Tuesday, May 5, 2015


Christopher Nemitz
How was my life affected through social media while working in rural Georgia over the last 4 months?

Let’s start from the beginning for those that have just tuned in and are about to follow along. On January 1st 2015 I started my journey that would take me all over the state of Georgia and even around all of north Florida and all the way down to Lake Okeechobee. I was working as an assistant trainer/bird technician for a large retriever hunt test and field trial training kennel that is located out of Monticello Minnesota.

My journey actually began in November of 2013 when I saw an ad on RetrieverTraining.net when Hidden Acres Retrievers was looking to add an assistant trainer to their program. I responded to the ad and was offered a job training young dogs in obedience and beginner retriever work. When the time came to travel down to Georgia for the first winter trip I was gung-ho and set out on the open road ready to train some dogs. However, this ambition was short lived. When I arrived in Georgia I didn’t pull into a typical plantation style setting with peach trees and pecan orchards all over the place. Instead I pulled in to southwest Georgia and all there was, was picked cotton fields as far as you could see. The first week started off horribly. It rained, and rained, and rained some more. The weather was cold, we didn’t get much training done, and I was living out of a cheap motel. Quite the culture shock for someone who had only been south of the Mason Dixon Line once before in his life and that was to go to Disney World. Needless to say, I didn’t last long. After two weeks I pulled up camp and went back home. That was my first go ‘round at training dogs.

Let’s fast forward to June of 2014. I was working as a groundskeeper at the local golf course when I got that all so familiar text message from the head trainer at Hidden Acres. It read “Yo”. I just had to shake my head and laugh, thinking to myself “what the hell does this guy want?” So I asked Marc what was going on and he said they were looking for some more help for the summer and was wondering if I wanted to give the dog thing another shot.  Of course I couldn’t refuse an offer of getting to go play with dogs every day.

So I gave my two weeks’ notice, packed up my dog and my belongings and headed to Monticello to train dogs. The summer started off great, I was getting to train dogs, spend my days outside in the sun and having a great time. Sure, days were long, and there was the typical grunt work that had to be done around the kennel to keep it looking nice and keep the training grounds usable but overall it was a good time. I got to do a lot of training, and my dog was advanced very quickly in his training and we were able to start running senior hunter hunt tests. I love the feeling of showing up on weekends full of that confidence that were are here to take down some tests and collect ribbons. I loved showing off Kirby’s “swag” and being one of the best dogs week in and week out. I got to go all around Minnesota running tests and meeting new people and getting to experience what the dog life was all about. I had no idea it was as involved as it is before I really got serious into training and found out about hunt tests and field trials.

As the summer came and went fall rolled around. I was asked to go on the winter trip starting at the end of October, but with a busy fall semester and of course hunting season, I pushed back my trip to January 1st. So I spent my fall doing school work, and hunting… And I mean hunting A LOT! I hunted probably four days a week. The only thing that would have made my season better was if I had had Kirby there with me picking up all my ducks and geese I shot.

Shoot, I almost forgot. I got my new puppy River the last week of October and was very excited to get started training her! She was a little pud when I brought her home and was such a ball of fire. She was going to be my real field trial dog. Her daddy won the 2014 National Amateur Retriever Championship and hopefully someday she can follow in his footsteps.

As the season changed from fall to winter I was getting the itch to head south. January couldn’t come soon enough! Finally the time had arrived! I packed my truck and headed to Monticello to pick up a couple puppies and supplies from the kennel and I was on my way out of the cold and snowy weather of the Midwest.

My journey was mostly uneventful, except for a couple days while traveling through the St. Louis area. I had to pick up a client dog just on the west side of St. Louis and was then going to get a hotel in the area to crash for the night before I finished the second leg of my trip the next day. Upon recommendation from a very nice police officer I was advised I probably shouldn’t stay overnight in that area of town. He recommended heading downtown St. Louis where there is a casino and quite a few hotels. The activity keeps it a pretty safe area of the city. He did warn me not to cross the river though to the east. That is when you start running into towns such as Ferguson where all the Michael Brown uproar took place. So, we stopped downtown and I aired dogs and got them all fed and watered. Finally I got done with them around midnight and headed up to bed. The next morning I was outside by 6:00 taking care of my dogs again when all of a sudden animal control arrived and wanted to seize custody of the four dogs I had with me. Apparently there is a city ordinance that prohibits leaving a dog inside and unattended vehicle. Now, it wasn’t 90 degrees outside, nor was it below freezing. It was about 50 degrees overnight and all the dogs were fine. They were left alone for 6 hours at most. I sweet talked my way out of any tickets or getting the dogs taken from me and was on my way again.

When I arrived in Georgia, rural, southwest Georgia, it was dark and very very muddy since they just had a lot of rain. My GPS took me down a wrong turn and took me in to some back field road that was flooded out and I almost buried my truck in a swampy area. Luckily I was able to back myself out and get back to the black top. A little more driving around down dirt roads and I finally arrived to winter camp in Georgia! Finally!!

I soon came to realize this winter trip would be nothing close to what working at the main kennel was like in the summer. We worked sun up, to sun down. Every single day. I was outside every morning by 6:45 by myself, starting puppy chores. I fed, and cleaned up after puppies alone every morning. Surprisingly just as I finished up with that the other two trainers happened to be walking out the door with a hot cup of coffee in each of their hand. No time for me to head back in for a short break as now it was time to take care of the big dogs. They aired for about half hour then I was on poop duty and had to go pick up dog crap for the next 15 minutes. Now it was time to go have a quick breakfast. Usually consisting of a bagel or some granola.

Around 9:00 the training started. I went and worked 12 puppies, doing obedience training and starting collar conditioning and getting them to retrieve. It was fun, for about the first 3 or 4 puppies, then it got to be annoying having puppies with muddy paws jumping all over and scratching and just being puppies. I couldn’t get mad because they didn’t know any better, they were, after all, just puppies. Around noon we would finish up our drill work and head out to the field to run marks with the big dogs. My main job was to sit out in a chair and throw birds for 26 dogs every single day. No big deal, I got a good tan, and got to spend a lot of time on my phone texting my family and trying to keep up with what was happening back home.

After a couple months my phone usage went down and I seemed to disconnect with reality more and more. I was getting burnt out and all I wanted to do was go back to bed. It got to the point where I began to just go through the motions and I quit giving a crap about my job, my dogs, and even my friends and family back home. I needed a pick me up. So I took a week off and flew back to Minnesota to see everyone and it was a very much needed break. When I was home I realized I had no clue what was going on in society. Working outside, all day, every single day really disconnects someone from reality and I couldn’t keep up with the news at all.  I felt refreshed and was ready for a strong push to finish off the winter trip.

I got back to Georgia and that feeling of refreshment went away after the first week. It was go time and training was getting grueling. We were in the field by 8:00 every morning now throwing marks and really hammering home concepts on these trial dogs as we were about to run the gauntlet of 6 weeks of trials every single weekend. No breaks, no days off. It was tough. We started off with three weeks of trials around our winter camp and then packed up and started the push home.

This is where the fun really started….. NOT. Going through the mountains in Tennessee and Kentucky with an overloaded F-150 was not a good idea. I had a large dog topper on my truck and was pulling an 8 hole dog trailer. The toll of winding roads, steep inclines and declines finally made my truck crack. As we were going 90 miles per hour down the interstate my front end started walking and throwing us back and forth on the highway. Luckily we were able to get stopped on time without a major wreck on our hands. A call to a tow truck and being lucky enough to find a mobile mechanic that could fix my truck that same night yet was a God send. The bearings in my front right hub were shot and the tire was about to fall off my truck. My CV joint busted and snapped my axel, my ABS sensor burnt up and locked all the brakes up on my vehicle and they all needed to be replaced. Needless to say, $1,500 in parts and labor later, we were able to get back on the road. On the bright side, I guess I now have a whole new front end on my truck. Always have to look at the good in things, or you’ll never survive. That’s one thing I am taking away from this whole experience.
The next day we made it to Paducah Kentucky to train. We ran a nice set up and the dogs did fairly well on it. In our rush to leave I had to turn around with my truck and this heavy trailer on some wet ground… Yep you guessed it. Buried. By this point in the trip I wanted to say F it all and drop the trailer and drive home. However, I stuck it out, we got the truck and trailer pulled out, and were able to finish off the rest of our trip to Sedalia, Missouri. From the start of this trip I had not hardly been on my phone, or did any sorts of accessing the internet or keeping up with any news or social media. I was pretty much oblivious to the outside world.

