April 2006
Monthly Archive
Sat 29 Apr 2006
Because, I think about this alot of the time, though realistically, my next dog won’t be coming along for at least three to five years.
It will be interesting to see if/how the list changes.
The current list:
1. Portuguese Water Dog
2. Border Collie (yeah - I limited the search to red ones. Encore stole my heart! And a red merle - that would be the ultimate. I think they are just the most gorgeous dogs!)
3. Rat Terrier
4. Cattle Dog
5. Border-Jack - Crazy!
6. Bearded Collie
Sat 22 Apr 2006
The other day I started working on Sue Ailsby’s scentwork with both Katy and Ellie.
The first step, at Level 3, is taking a single item and placing a piece of food under it and then letting the dog find the food. I used both a towel and some big plastic party cups. Both dogs “got” the game and found the food.
The next step, at Level 4, requires the assistance of a stranger. I took two of the plastic party cups to work and had my co-worker handle them for about 30 seconds each. He then put them back in a plastic bag and I didn’t touch them.
Today I took out one of the cups, being careful not to put my hand in the bag or to touch Ben’s cup and put my scent on the one that I pulled out. We played the game where I put just a little bit of cream cheese on the cup and send Ellie to “find it”.
After about eight successful “finds” and three times when she picked up the cup and brought it to me, I brought out Ben’s cup and placed it next to mine (mine has writing on it so that I can tell the difference between the two cups). Ellie found my cup about eight out of ten times. I changed the relative position of my cup on each trial so that she wasn’t picking the cup based on it’s positioning. Twice, I set the cup down while she was in a sit-stay in the other room, so she couldn’t watch me put it down. She got those right as well.
As Sue indicates, the hard part for the dog isn’t the scent discrimination. It’s learning that what I want is for her to pick the one that smells like me! The only thing that I wonder about (well not the only thing) is whether she’s playing this like the hot/cold game. I don’t think she is - as she’s going straight to the correct cup at a high rate. But, I’ll have to work a few more sessions to determine if I think she really get’s that it’s my scent that she’s working for. The other difference between this and the H/C game besides the fact that I had Ben stink up the cups is that the items are identical in appearance. When we play the H/C game, I use items that are very different physically from each other.
Thu 20 Apr 2006
Finally! The vet sent Katy’s blood up to the lab at Michigan State for a comprehensive thyroid level test. She’s definitely hypothyroid and we started her on levothyroxine yesterday. I’ve got my fingers crossed that in a few weeks, I’ll have my “agility Katy” back. She loves the sport but has been so dog reactive and physically lethargic, practicing agility just hasn’t been much fun. I’m looking forward to the possibility to doing some good work with her outside this summer.
Fri 14 Apr 2006
I’m reconsidering Ruff Love. At least, reconsidering the concept of Ruff Love. Ellie definitely needs boundaries that are consistent. However, I’m finding the program hard to maintain to the letter because of my job responsibilities and the limited number of available hours during the day.
The major issues that I need to address:
- running off to self-reinforce when off-leash
- getting the toy/tuggie then running away instead of running back towards me
- motivation/drive/enthusiasm level while training (incorporating play into training)
- wavering attention during moving exercises - the time she stays with me while working needs to be built up.
- develop a very strong and reliable recall
- develop the retrieve as Susan demonstrated during the workshop
- eliminating on leash!
- maintaing/improving on-leash behavior while around other dogs
- perfect LLW
Fri 14 Apr 2006
L2 Distance - Dog goes out around pole from 2′ away
L3 Distance - Dog goes out around pole from 4′ away
L3 Front - Dog hits center line of front ray diagram at least three out of five times
L2 Handling - Dog allows for handling of feet, tail and ears. Minimal fussing
L2 Leash Manners - Handler stays in one spot. Dog maintains loose leash for one minute.
Tue 11 Apr 2006
It’s about time I do this Level One Homework. Ellie has tested up to level seven on some of the behaviors and still haven’t completed MY homework.
Five things I hope to accomplish by training the levels:
1. All around good behavior from my dog(s)
2. Increased awareness on my part in the planning and design of training sessions. I don’t want to keep my criteria too easy for too long nor do I want to raise the criteria too quickly. Record keeping will help with this.
3. Increased eye contact and attention in challenging situations.
4. Solid foundation of self-control for future obedience and agility training.
5. The ability to use eye contact to move my dog (Sue demonstrated this at her seminar and it’s really cool to watch)
To work on:
Level Three Watch (Required) The dog finds the handler’s face and holds eye contact for 30 seconds with as many voice cues as necessary. Glancing away is acceptable but any prolonged look is not.
Level Three Down Stay (Required) The dog Downs and stays while the handler walks 20′ out, stays for one minute and comes back. One cue is allowed for the Down, and two cues for the Stay. There will be one mild distraction. (Tested and failed - she only stayed for about 45 seconds and then went into a sit.) Work on duration and maintaining position. (work Level Two outside on the long line!)
Level Three Sit Stay (Required) The dog Sits and stays while the handler walks 20′ out, stays away for 30 seconds, and comes back. One cue is allowed for the Sit, and two cues for the Stay. There will be one mild distraction. (tested and she broke the sit after about 45 seconds. Increase duration)
Level Four Sit Test this! The dog sits from a down with one cue.
Tue 11 Apr 2006
Ruff morning after a ruff night. Katy was trembling from either fever or pain from the infection in her foot. Ellie just had to hang out and rest or sleep in her crate. We did have a nice cuddle session last night before I went to bed. We played with a toy on the couch and I rubbed her belly and scratched her head and ears. We’ve never really been all that cuddly before, so I think this is a good thing.
11:00am - Let her outside while I soaked Katy’s foot. Came inside and we tested some more of the levels. Once I can figure out where she is, I can incorporate this training into our everyday sessions. Surprisingly (or not) her eye contact is not that great when it comes to measuring duration. We can get about 5 seconds, then she looks away and then back for about two minutes. Have I trained in these little breaks? Time for me to start working on eye contact duration - with very, very small incremental increases in duration (so that I don’t kick off an unintentional shaping session).
note - despite infection, pain, fever and a foot she can’t walk on, Katy still has all the energy in the world to bark at the other dogs and the mailman!
Mon 10 Apr 2006
Mon 10 Apr 2006
7:30am - Walk around the block. Worked on LLW. Today wasn’t quite as good as Ellie seemed kind of excited. Plus there was a considerable amount of squirrel activity going on. Though, she did pretty well with the squirrels - sitting and hoping that I would release her to go get them (I didn’t do this!). We worked on attention down by Lucy’s house.
1:15pm - LLW down to the end of Elm and back. We saw the postman - that was exciting! Pretty good for most of the way. Treats used: boiled chicken. Let her run around in the backyard with Katy for a bit.
2pm - Out of her crate to play with the squeaky sun. At first she was only interested in the kitty, the smell of the breeze coming through the window and imagined sounds from outside. I put her on leash and had a party with the toy. “Ready, ready, ready” got me a squirrelly girl who only wanted to rub her GL on my leg. We had a quite a struggle as I worked to interrupt. She is strong. Finally, finally, I got her to chase the sun. She was into it and we did some crate game releases to tug on it.
6pm Katy won’t walk on her back left paw. I soaked it in epsom salts like the vet suggested, but she still won’t step on it. She’s in Ellie’s crate looking sad.
6:30pm Walked around the bigger block with Ellie with smoked salmon! LLW in the face of birds and squirrels. Still she did pretty well. Came home and played with the squeaky sun. Tested some of the levels. She tested all the way up to the level seven down!
8pm Pre-Novice class with Ellie at CABTC. She had a really great night in class. We worked on scootches in front and in heel position. Then we did a couple different recalls. One was restrained. One was a chase and one was a call to front. She did excellent on all of these. And got compliments from the teacher!
Sun 9 Apr 2006
1:15pm - Send to crate from 6 feet away - big prize: rawhide bone with peanut butter mixed in.
2pm - Late start today! Play some tuggies. I had to really yuck it up as she always seem a bit out of it when I pull her out of her crate. I had to throw it, hide with it and go crazy. She did tug eventually when she realized that she was being left out of the game.
Work on hand touch back to my right side. This is the starting point for the “close” command. This went well. Very easy, treats for every bump.
We did some left pivots. I just throw these in and she gets rewarded whenever she moves herself into a straight heel position. Then we played some more. She felt so left out of the fun I was having with the tuggy toy that she stole the squeaky sun out of the kitchen basket of toys. Sneaky girl. We’ll save the sun for another game!
Did some crate games. She’ll send reliably with me about four feet away. We need to work on distance with some really yummy, special treats.
6:30pm Play with the jumps. Fun and games. Table games as well. I ran away from her when she had the frisbee. And sometimes I ran away when I had the frisbee. Not too much rubbing - significantly less than the last few times we’ve played. Lots of good jumping! Then some scootches.
6:45pm - take Katy to play frisbee. As we were walking home, we saw the old golden. She was “interested”, but we easily walked on past. She was carrying her frisbee the whole way home.
8:45pm - Ellie’s dinner. Outside to pee in the backyard. Off leash, but I was with her. About 2 oz. for collar grabs - gentle with quiet talking. Very good. Then the rest for work on the wobble board (on carpet). Doing well on the wobble board - getting her to “make it move” for reinforcement. After dinner was over, we played a really fun game of chase and tug for the stuffed sun. She was really, really into it. For the whole 15 to 20 minutes she didn’t try to rub the GL at all. Did a few crate games and releases to tug on the sun.
9:10pm - Fed Katy - she got hers in her bowl with green beans.
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