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  • Favorite Store for Clicking Training Supplies – Sit Stay

    http://www.sitstay.com/dog/supplies/servlet/CategoryDisplay?langId=-1&storeId=10001&catalogId=10001&categoryId=25402&top=Y - These are their clearance items.

    They have a huge range of supplies for clicker training, for clickers, to targets, to training books and videos.

    Super fast service, and really nice people.  I've known them as long as I have known anyone on the internet!

  • Good week of classes

    We got to go to a more advanced class — the dogs were competing in Open and Excellent.  Macy did REALLY well, got distracted where the puppies were trained, but hey, they left cookies in the dirt.

    We also went to a new class to us, I've decided to get more serious about Rally, and went to a 1/2 sign familization class, and I think we'll do that for just the next six weeks.  I am even thinking about looking at the Rally schedule and see about when I might want to enter.

    She needs to learn how to stay but then she doesn't do that for agility either, and learn some more heeling skills, but she is doing well.  She really seems to like it.

  • Getting our Heads in the Game

    Macy and I have three weeks before our next trial.  I want to work on two things extensively.  The first is my weight.  There is no denying that my weight affects how she runs.  I’ve stayed at the same weight for a over a month, and I need to change that – that was the point of the lap band surgery.

    I also need to work on her focus.  Rally is helping that and I also need to work on her stays.  So yes, I’ve been working on all of this all along. 

    Our Q rate over the last three weekends was 25%, which is a whole lot better than it was.  We’ve got two more trials this season, and I’d like to be out of Novice.  The good news is that we only need one more leg.  Even better, I’d like to be out of Open, but  that probably isn’t possible.

  • Macy’s Head is either in the Game or Not – Took 2nd in Novice Standard

    The sad thing, is that I don't know until she's in the ring.

    Today is a good example.  We had a horrible Open JWW run.  Awful, and everyone said her nose was completely down and she definately wasn't listening.

    Part of it is the cold.  I am so stiff from the cold I can barely move.  We've had two days of overcasts 40 degrees and that barn just stays cold.  So I understand that she can't be in the game.

    However, she had a fabulous Standard run.  And the funny part was that I was just about ready to leave, and kept saying I was going to. 

    By the way, here is a major irritation on my part.  Someone decided to check in the Novice dogs and a bunch had decided to leave.  Like there was an 8" dog checked in we couldn't find.  Besides for me, I have a routine.  I watch the course build, walk it in my head, check in, walk the course, go get my dog.  It's part of me putting my own head in the ring.  Having a bunch of dogs checked in who aren't there is irritating because the ring steward has to find them.

    Back to the run … The only difference I can see was that she was really throwing behaviors and asking for food.  Hate that little impatient bark, and usually put up the food as I don't want another criticizer.

    However, she was taking everything I was throwing out her, and just a moments hesitation on her problem obstacles, in fact, she threw herself onto the teeter and it just took a moment of concentration to get her in the paint.  Lovely.  Weaves sucked, had to sniff each pole, but that's okay we were well under time according to the peanut gallery.

    She took a second place, just seconds behind a Papillion and ran clean.  Very nice!  We need one more Novice Q.

  • DFWESS Trial

    This is our third agility trial in a row.  Or should I say trials, since each trial is officially one day.  The weather is better this week, still cold but a few degrees warmer and much drier.  We had a steady light falling of snow last Sunday.  And I did see some sunshine in Dallas, but not in McKinney.

    Open Jumpers came up first.  Vast improvement over last week, all the bars were up when we got done.  However, she got caught by a smell at the beginning of the course, and I think we got two refusals.  I’ll have to look at the scores.   One refusal because she just wasn’t with it, the second probably at the weaves.  She was really distracted there too.  When I finished I felt like I had pulled her over every obstacle and the horn went off for time.  Still much better than last Saturday which was 5 refusals and an E for a bar.  Today was three refusals in Open.