We stayed in Sedalia (about an hour east of Kansas City) for 8 days. Ran a trial on the weekend we arrived then stayed to train on some property all week before heading to Nebraska for the last trial of our winter trip. About this time the whole Baltimore riots began to heat up and here I was, sitting in rural Missouri and Nebraska, no idea what was going on.

When I arrived home that’s all I saw on TV and in the newspapers and all I heard about when people would talk. This is when I realized how much I had missed while not being active through social media, or being able to read a newspaper or watch more than a couple minutes of TV every few days. It was a real shock to me. And in all actuality. I loved it. I loved not having to hear about how shitty it seems our country is becoming. I loved not having to see the way human beings were acting like animals with no regards to anyone’s wellbeing or anything other than their own selfish actions.
While social media kept me in the loop in the beginning of my trip, I disconnected about halfway through and I’m glad I did. I realize now that I don’t need all this technology to survive. Or to function in this world. I liked the simplicity of the lifestyle I got to experience.


I guess I didn’t completely disconnect from all social media. I did use my phone to take a lot of pictures and those I will share. Most of them are all dog training related but being able to experience parts of the southeast that I would have never even thought of going to see was a really cool experience and probably one only I can say I did.




Saturday, April 11, 2015

We are coming to the end of our winter trip. Packing has started and preparation to leave has begun. We are leaving next week to head to Missouri to run the Kansas City Retriever Club field trial then train there for a week. After training in Missouri we are headed to Illinois to run the River King field trial before we finally head back to home base in Minnesota. Even though we are prepping to leave we are still hitting the training hard.

Here are some blinds we have run the past couple of weeks.

This first blind the objective was a long angle entry, drive over the first point and up over the second point as well. Then the goal was for the dog to swim down the shore parallel before it got out of the water for the end of the blind.

This blind I ran at the Snowbird Retriever Club field trial. A short angle entry, then dog has to clip the left hand point then the blind is at the end of the point on the right hand side. Very tough blind.

This next aerial picture is of a blind drill we ran called a "Tune Up Drill". The goal of this drill is to keep the dogs honest and balanced on their water attitudes. The dogs clip land on each of these blinds to teach them it is OK to get out of the water and get back in. This drill helps the dogs water attitude because they are run for multiple days and the dog can just run by the third day and hopefully do the blind very well without having to think too much about getting in trouble. Very low pressure drill.

The next picture is of the marks we ran today. The left hand mark was the go bird and it was a live shot flyer. The right bird was the memory bird angled back from one piece of land, over the water on to the next piece of land. Very tough bird for dogs to get.  The flyer was thrown left to right, and the memory bird was thrown right to left.

Sunday, April 5, 2015

I missed out on a few weeks of blogging but we have been extremely busy in preparation for a strong finish to our winter trip here in Georgia. Team Hidden Acres has place THREE dogs on the national derby list and we currently sit in 3rd place nationally for derby points by a professional kennel!! This is HUGE for us since we are only running 4 dogs. The top two kennels have 14 and 9 dogs respectively. We are competing against the toughest competition week in and week out. I think we are all ready to head back to Minnesota and get that success flowing back home! It will be great advertising cleaning up those ribbons in MN!

I have been running Kirby in the qualifying stakes and he is doing fantastic. Me on the other hand... Not so much. The last 4 trials we have run I have screwed up on the water blind and we haven't made it back to the 4th series. A lack of experience is all it is and we will work through it. Much more a team game than people think. We both have to be firing on all cylinders to make it happen.

I have been accumulating a lot of training pictures of our set ups that last couple of weeks and will share a few with you.

These are some marks we ran last week. Been doing a lot of cheaty water work. Dogs are really showing how hard we are working in training come trial day. The dogs never lie.





Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Great news from the Hidden Acres South kennels the past couple of weeks. We have put a dog on the derby list! Doc, our Golden Retriever received a 2nd place and a 3rd place last weekend and made the national derby list. It requires 10 points to make the derby list and Doc now has 13 points. We are having a great winter trip with the derby dogs. Doc is on the list, and the 3 others are all within 2 points of making it! Ice has 9 points and has one more week before she ages out of derbies so hopefully she can pick up that last point this weekend and make our second dog on the list. Clyde has 8 points and ages out in late August. Finally, Larry, has 8 points and ages out in May. This would be a HUGE accomplishment for us to go 4 for 4 with these derby dogs all making the list. Making the derby list with one dog is extremely difficult, and being this close with 4 is an extremely big accomplishment. We are just starting another young dog running derbies too. Eli, he is just barely over a year old so he has a long time to compete yet (can not be over 2 years old to run derbies).

I took a week of some much needed R&R this week and flew back to Minnesota to see my family and friends. This was much needed and will definitely give me a second wind to finish off our winter trip strong, both mentally, and physically.

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

We are on our third week in a row of trials. This week I am taking Kirby down to Miccosukee Florida to run the North Florida Qualifying on Friday. Marc is taking the derby dogs to Pavo Georgia to run the Tallokas deby on Friday, then on Saturday he is taking the derby dogs down to Miccosukee for the North Florida derby.

I have been getting into Kirby quite a bit this week as training standards needed to be raised and he is responding OK to it. Hopefully with the excitement and adrenaline of the trial he will be loosed up just enough to be on his game.

With the nice weather we have been having we are taking advantage of it and hitting the water pretty hard. We are running both water set ups and land set ups each day. Here are a few examples of what we did.

The first picture is a blind. The objective of this blind was for the dog to take a long angle entry into the water. There are three points of land in this blind that the dog/handler team needs to navigate. The first point is on the left just after the entry. The dog must swim past this point and through a channel of water. The next point is about halfway through the blind on the right side and the dog must swim past this point also. Finally, the third point is about three fourths of the way into the blind and the dog must get on the point, then get back in the water to finish the blind successfully. The qualifying level dogs were ran on this blind cold. The derby dogs had a white bucket marking the end of the blind.

 This was a water marking test we set up on Monday. The marks were thrown left (75 yards) right (150 yards) middle (300 yards). The dogs had to clip a sliver of water on the left hand bird. Then the right hand bird was thrown. Dogs had to fight factors of not squaring the bank to the left and ending up behind the gun, and not giving into the factor of swimming and cheat out early on the right side. Finally the middle bird was through the middle of the pond, drive up passed the right hand gun and go get the bird. Sounds easy, but was quite difficult because we retired this gun and he was not visible to the dogs when they exited the water. Was a very good test and would have been a real killer if it was ran as a true triple.

Saturday, February 28, 2015

Another busy week here in Georgia, as will be next week. We are on week 2 of a 3 week stretch with trials each weekend and a lot of traveling to each stake and back to the other to run all the dogs. This weeks trials are held in Americus Georgia, and Leesburg Georgia. While they are not far from our kennel down here there is constant running back and forth between the two trials. The Americus trial is being held by the Southwest Georgia Retriever Club. And the Leesburg trial is being held by the Tall Pines Retriever Club.

Yesterday was a big day for us here at the kennel. One of our very own placed 2nd in the Qaulifying stake and is now Qualified All Age. Congratulations to owner Mike Wilson, trainer Marc Patton, and the rest of the Hidden Acres crew on getting Dominator's Slapshot "Puck" qualified all age!

Today we start over again and I'm hoping to have a good day with Kirby and bring home some color too! Getting two young dogs qualified all age in the same weekend would be huge for us! Hopefully we get it done!

Wish us all luck! I'll be sure to post results tomorrow!

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

This week is a trial week for us so it is pretty busy. We are running a lot of set ups each day but they are confidence building set ups. A lot of singles and very few multiples are being thrown. We have four derby dogs that are running this weekend and they are all looking pretty good. It is a fine balance between getting the derby dogs prepared for the trial this weekend and keeping the qualifying dogs in check and tight enough for the preparation of next week's trial. With the big dogs we ran the same set of marks but we added a tough blind to run after the marks.

