative incidents of any kind. Just lots of great work. The pushy, jealous behavior I was starting to see around the house is already gone. They have always gotten along great together one-on-one, and they continue to do so.

Agility Homework - We have now advanced from just flatwork to transfering our skills to equipment. The transition from circle work to sequencing is our focus now.

Jumping - Setting up small sequences now, 2 - 4 jumps. Lots of emphasis on focus forward vs. focus on me. I have to hide the toy to run with her over 2 or 3 jumps and have her look where she is going, but if I do she does. Her jumping style is fluid and lovely - really pretty. When she's looking where she's going - bars stay up, I'm working them at max. 16" or 40 cm.

Grids - She is due for some - on the "to do" list.

Box Work - Yes, that's what I said! I worked some sit stays around the box from different positions with success. Curious to see what she'd do, I went to the jump at the Left (L) of the 1st square, tried a Lead-Out Pivot (LOP) w/ a Front Cross, (FC) to the L and she read it beautifully. I rewarded at the turn before the jump. A 2nd try, I let her go over the jump rewarding on the outside. Ditto to the Right (R). So much success I sat her & went down to the 2nd square. LOP w/ a FC to the L - she handled it like a pro so ditto to the R - again success. This time I went back and tried running with her through the same sequences - success again but wide around me through the FC (easily tightened up on a 2nd try). Worked each direction with success.

Later came back to a 270 at the top of the box, wow and wow again, by George she got it! Worked 270's on both sides, son of a gun - she got them. So we had a little session of a 270, then a threadle on the same jumps, then a 270, then back to pulling through the gap - each time changing the task, over the same two jumps, working in each direction to the L & R, and each time she's on it like white on rice! So wow, and wow again for Bungee. Now I see the true magic of circle work! We've only worked on the box twice but very exciting beginning!


The box work also provides an option to drive straight up the center or some turns at the top and drive back down the line of center, which Bungee did nicely.

FFD - However, "before we can run we must walk", and in AAC Starters Jumpers courses that means long straight lines of wide open jumps, maybe with only 3 turns in a whole course and perhaps only 13 -15 jumps in total. That translates to huge, wide-open spaces, jumps set at 18' - 25' apart and so forth.

The point of explaining all this is yet another reason Bungee will need to understand to drive long straight lines, starting "first thing out of the gate" with these long, large, simple circles so frequently seen in Canadian Starters & Novice courses (U.S. too). FF work is really going to be the key to success, but in fairness we will start out by breaking this work right down and that's where we are at now.

Contact equipment
- not before contacts of course! But skills work continues.


Contacts - 2o2ow/nt continues .







Saturday, June 7, 2008

June Trial

How HOT Is it?

I'm not sure anyone wanted to know that today! This weekend is Tamsu's June Agility Trial and it's a hot one! 32 c. in the shade, 39 c. heat index, an actual record-breaker according to the news. Thank goodness for strong breezes!

This was Bungee's 2nd trial experience. It was Guinness and my 1st time back in the ring since we lost Ketchy. It felt really good to be back in the ring, running with our friends, one little Terrier fella' in particular...Guinness, who did absolutely great! It just thrilled me to see him enjoying it so much and that just means everything to me! No Q's today but he really made me proud, plus two 2nd's & a 1st as a bonus!

Bungee was great too! She is a dream to have at a trial, and she is ready to work! She stayed in the ex-pen with Guinness under our shady tent and never made a peep. She just relaxed & enjoyed the view.
I'm told she talks her funny voice when she can hear me in the ring, and she talks to me when I return to her too. I spent my breaks & after my runs with the dogs and she got to go all around with me.

I ran 3, worked 6, and now I'm cooked like a baked apple - and about the color of one too! It was SO hot, I sent the dogs home with their "dad" about 3 p.m. I stayed on for ring crewing, and at the end helped with course building for tomorrow.

Plans for tomorrow - more of the same.

Guinness is entered in only 2 runs. But now it's supposed to be even hotter, higher humidity and big thunderstorms (again! that's 6 out of the last 7 days!) I may leave the dogs home with the DH and just go and help tomorrow. This is a "game" and that means it's supposed to be FUN, right?


Tomorrow in honor of the heat (or is it the team?), there is a human pool party fund raiser for the Canadian Agility Team (CAT Team) on the premises. That sounds MUCH more sensible to me! But don't worry, the dogs have several pools set up for them too!
(click on the link to check out the team's website)

In honor of all the big hearted dogs out there running in that heat today, I've posted a little fictional story I came across next. Happy to report that overall today was a MOST pleasant trial experience for Bungee and all of us. Not only did we have many dear friends there to welcome us back and cheer us on, but every handler there would have passed this next "hypothetical" test!
Would you?


Not Just Any Old Trial


Dedicated to big-hearted agility dogs everywhere!


Inserting update, today, Tuesday, June 24, 2008
I have just been informed the prose below is titled: "Perfect Run" by author Tim String, advisory comment end post.

Agility With God or "Perfect Run"


A man dies and goes towards the light. There is no pearly gate, no rainbow bridge, just an overwhelming presence. He falls face down and cries out "God help me". It is a simple prayer he has often repeated in time of stress. He was totally unprepared for what happened next. A voice said, "Never fear my child. I am here. I'll take a simple form, and we'll have a talk".

The man was filled with peace and knew he had met his Maker. He realized he was being helped to his feet. The man that helped him to his feet had a radiance unlike anything he had seen before. He became aware of the conversation covering his life, beliefs, and why he should be admitted to Heaven. God said he had one last test.

The man had competed in agility and had always wanted one more run with his favorite partner. God said he would grant one final run. A perfect run and he and his dog would be granted access to heaven. A failure and he would not be allowed in.

The man said to God, "Win or lose, I thank you for one more run."
The man looked in the crowd but could not see his beloved partner. He asked God where he needed to go to find his faithful teammate. God called the man to him and said to stare into his eyes. Unbelievable peace and joy filled the man's soul. God started to change into bright overpowering light. The man became aware of a movement in the light. It grew and grew and there was his friend. He was bowled over just like so many times on earth. His face was being licked, a tail beat his legs, and a playful reunion was had.

There were several agility teams there that day. God was to be the judge. The exhibitors walked the course and the man was to be the third team to run. He watched the first team. It was a beautiful start. The team looked so perfect, he smiled at their teamwork. It was poetry to
watch. Then it happened. The handler took his eye off the dog and it took an off course. "You idiot!" yelled the handler. "What were you thinking"? A curtain covered the field and God's voice could be heard but not understood. When the curtain parted the previous team was gone.

God beckoned the next team to the line. This team looked even better. Then a bar was knocked. The handler went to the dog and beat it. The man wanted to go to the dog's aid but an icy stare from a near by angel froze him in his tracks. The curtain quickly drew around the ring. God's voice boomed and the ground trembled. When the curtain parted the team was gone.

God motioned for the man to come to the line. A quick placement at the line, one last scratch of the dog's ear, as was their ritual. The stay was perfect. The man smiled, overjoyed for one last run and the gleam in his old partner's eye. The man gave the command and released his dog. The run was one of the rare ones. The connection so right, the unexplainable feeling of being in harmony with your dog. Both the man and the dog beamed. One last cross and they would be headed home. The man realized in an instant he had moved to soon. "I'm sorry, that was my fault." he said sheepishly. They finished in fine form but it was not a clean run. The curtain drew.

God came over but before God could speak the man fell to his knees. "I'm sorry it wasn't a perfect run, but I thank you for one last run. It was so much fun, but I just blew that cross. Please don't punish my dog for my mistake. He only did what I trained him to do."


God lifted the man to his feet. "You passed the test," God said with a smile. "I don't understand," stammered the man. "It wasn't a clean run." God answered, "I didn't say your dog wouldn't go to heaven if you failed, nor that the run had to be clean." The man said, "You said it had to be perfect". God answered, "Yes, I said the run had to be perfect, not clean. Up here there is a big difference. You see, nobody can run this course clean. The joy of the run, the connection so close, makes it impossible to run this course clean. That is part of the test. Do you take responsibility for your mistake; do you treat your dog, my gift of love to you, with respect?

"do you treat your dog, my gift of love to you, with respect?"

The perfect runs are the runs where the handler takes responsibility for his mistakes and allows the dog to make his. The dog doesn't care if the run is clean; he just wants to have fun. You really passed the test before you ran. You thanked me whether you won or lost. Also, don't think I didn't notice you reacted when that other handler abused the dog. You have shown great love. That was the test. To me your run was a thing of beauty, your conduct even
better."

The owner smiled, "May I have one request?" God said, "I know you want to watch the other runs. If you look past the ring you'll see your old ratty chair. I would love to have company today."
The man saw some stunning runs but also some crazy runs. Dogs that did nothing but visit all the heavenly host. Dogs that knocked every bar. Dogs that sailed over every contact. He smiled each time as the curtain closed and watched God inform the handlers that though not clean they were still perfect.

He realized he never saw another run where the handler was mean. Every run he saw brought another team to the sideline. Cheers arose and people rejoiced. It then dawned on the man. He was no longer waiting to get to heaven, he was already there.


At the end of the runs, the man said to God, "You must be pleased; only two teams failed." With a tear running down his face God said, "If only that were true. Once you pass, you only see those that pass. But enough of that, we have a rainbow bridge to go visit. Some more of your friends want to see you."
author unknown