    Novice Standard sucked.  She got distracted on the first long line, took the A-Frame instead of the dog walk, took forever to down, and was whistled off before she finished the last four obstacles due to time.  She’s obviously done better.

    But I’m pleased to see that she hasn’t knocked any bars. 

    Hopefully tomorrow is warmer.

  • Training this Week

    We did our last agility class at Dog City Training Center – probably do some facility rentals from time to time but we don’t really need to do two agility classes a week and I need less to spend the extra money.  Once I get past the spring expenses we’ll see but I might have the second dog by then.

    Both our classes went well, but she was still very sniffy.  Got a lot of good work done.

    Rally is also going well, but haven’t been making a lot of progress on staying.   That’s so hard for her – and yes, she’s four years old and has an agility title (NAJ).

    My Rally instructor tried handling her and got no where, which in a way is gratifying because she does do a reasonable job on it with me.  I still have food in my hand, and I am not going to try Rally until the fall.  It does seem to help with attention in agility though and gives us more stuff to do before we go into the ring.

  • No Q’s but a good trial

    Macy competed in Open JWW's for the first time this weekend.  Saturday she had 5 refusals and one crashed jump and Sunday she had 2 refusals and a crashed jump.  In fact, she also crashed a jump in Standard on Saturday and wouldn't down, but I didn't blame her much on the down.   It was cold.

    Though the response I've gotten on the crashed jumps were — Macy, crash a jump?  Yeah, she never does in class, but here's what she was doing:

    Head down, sniffing the dirt, but going the same direction.  Hey, there's the jump, whoops took off to late and "crash".  In fact, that's how we got the refusals.

    Sunday I figured out that if I talked to her incessantly, she did better and put her head up, which is why jumpers results were better.

    Standard was better on Sunday too, I scooped her up and went to the car and didn't bother to check scores, but she did everything and looked good up until and after the teeter.  She went up it, but couldn't bring herself to go all the way.

    Both days, afterwards, we went over to Dog City Training Center to fix things.  They do a facility rental for students at $8.00 and I'm taking more and more advantage of that.  They had a fun match on Saturday so they left the course up for me and I used it after.  That was great, and we're doing a lot of work on the table.  At home too.

    By the way, there is a nice looking little beagle up in Utah that might make someone a good agility dog, say something in the comments if you want to know more.

  • NAJ – All first places

    Looked at Macy's first Q ribbons and as I suspected, all blues!  Very cool

  • Fabulous agility weekend

    Yesterday looked good but no Q's.

    For some reason, I kept pushing or pulling Macy off of the jumps in jumpers.  I think I did it three or four times.  Not sure what I was doing, but got refusals.

    Standard was the best we'd done in a LONG time.  She did every obstacle but did a huge leap off the dog run.

    TODAY was FABULOUS!

    Two Q's, two first places.

    Jumpers was clean with 4 time faults.  That was ALL in the weaves.  We're doing Open next week so I'll get to see how 12 poles looks.  I'm thinking she doesn't know how to do six poles. 

    That means she has completed her NAJ title and is now Tesoro's Heald Square NAJ.

    Standard had two refusals.  That happened either in the weaves or at the teeter or dog chute.  Not sure which but she ducked way from both the teeter and the chute but got her on the obstacles quick, so it was a judges call.  Also had time faults, so we squeaked into the Q with an 85.

    I've requested that she be moved to Jumpers for our next trial.  I also need to contact the other trial secretaries.

  • Rally Class

    Macy likes Rally and seems to be teaching herself the necessary skills.  I would like a class the focuses more on practicing the individual skills, this seems more like a fun match, but that's okay too.

    We need to learn the following better to be successful (a reminder for myself):

    • heeling on left turns — she tends to forge
    • fronts
    • left finish
    • right finish
    • sits
    • downs — especially when mother is walking around her.

    We're training at Dog City Training Center in Dallas (off of BeltLine), and it's a great place to train.  Tell them I sent you.