Lance was also entered in the trial this Saturday. He did one round of CDSP utility and another of APDT Rally level 3. And then he scared the crap out of me.
Obedience
Due to his still healing hot spot I had him wear a harness in the obedience ring:
Signals- No moving after left on the stand!
Articles- Didn't seem to know what he was doign when sent, but then spotted the pile and quickly worked it. Dropped it twice coming back to me, near my feet.
Directed Jumping- 1st go out he went to the tape mark and then didn't sit. 2nd one he again went to the tape but did sit.
Gloves- this judge liked the glove VERY close together (about 7ft!) but Lance did both sends without an issue.
Stand- no moving again!
And that was our 3rd leg to get our UD-C title!
Rally:
I thought Lance was moving weird in the harness so I put on a really thin and lightweight collar that hung low enough to not hit his hot spot when off leash.
I thought he did a nice job, especially after the first sign when I caught him off guard on the 270 left because he broke eye contact with me. We had to redo the send to jump since Lance didn't go out to it the first time, and on the recall over jump he again needed a 2nd cue to come. There were two backing up exercises in a row, first in heel, then in front; so Lance got to yell at me about that.
Scariness
When getting ready to leave the trial I suddenly noticed that I had a FAT corgi. Lance's belly was extended big time. I then remembered that before going into the rally ring Lance was really wanting water badly and was acting a bit weird, but I shook it off to not having enough time to do a warm up. After we came out of the ring I offered him water and he wanted to drink a ton but I cut him off. Then I must not have zipped up the crate far enough as a few minutes later I noticed Lance poking out and licking the now empty water dish. So when I took Lance out 20min after the disappearing water trick he was a giant. Luckily there were two nice vet techs there who examined Lance and didn't think it looked like bloat since his stomach was squishy and he didn't have any other signs. A call to my vet also suggested waiting since corgis are not known for bloating and he wasn't showing the typical signs anyway. I took Lance home and had to block off access to our water fountain as he was still wanting more water. While his stomach remained huge all night, Lance didn't vomit, didn't have diarrhea, wasn't restless (other than wanting water), and had a soft belly. In the morning he seemed much better but his belly was still slightly extended.
I have no idea what the corgi did. It also makes me think that he might not have been feeling well during both of his runs. He certainly was showing signs right before rally although I don't think he was bloated yet.
Vito has his CDX-C! But most importantly he was HAPPY! Vito was entered in 2 runs at the CDSP trial today.
Open Run #1:
I am so proud of him! He showed some stress as we walked into the ring and tried to get him set up, but as soon as I stepped off he forged!!! We've been working hard on setting up and charging off so I'm very excited about his response. I know I'll have to fix the charge later but that should be a much easier issue with him. The rest of the set ups I had no problem with and he was an eager partner. I loved that he had enthusiasm when he saw the judge had his dumbbell and had good speed on the retrieves. The go out was ridiculous but cute :) He was just certain that something was out there for him to retrieve! I was shocked when we got called back in the ring as a qualifier, something about doing the principle part of the exercise...!
Open Run #2:
I still had some difficult getting Vito set up at the start, and this time he heeled with me instead of charging off. Right at the halt he looked away (at the judge?) and then missed me stopping. I gave him a cue to heel but he just stared at me. In hind sight I should have given my left finish hand signal. The heeling was nice but I felt like I was in the verge of him wanting to lag. After the broad jump he didn't want to jump up on me like I asked, but did when I repeated the cue. The rest of the exercises he performed nicely but without the attitude he seemed to have in the first run. But the go out was much better :)
Today really gave me hope for future trialing. I think that we will limit ourselves to only 1 run a day though, just to keep his enthusiasm as high as possible.
"Running contacts = rabbit hole!!" That quote by Shenna about sums up my knowledge quest on running dog walks. I audited the Daisy Peel seminar on the subject in the morning and then worked Vito in the afternoon session. So many more questions now!
Going into the seminar I knew Daisy's method had evolved since she started with Silvia's, but I still wasn't prepared for some of the huge core differences. I find it fascinating that both methods are capable of taking the dog to the same place.
I think Daisy's focus on location over speed in the training process would have been a huge benefit for Lance. It would have been interesting to see if letting Lance go slow when he was unsure at certain points in our training would have resulted in that ideal image of a RDW that I was looking for. I am almost debating trying the corgi again on the dogwalk, but then I think someone should slap me for putting the poor corgi through another retrain.
As for Vito....no idea what to think. He was super excited to demonstrate his running dogwalk but didn't demonstrate the best criteria according to my standards and worse according to Daisy's in the 2 attempts he did in the beginning. Vito did hit the yellow both times, and the 2nd attempt was in even on the smaller USDAA zone, but he wasn't driving as much as usual so his hind legs weren't split. My thoughts/excuses: 1) It was a VERY crowded space to put a dogwalk that barely squeezed the two tunnels in and Vito hasn't had much experience with all that wall pressure, especially when I had to decelerate or run into the tunnel myself. 2)Vito hasn't seen a non rubberized dogwalk in ages. 3) I was nervous, and there were a ton of people watching and while he seemed completely fixated on his tennis ball he might have also been feeling pressure from the crowd as he tends to do.
After the 2 dogwalks, Daisy had us break while they lowered the dogwalk for everyone else. I'm not sure if she forgot to bring us back out at that point or what, but we then had to wait 2hrs for our next turn. On the lowered dogwalk he did fine so she had us work on turns which is what I was really curious to discuss. I haven't worked on turns in almost 12 months, ever since we moved and access to the dogwalk became difficult. Daisy is very anti toy in training running contacts so had us use a manners minder once the jump moved to an angle difficult for him.
Vito is not a very food motivated dog but he does love the robot. Unfortunately I knew that Vito would never RUN to it. I cringed during our turn training as Vito trotted down the plank to the MM although I could see where going slow would teach the dogs clearly that going to the end of the board was important. But I almost wanted to die when during the next session she had Vito do the full dogwalk to the manners minder for turns. Vito has NEVER trotted across a dogwalk since we started on a RDW as a puppy. Going the opposite direction from the MM he slowly came to the tunnel and going towards it he went faster but still didn't break out into a run.
See for yourselves, 1st is Vito working on increasing angles targeting a jump with ball as reward, at 47sec it switches to increasing MM angles, and at 1:48 it switches to full height dogwalks:
This past weekend I have been auditing a Lori Michaels agility seminar at my club. She is such a nice person and I love her philosophy of not caring at all how people handle something as long as they execute it well!
I picked up some new ideas for teaching dogs to keep bars up and collect even when excited by their handler's motion. Collection isn't Vito's issue, but watching the work I realized that switching back into extension/RUNNING is a big issue for him so I asked Lori about ideas. She directed me to Silvia Trkman's cik/cap work which I have been meaning to do for awhile but has been stuck on that "to do" list. But just spending a little bit of time during the lunch break working on wraps and running out of them seemed like it could really help us. I don't know if I'll systematically go through the work of increasing heights although I certainly plan on working the sprinting out portion.
On Sunday I decided to pick up a working spot on handling skills with Vito. It was both good and bad:
Bad- Vito definitely noticed Lori and some other people standing on the edges of the course as we started walked to the start line and set up.
Good- Vito didn't bark or run up to them
Bad- Our initial start routine sucked each and every turn. Vito stretched, yawned, did some scratching one time, and didn't want to do his tricks. Stressed Vito who was capable of walking up and doing and looking at me but not much else.
Good- after stopping to give him his ball or to restart, Vito would very happily tug with his toy and would happily start again within each round and with good speed. He even screamed a few times.
Good- Running Contacts. Of course I chose to cheat on the one course where it was the far end of the tunnel and just did the straight exit to keep him happy. But on the other course I was further behind than I usually am and he still accelerated to the next obstacle and let me rear cross.
I am not sure where to go with Vito and his start line anymore. In practice he is mostly good but there are still some runs where he can be sluggish off the start. I thought I found a trick he liked, reverse chest vault, but Vito wouldn't do it today when asked. I already don't lead out with him and try to push back on his chest when waiting; he doesn't like being fully restrained. Lori suggested I teach him to bark/scream and I actually just started doing that this past week. It has been surprisingly difficult!
I am struggling to apply what was discussed in Vito's obedience lesson about similar issues to the agility ring where I usually want him in obstacle focus for at least that first obstacle.
Read more...
Lance is such an easy going and happy dog that he is easy to overlook especially when the Toller's issues takes precedence. Thank you for being one of those elusive normal dogs!
Unfortunately, Lance is still recovering from his bad hot spot. It didn't start improving with the zinc cream or antibiotics until we added prednisone to the mix. Lance was finally able to start lying down on Thursday but is still hiding in a crate all day. At least I know it won't be too much longer of sad corgi, but we will have to miss the obedience trial we had planned for tomorrow :(
Fiona has moved on with her job in life. Today she is going to the state prison to be finish up her training.
Close It
I have to say that I have really enjoyed puppy raising her and am
afraid I'm going to be disappointed with all the future dogs I puppy
raise. She is bossy, high drive, and loves to work. She is
athletically built and has all the makings to be a great sports dog. I even taught her an awesome 2o2o on the aframe and dogwalk, although she hasn't done the full obstacle yet!
Unfortunately
the drive that I love could make it difficult to place her
as a service dog. The majority of clients on our waiting list want and
need a much calmer dog. The life for most service dogs isn't an active
on the go job. Most public outings consist of the dog doing long stays
under a table at a restaurant, a conference table, the pew at church...
While her love to work would be a great use as a mobility dog, most
people do not keep dropping pens all day long. Luckily
for her, Fiona has a great nose and a huge love for the scent work games
we play for diabetic alert work. This broadens up her pool of potential
clients, giving her the greater potential of finding someone with a more
active lifestyle.
One of the reasons she is going to prison is so she can continue diabetic alert training. She is doing fantastic with the start I have given her, but now she is ready for the next stage of doing more random "real life" low scents rather than in the context of a training session. With my schedule I am unable to work on that in the home and prison life can easily provide that next step of training for her.
The next stage for Fiona is not a guarantee that she will make it through the program. Fiona still has to pass her xrays and CERF tests, as well as behavioral. While her behavioral issues of being a submissive wuss has continued to improve and there are no longer any episodes of self doubt occurring at home, the issue still lurks. Currently, Fiona will only cower if she has to go to the bathroom. At those times, any command given other than walking nicely and waiting at a door has the potential to cause her to flatten herself and then pee if pushed. The issue is non existent if I simply potty her before any training session or just keep an eye on the clock.
Vito won't miss her. But he does a great job of tolerating her, and if stuck in a close space with her, such as the car or cubicle, he even lets her do a tiny bit of cuddling. Lance seems to like her but doesn't play with her much anymore. He definitely hates how rough she plays.
I was organizing her videos and came across this one from January when she was 9 months. What a nut!
He has a gigantic hot spot on his neck and has spent the last few days playing musical kennels. Lance's version is spending all day sitting in the kennel, not lying down, and occasionally going to sit in Fiona's.
Pre Shave
He has been giving me death stares when we have to apply ointment to it but to his credit he hasn't even tried to snap even though he must really be hurting.
Lance went to the vet today to have the area shaved and to get some antibiotics. I had Adam take him but ended up having to drive down to hold him for the shaving. The corgi had enough and wouldn't hold still so they were going to have to sedate him since there's not an easy way to restrain for a neck shave. Luckily when I arrived he let me hold his head. And then went and hid behind the potted plant. The poor guy didn't even come out for dinner tonight until after Fiona and Vito had some training and I had to coax him out :(
This blog is about life with my 3 dogs. It's mainly to keep track of my training with the dogs and my exploration into the world of competitive obedience, agility, disc dog, and trick training. We reside outside of Minneapolis, MN.
Train With Me!
I offer online private lessons, online group classes, and in person lessons! Find out more by visiting my official training page, Tandem Dog Sports
Fenzi Dog Sport Academy
Lance the Corgi
Lance is my first dog, born April 2007. We faced early retirement due to an injury but Lance enjoyed playing in obedience, rally, and agility. He got me hooked on dog sports.
(photo by Sarah Beth Photography)
Vito the Toller
Vito was born on Halloween 2008. We currently compete in agility and are slowly making our way back to the obedience ring. Vito is making me into a better trainer every step of the way.
(Photo by Great Dane Photography)
Zumi the Duck
Born October 2014, Zumi is adventuring into the agility world and competitive obedience. We are working on some over arousal issues!
Luke the Kitty
Luke is a 10yr old kitty who finds his greatest joy in tormenting Lance. He also loves to wrestle with the fosters, cuddle with his tollers, and steal as much food as possible through trash can raiding and chewing holes in pockets.