Training! Lots of training! Last week I first started training with field problems. My boss puts pin flags in a field, with a scat next to it, so we know where it is. Then we take out a dog and search for the scat. As handlers we are responsible for directing the dogs to where we want them to search, much easier said than done. The dogs are super high energy and want to work, so to get them to calm down and little to you can be hard. We are also in charge of knowing the wind patterns and how they affect where we are searching, and how often they change. This is all very important for the dogs' to find a scat and to be searching the correct area. Last week we also trained on sit problems. Pin flags with scats are set up in a line, close together, and we take the dogs on-leash to each one. Once they have determined "yes this is the type of scat I am looking for, yay" we tell them to Sit! so that they correlate finding a scat with sitting. This week we did field problems and trail problems. Trails add a whole new dimension. Air is often funneled by trails, and we also have to direct the dogs to work off-trail, around trees, logs, holes, etc. I really sucked my first time, because I was the first person to go, without seeing an example. So I did everything wrong! But I worked 3 more dogs and got better each time. I ended with Shrek, who is extremely energetic. And, to top it off, he saw a cat on the way to the problem, and got really crazy. It took a while to calm him down, as much as I could. But, he was a great dog to work. I also worked Orion, who is also pretty crazy. He listened really well, took direction and worked great. However, he is really ball insane. After doing well with 'drop its! and leave its!' he lunged at the ball and took a chunk of my finger with it. So I rolled him, showing him who's boss. Then he did it a few more times, so he got rolled again. Not anything new for the silly boy. This week ended with a more difficult trail problem. I got to watch a few other experienced handlers do their thing, and learned a lot! They are much more quiet, relaxed and calm. I'm sure partially because the dogs know them, so they do not have to extert so much force and because they already have an established working relationship. But in the end, I worked Alli, and really tried to emulate what the experienced handlers did. I think I was pretty successful-I was happy with my performance.
Here are some pics of me working Alli - so cute!


Stay!

Alli found a scat, so she sat, and was signalled to stay:

Sampson: he is cute, but the biggest whiner!

Max: a really good dog.

Mason, getting ready to work:

Tucker, Max, and Alli - they are all play buddies: