Friday, February 12, 2010

Taking advantage of a beautiful day to get some training in

We had a beautiful day today and I needed to go down to the agility yard to pay for the new series of classes that start this week! YIPPIE! Because I have been a total sluff at working with the dogs with all the rainy weather, I decided to bring the dogs and get some work done.

On the docket for todays training:
Weave entries with Breeze, working with the entries while I am recalling her through them, then working up to running along side her.
Lizzie needs to work on attention and contacts, just sharpening up the teeter end behavior.
CRICKET, working on attention when she is excited, and just letting her be cute!


Lizzie does not get to ride like that on top of the crates, but that is where she would dearly love to sit. Cricket was MAD she was in the crate and you can see her trying to open the gate, she got really mad and finally took out her frustrations on a bone. Poor puppy, puppy abuse.






Lizzie showing her BEAUTIFUL end position on the teeter. During the break she was just a little sloppy with the teeter performance, so time to sharpen things up a bit.
Lizzies teeter performance criteria:
Load onto the teeter straight (we have some exercises we do so she understands that), I do not want to have to manage her entries ;-)
Race up and through the tip spot, I want her racing for the end
shift her weight back to her hind end and slide into position with her feet at the end, her head forward and stay there until I release her.
I feel the more clear the criteria is for my dogs, I am better able to reinforce what I want and they feel more comfortable and safe knowing what to expect.




Cricket being Cricket and trying to get Breeze to play, no one is safe from the puppy play monster!

Unfortunately we did a little weave entry work and once again Breeze is looking really stiff and limping ;-(, I am not sure what is going on so she mostly just got to play with the ball no big workout for her, guess it is time to take her in to the vet since this does not seem to be getting better ;-(, she is not looking horrible but something is definetly going on.







RUNNING CRICKET-WHOOOO HOOOOOO! She is fast! Have I ever mentioned how much fun I think she is?






Liz and Cricket playing at the agility yard, Cricket LOVES to harrass Liz, Liz is her favorite target!





PRICK EAR (ONE EAR)! Cricket lost another tooth which explains why her ears have been all over the place again!




Liz wants to practice her contacts, but isn't willing to run into Cricket's face, Cricket says "What are you doing Liz?"





Is Cricket exhausted when we got home from our adventure? NOOOOOO. She is still going to bug Breeze to play, LOL.



Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Another rainy evening, what to do???

THE EVENING BEGINS PEACEFULLY ENOUGH, IT IS RAINING SO WE ARE ALL JUST HANGING OUT. CRICKET IS CHEWING ON HER FAVORITE HEDGEHOG-



IT IS GETTING A LITTLE QUIET, TIME FOR CRICKET TO LOOK FOR A PLAYMATE-AT FIRST MY YOUNGEST DAUGHTER PROVIDES A GOOD GAME OF TUG-




KIMMIE THE CAT LOOKS ON AND FIGURES...THIS CAN NOT LEAD TO GOOD THINGS, THAT BORDER COLLIE PUP IS RAMPING UP--




YEP, KIMMIE KNOWS SHE NEEDS TO FIND HERSELF A SAFE SPOT AND KEEP AN EYE ON THIS ACTIVITY-



CRICKET SAYS "HEY KIMMIE-HOW ABOUT A GREAT GAME OF CHASE-I WILL BE IT AND CHASE YOU"




CRICKET LOOKS AT ME "PLEASE MOM, JUST A LITTLE CHASE, I KNOW SHE SAYS SHE DOES NOT WANT TO PLAY BUT I KNOWSHE DOES!



"COME ON...."




KIMMIE RUNS TO THE CAT TREE, SHE KNOWS HOW TO HANDLE OVERACTIVE YOUNGSTERS, AFTER ALL SHE HAS BEEN THROUGH 3 BORDER COLLIE PUPPIES.



CRICKET STARES HOPEFULLY........



NO LUCK, KIMMIE IS STAYING PUT AND ENJOYING FRUSTRATING THE PUP, LOL!

Monday, February 8, 2010

Monday Morning

Cricket cleaning herself up after a wild weekend playing and learning!

Friday, February 5, 2010

Cricket running with the big dogs!

Cricket is now 4 1/2 months or 20 weeks old, 24 1/2 lbs and about 16 inches tall. She is growing up.

She is such a mix of personality traits. She is very excitable, very stimulated by movement and she can sometimes seem so over the top but then a second later she is so awesome at controlled behaviors or being over the top and then snapping into working mode. She is already able to sit on a stay on the couch while another dog is clicker training in front of her. That just blows me away to see her doing that. She is also really good with dogs but she can be pushy, especially with Lizzie. She wants to play and she wants to play now. Lizzie who is all about getting along lets her get away with it, while Breeze and Skyler and even Chloe already seem to know that they better teach her what their boundries are before she grows up!

Not the best quality video but I wanted to shoot a little bit of her playing with the other dogs. Check out how Lizzie is not at all excited about Cricket jumping at her-but she does not want to rock the boat by telling Cricket off, poor Liz looks stressed when she is trying to deceide if she should put a stop to things, but then she will join in the play when Cricket stops jumping at her. Cricket is like Lizzie's shadow these days, this little black figure that follows her everywhere. Lizzie has always been such an over the top dog that it is really weird to see her seem like the calm girl now, LOL. My how time changes things. Cricket LOVES to tease Breeze and will grab the balls and just dance in front of Breeze and turn her head so Breeze can not get the ball, she knows Breeze's weakness is the ball, LOL. Breeze is smart and just watches her and waits her turn, the minute Crick puts the ball down, boom she moves in and takes it. They are a crack up to watch.

I was looking at the tape and gosh Cricket really can spread out her body and run, and those tight turns, humm, she might be a little fast one day!

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Cricket Feb. 4, 2010

Finally a picture where you can really see her face and those cute little ears, LOL.



Wednesday, February 3, 2010

PRIVATE LESSON WITH DEANNA FEB. 3, 2010

I have sort of been taking an unofficial break from agility over the holidays while the classes here in town were on break. I needed some time with Cricket and I have been devoting more time and resources to herding and just some basic training around the house.

Breeze and I were at a point where I need to learn some more distance work and where I need to put myself so I can give her good information and have things flow. I still have trouble backing off and letting her handle things she is capable of handling-letting her work further out and trusting she knows what she is doing. She has gotten more confident if I give her good directions and a lot faster - my handling has needed to change to accommodate that ;-), so I really felt like I wanted to work on that and the weaves before I stuck her in more trials.

Sooooo...tonight we scraped off some of the rust and took a private with Deanna. Deanna is wonderful, she is always cheerie no matter what is going on in her life, she always acts like you and your contact problem or your off course dilemma's are of the up most importance, she always makes sure you understand and she always is just so encouraging, I love training with her. My training buddy Denise-who runs with a gorgeous rough coated collie named Kodi, and I got to work on a nice little course.

IT FELT GOOD TO BE BACK, and especially training with Deanna, no pressure, no worrying about anything else just immerse yourself in agility for an hour. What could be better?

I wanted to work on treadles, somewhere in our training we had never learned how to handle those-so I had a lot of clever ways to get around them, but that was one of the goals for this private for me. I know how I handled them with Chloe who was a very different dog and that was not going to work with Breeze and I wanted to make sure I could handle them from behind-where I will no doubt be.... I also wanted to make sure it worked in my handling system. So on my video that is the one place I was still having trouble getting my timing at first was the treadles, that was our first attempt. After the video we worked on them and by george a little more practice on the timing and I think we will have it. My other problem area has been the weaves and I could not figure out what was going on there. We broke it down during this lesson and it appears I neglected to work them with a lot of pressure from me being by the weaves. Breeze can handle them if I am far away, or if I stand fairly still but when I am really running it blows her mind. So we got some exercises to practice for that. A very productive lesson.

Here is the course we worked on, I am sure I got some of the spacing way off, but it did have a lot of weird angles when I walked it, things did not line up so it was a little more of a challenge.




DENISE AND KODI's RUN


BREEZE and ME


contacts
We also kicked around the contact dilema and since I just do not seem to be able to get a 2020, but Breeze is definitely striding through the yellow and doing ok on that, I am going to continue to train a 2020 in practice, have her hop on and off and keep having her find that spot rewarding but I am going to just go ahead and live with the 4 on the floor. Sometimes you have to pick your battles, and how much of my life do I want to devote to this contact? We have also had Breeze going back to really being crooked on her down, but it is working and I am not going to sweat that. Now the table and the start line, since I am going with what I have in the contacts....I am going to be dealing with those a lot more, LOL.

silly tricks...

The dogs were playing last night- they all love to "speak". It really riles them up. Poor Liz is a great "speaker" but she was getting stressed trying to do it around the other dogs, so because we were just playing, she did her favorite trick.


Liz wanted to do her favorite trick-wave-

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Cricket-the new recall graduate!

Check out the cute ears!




WELL, we did it. Cricket is an official graduate of the "Fido Come" class.

I must say she did marvelous! On the last class she was recalling with food in the instructors hand and Cricket is the only one the instructor let her nibble on the food and then I called her. Little genius never batted an eye and turned and came back to me as soon as I called.

They had everyone in the class take turns holding food and then calling the dogs off of the food, then the helper would come over and feed the food to the dog, along with the owners treats-pretty good for a 4 1/2 old pup in a new environment with a lot of other dogs running around, and her doing that exercise with all the people in the class.

The other big challenge in the class was having someone hold Cricket, I went to the other side of the yard and Cindy the instructor put down food on the ground making sure the dogs saw the food. I then called Cricket and she came running-never gave the food the slightest attention.

Cindy was saying the way to have the recall a totally conditioned response, meaning the dog just does it without thinking and it is like slamming on the brakes when you are driving, is to have a really strong reinforcement history over a long time. So she advised continuing the type of work we have been doing for at least six months before we start using a variable reinforcement schedule or using a lot of different types of rewards. So I guess even if we are graduates of the "Fido Come" class, the work continues, LOL.

I really liked the class because a lot of it was catching the dog checking in, making yourself fun, setting your dog up for success--a lot of good relationship building goes into that little recall!

For the flip side of the coin....little Crick has not been totally perfect! She is pretty durn close to perfect ;-), as close as any pup can get to being perfect while still being real, LOL, but she does have on behavior I think might be shaping up to be a bit of a challenge, LOL. Cricket is really getting OBSESSED, and obsessed big time with cats. All my border collies sit and stare at the cat. They will sit for hours, but my cat Kimmie is very dog savy and just gives them the look, like "hey, you can stare all you want but I am just going to sit here". She does not run or get upset, so everyone lives happily together. Cricket has been treating the cat like the rest of the dogs do....until very recently-actually seems like the obsession developed virtually over night.

Cricket staring at the cat--poor kittie




When we went outside weeks ago, she saw Kimmie or another cat up on the outside of the window sill. Now when ever we go outside Cricket will try to play keep away so she can sit and stare at the spot where the cat once was. The cat has not been there since, but Cricket knows if she stares at that empty space long enough....it will show up. First clue we had some cat obsession starting.

Second clue--in recall class where Cricket is able to shut out any other distraction and is even doing good with the other dogs movements, she spied a cat-WAYYYYYY far away. I could not get her focus off the cat with food, or play or anything even after the cat was gone. YIKES, like she is pretty intense and doesn't forget where the cats might have been.

Third clue--Cricket is starting to whine at the gate to the room the cat can go in where the dogs can not get in. Cricket will just stare in the room and bark more, most of the time if the cat is in that room the border collies know there is no chance of getting her so they generally get bored and never even glance in there, but not Cricket, LOL. Cricket is also getting closer and closer to chasing the cat when the cat is just sitting she will once in awhile spring and nip, something definitely not allowed in this house, she was corrected the first few times she did it, but I doubt it is the last time I have seen her do that, I think that is definitely a behavior to put the breaks on right away.

I am doing some thinking on how I can teach Cricket to have a little more control. Last summer I was able to work with Liz and the gophers where we were training using a premack principle type of exercise. If she did the weaves she could go obsess on the gophers, if she did weaves-jump, she could go to the gophers, if she did weaves-jump contact she got the gophers and eventually the gophers were not the powerful little critters they had once been. The problem with the cats is that I have to be able to have control of the cats, and get Cricket far enough away that she is not over threshold. I think that might be the next state, LOL. So I am still thinking about this. In the house with Kimmie, who is a familiar cat that is not moving I can tell Cricket "leave it" and then reward her when she moves away and she is doing pretty good with that-I am pretty proud of her for being able to manage that as well as she does. I have to think of some way to work on the feral, wild cats that move fast and are all around where we train, she is way too over the top for "leave it" to work in that situation yet. PUPPIES! LOL.