Kirby is looking pretty good, with the exception of his obedience. Due to the confidence building we are doing with the dogs his head has gotten a little big and he doesn't think we need to work as a team right now. So the next couple of days I will be focusing on keeping him in check and tone him down a bit. I am looking forward to our next trial as I am quite pleased with how Kirby is looking and would really be ecstatic with a Q win or 2nd place finish. This is very important to me as he would be one of only a handful of pointing labs to achieve QAA status and would be a very popular stud dog.

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

The truck is fixed and running well. So it was back to the training grind again today. We ran a cheaty water double and worked on having the big dogs swim down the shore. This means the dog will swim parallel to the shore and not cut out early to run the bank. This is a pretty difficult concept to teach because it is obviously quicker and easier for the dog to run than swim. Kirby did great on this double. A had very small hunt on both birds but he was quite honest and stayed in the water the whole way through the swim.

After running our marks we set up a double blind. We ran back across the same location we ran marks for influence to get the dogs to try to cheat the water and catch them with their hand in the cookie jar to get a good teaching opportunity in. Kirby has been running crummy blinds this last week or so because of the battle I had to get in with him. Today, he looked a little better. He ran well on the first blind. It was a land blind about 100 yards long and through a tight keyhole between a couple of trees. He lined this blind and had good momentum. The water blind was a sharp angle entry, and they had to fight through running water before they go to the swim down the shore. Most all of the dogs faded right towards shore while in the running water. Kirby was the same. So I had to handle him back into water. He tried squaring the bank, so I handled again. This was a good teaching day for the dogs.

Monday, February 9, 2015

The next few days will be pretty slow for us training here in Dawson Georgia. Our 14 hole chassis rig had some engine issues that needed to be taken care of. The injectors on it went bad and the truck wasn't operating efficiently and was blowing a LOT of white smoke which can't be good for the dogs to be breathing in all the time. So, the truck is in the shop and we are here to do drill work and run what we can for marks around the kennel property. We had some down time between trials so now was the time to take the small break in training. Hopefully we are up and ready to go by Wednesday and can get the dogs back in the swing of things.

The next trial we run is on the 20th of February. It is a derby, open, and amateur all age stakes trial. There is no qualifying meaning Kirby and I are not running in it. That's OK though since we are working through some issues that needed to be addressed and should be all ironed out by the next time we run.

With the highly competitive nature of field trials its pretty much a waste of your entry fee if the dog isn't on its game for that particular day. This is why it is so important to keep a well balanced dog in training. Don't let the dog get too high, or don't squash the dog with obedience and get it too low because then it will have a pukey attitude towards training and you will just get in a battle and not accomplish very much with the dog.

Here is a picture I promised of Kirby and me with his JAM ribbon from the first trial we ran last week.

 

Friday, February 6, 2015

The last couple of days have been a break down Kirby's attitude and get him back to respecting me as a trainer. I took him to the point yesterday where he wanted to quit working, but I forced him through it and made him finish the task at hand. It all started with him being hard headed and thinking he knew where the blind was planted better than I did. He started blowing off sit whistles and started auto casting. This is where he doesn't wait for me to cast him a direction, getting him closer to the blind, but decides he wants to go on his own and not work as a team with me. So, I broke him yesterday and really hounded him for every little bit of defiance he gave me while he was supposed to be sitting rock solid. His blind running will be horrible for the next week or two but it needed to be done.

On the other hand, his marking has been exceptional and he has been one of the top 3 dogs on the truck. This is exciting to me because marking is what wins trials. Blinds are usually pass fail and Kirby is a consistent and very good blind runner. His marking needs to be on point for us to win. And if he keeps this up, we will win before we head back to Minnesota.


Tuesday, February 3, 2015

My first field trial running the qualifying stakes went about how I expected it to go. Would I have liked it to go better? You bet. But hey it was a lot of fun and we came out with a ribbon. The first day we ran a land triple with a retired gun for the first series and this is where kirby and I dug ourselves a huge hole that we would have to be flawless to recover from. Kirby creeped about 6 feet out in front of me as the marks were going off and he only saw one bird thrown. He picked that bird up flawlessly then we had to struggle through picking up the other 2 birds. Good thing he runs fantastic blinds, I lined him up liked he would be running a blind and sent him on his way. He had a HUGE hunt on the flyer but finally prevailed and dug it out. The long middle bird he took a great line, made on loop and picked it up.

After that fiasco we snuck back in for the land blind. After running a great 3 whistle land blind we were back in it and called to the water blind. This was no cake walk of a blind but we did a great job on it and I was confident we would be back for the fourth and final series. I was pretty excited for this since kirby was the youngest dog in the trial and we were lasting longer than a lot of pros that have been running and training dogs for 20+ years.

The fourth series was a BIG water triple. After smacking the first two marks it was time to run the long retired gun that required a swim to the end of a lake. Kirby's initial line was looking good until the suction of a gun station pulled him off line and I had to handle. We ended up with a JAM (judges award of merit) in our first qualifying. I was pretty excited about this since we are new to the game and many of the dogs we were running against were 4 years old. Would I have liked to win it? You bet I would have. But I was content with green... Until next time. I WANT THAT FIRST PLACE BLUE.
 Pictures will follow when I get back to my computer.

Friday, January 30, 2015

You could say today sure was an interesting day. It started off with an early wake up to get all the dog chores done before we had to roll out for the trial we were attending today, tomorrow, and Sunday. Well, I got my chores done and left my dog Kirby out in the airing yard because I knew it would be a long day of being in his dog box on the truck and I was just letting him stretch out for a while. Well, after about ten minutes of him being out I hear a huge eruption of two dogs fighting. Kirby, and another male, got in to where there were four females in heat. With tensions at a high Kirby and the male got into a fight and Kirby, in simple terms, got his butt whooped. He came out with a puncture wound in his right lip, a small puncture wound on his muzzle, and a few small cuts around his left eye. His eye was OK, just around the eye was skinned up.

Well, after that was out of the way we finally arrived at the trial in Thomasville Georgia. The first series was a triple with a retired gun on the left and the right bird was a live flyer. With Kirby's adrenaline still pumping from his scuffle earlier in the day he proceeded to "creep" out on me approximately 6 feet or so. During this time birds were being thrown and Kirby was focused on one bird and one bird only. When it was time to send him he picked up the first bird clean. Time to send for the flyer station. This is where it all went to hell. Kirby had no idea where this bird landed and he backsided the gun station and hunted for what seemed like ten minutes! Finally he dug the bird out and we were on to bird number 3. Surprisingly Kirby did very well on this bird, picking it up after only a small hunt.

So after the first series in today's Qualifying stake I was feeling pretty low. Thinking I lost Kirby due to a dumb mistake I was ready to throw in the towel. Luckily, I was called back to run the second series land blind. With a near flawless, 3 whistle, blind we were on to the third series! The third series was a long water blind that crossed one point in the water, and the dog had to swim past another point. Kirby, again, ran a great blind. Working as a great teammate taking the casts I presented to him perfectly.

Now tomorrow is the real test. The fourth and final series! Kirby has to knock it out of the park to make up for his stumble in today's first series and we also need some help from some other dogs botching this last set up. Kirby was the youngest of 36 dogs to start the qualifying today. Now he is one of 13 left in the trial. I am ecstatic to be in the 4th series of our first ever qualifying. The only thing that will make it better is a red or blue ribbon!

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

This is a pretty busy week for us here in SW Georgia. We have a field trial competition coming up this weekend. It is a double derby/qualifying. The derby is a stake for dogs under 24 months old. In the derby stake you see the best young dogs in the country competing. The derby is typically made up of four series. The first series is a land double. The second series is also a land double. The third series we move to water and run a water double. Finally the fourth and final series, if you are good enough to make it there, you will run a land/water double, or a water double. The derby is designed to test pin point marking and natural ability of young dogs. The straightest line usually wins.

The qualifying stake is the next level up from derbys. In the qualifying stake the trial consists of four series. The first series is typically a land triple. The second series is a land blind. The third series is the water blind. And the fourth series is your water marks. Usually a triple again. Qualifying stakes are for more advanced dogs that have received more training. If you win or get second place in a qualifying stake you achieve being able to call your dog Qualified All Age or QAA. It takes a special dog to get to this level.

We head to Thomasville Georgia on Friday January 30th for the start of the trial. Since it is a double there will be two qualify stakes, and two derby stakes.

