blackcob
🖖
...what are you training now, and what will you be training next?
In light of poor Tyson's upcoming boot camp I thought it was topical!
D had a fab one-to-one agility lesson last week in which we learned that I am a crap handler and she is brilliant despite it.
So being able to go to a new (very interesting, sheep-strewn, location previously used for super exciting canicross runs) venue with a new trainer, new equipment and to stay calm, focused and work well was the fing wot we have trained.
The fing wot we are currently doing is to re-train her contacts with a strong focus on the release cue, not the position, and to un-velcro her and encourage independence into certain obstacles, most especially the weaves for which I have always been on top of her to date. Apparently this whole feeding from the hand thing which has been so brilliant for un-husky-ing her behaviour is totally at odds with agility training and so now food comes from a tuggy toy sack thing left at the end of a sequence and I have to work on making the tuggy food sack thing the most exciting thing in the world.
The fing wot we will do next is to teach her to go to her box when the door goes - if I can teach her to do complex agility shenanigans there's no reason for me to put up with her mobbing guests and I don't know quite why it's been allowed to go on for so long. She doesn't jump up but is a wriggly underfoot nightmare.
I sometimes feel like I've taught R nothing but the fing wot we have done this year is prove that he is totally okay with other dogs by flooding the poor bugger at a million dog shows.
Currently in progress is to extend this neutral behaviour to passing dogs out on walks. He has vastly improved in this but will still lunge and have a (friendly, honestly) howl at some passing dogs who are then mostly inclined to tell him to eff off for being so rude, thus he appears aggressive. I still have trouble figuring out his triggers, to be honest, some dogs elicit no reaction and some very passive dogs generate a frenzy.
To do is to teach him to go to the kitchen when the door goes and also to work on his impulse control (aka thievery) around food. He is obsessed with food, gets underfoot when cooking, drools, mugs, begs, snatches and counter surfs. Again, why this has been allowed to go on for so long I don't know except that it now seems normal to store things in the oven or microwave so he can't get them.
In light of poor Tyson's upcoming boot camp I thought it was topical!
D had a fab one-to-one agility lesson last week in which we learned that I am a crap handler and she is brilliant despite it.
The fing wot we are currently doing is to re-train her contacts with a strong focus on the release cue, not the position, and to un-velcro her and encourage independence into certain obstacles, most especially the weaves for which I have always been on top of her to date. Apparently this whole feeding from the hand thing which has been so brilliant for un-husky-ing her behaviour is totally at odds with agility training and so now food comes from a tuggy toy sack thing left at the end of a sequence and I have to work on making the tuggy food sack thing the most exciting thing in the world.
The fing wot we will do next is to teach her to go to her box when the door goes - if I can teach her to do complex agility shenanigans there's no reason for me to put up with her mobbing guests and I don't know quite why it's been allowed to go on for so long. She doesn't jump up but is a wriggly underfoot nightmare.
I sometimes feel like I've taught R nothing but the fing wot we have done this year is prove that he is totally okay with other dogs by flooding the poor bugger at a million dog shows.
Currently in progress is to extend this neutral behaviour to passing dogs out on walks. He has vastly improved in this but will still lunge and have a (friendly, honestly) howl at some passing dogs who are then mostly inclined to tell him to eff off for being so rude, thus he appears aggressive. I still have trouble figuring out his triggers, to be honest, some dogs elicit no reaction and some very passive dogs generate a frenzy.
To do is to teach him to go to the kitchen when the door goes and also to work on his impulse control (aka thievery) around food. He is obsessed with food, gets underfoot when cooking, drools, mugs, begs, snatches and counter surfs. Again, why this has been allowed to go on for so long I don't know except that it now seems normal to store things in the oven or microwave so he can't get them.