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.

1 comment:

  1. Your blog post is very interesting to me this week because my lab loves the water and it is interesting to see what you do with your dog as far as patterns go. My lab Brooke loves to jump off the dock more than anything in the world. She is very good at it too, gets some major distance!

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