Sunday, January 25, 2015

In conjunction with our marks this week we ran multiple blinds. A blind is when there is a planted bird, or bumper, at a location unknown to the dog. As the handler it is your responsibility to get the dog to the destination. Blinds are a true test of obedience and extensive training. To do this you give the dog cue words such as, "dead", "good, right there" and to send the dog you give the command "BACK". To accomplish running a good blind it is your job to keep the dog as close to the line to the blind as possible. This is done with giving a whistle blast and a cast. A cast is a directional change you indicate to the dog with your hands. Some people also call casts or blinds hand signals. There are 6 main casts you can give a dog. A left or right back is straight up above your head. This is to get the dog to correct his line very minimally. The next casts are angled backs. Represented with a 45 degree angle between a straight back and an over. This gets the dog to make and even larger change in his direction. Finally, there is the over cast. This is a cast that is straight out to your side and the dog should make a 90 degree change in his course to the blind. Here are a few examples of blinds we ran this week.

This first blind was pretty straight forward. It was approximately 100 yards through a couple of cover changes. My dog Kirby lined this blind and didn't have to take and directional casts to change his initial line.

This next set of blinds were a little more difficult. There was a side hill on the right hand blind working as a factor against the dogs and they had to fight against it so they didn't cave one direction or the other. The left side blind was down through a valley, and back up the hill then drive past the top, over a road, and through a field to get to the end. Kirby took 2 casts on the right hand bird, and one cast on the left hand blind. Very good work out of him this day.


This set of three blinds was tough on some of the dogs. The right and middle blind had what we call a "key hole" slot to run through. The right blind had two bushes on each side of the line the dogs had to go through. This blind was about 75 yards. Kirby took one cast. The middle blind was through a key hole in 4 small trees. It was about 125 yards. Kirby lined this blind. The last blind was an angle across a road and tight to a round hay bale on the right. This was a 250 yard blind. Kirby also lined this blind.

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

This weeks training we ran big set ups with the marks being pretty tight. What I personally worked on with Kirby was an issue we call head swinging. When there is a double being thrown, one bird, then another bird from a different location, Kirby has the issue of looking away from the first bird before it lands and he gets a good mark on it. He "head swings" over to the other gun station to try to see that bird right away. To correct this I really reinforced my obedience standards and used a "sit" momentary stimulation with the electronic collar "sit" and made him stare at the first bird for a long time before I moved him to look at the second bird. Here are some of our set ups.


In this set up the left hand gun was situated so the left hand bird was about 125 yards away, the middle bird was 115 yards, and the right hand gun threw the right bird at a distance of approx 200 yards. The order was, middle bird as a single. The right hand bird thrown as a memory bird in a double with the left hand bird being the "go" bird. The key here was to get the dog to run through an old fall area and keep on going to the long gun station to pick up the long bird.



This next set up was a water set up we ran. The far left bird was about 225 yard. The middle bird 150 yards, and the right hand bird 100 yards. The middle and right birds were thrown as a double. The right hand bird being the go bird. The goal of the right hand bird was to get the dog to swim parallel to a peninsula in the water and drive up the hill to pick up the bird. The middle bird, the memory bird, the goal was for the dog to swim past a small point and take an angle entry and exit of the water and not to cheat the water by running the bank. The long left bird was pretty simple and the dog and to run down a hill through a valley and back up to get the bird. Most young dogs fade with the terrain and get lost and don't pick the bird up without help.


Saturday, January 17, 2015

Introduction Post


This blog will consist of retriever field trialing, and hunt testing setups, and techniques. I will be posting our training setups we run in the field, and the yard work we do around the kennel. There will be instructional pictures that show what each setup is and what the goal of the setup to be achieved was. The majority of the posts will be pertaining to my two personal dogs, Kirby, and River. Kirby is at the finished level so he will be my example of the big dog work, and River is 4.5 months old so you will get a good picture on how to raise a dog from puppy stages to the end goal of being, what we refer to in the game of being a "big dog". I also will try to post a tip from the trainer at least 3 times a week pertaining to companion/pet animal training.

Due to timing of our training schedules the majority of my posts will come late at night, or early in the mornings. If there are questions for me to field please be patient and allow some time before I post a response. I will try to get back to any inquiries as soon as I can.

Christopher Nemitz