My wonderful dog

Chico was right on the money today, two out of three times. Our Jumpers run was slowish (0.96 seconds under the standard course time), but clean and within time, so we got a Q. Our run in round one of Performance Speed Jumping was also clean, so we got another Q – one of the two we need to go play that game at Cynosport – and a chance to proceed to round two, where the prize money is awarded. Practically, what that means is we have to almost immediately run another course. Ooops. I hadn’t bothered to look at it because I didn’t think we’d be in the running, so to speak. I also took a little too long putting Chico in the car so I missed all but the last forty-five seconds or so of the walk through. In other words, I was massively under-prepared for round two’s run. And that showed. At the start line, I had no dog. He wandered off, and in the process of coming back, he idly took a jump, starting us out as eliminated by an off course. But I gathered him and took off running and got most of the course, including two nice sets of weave poles, before we fell apart again at the end. As we left the ring, I gave a big “Thank you” to the judge for letting us run at all; someone complimented me on “a good recovery,” I said, “Thank you,”and we headed out for home.

We’re entered again on Sunday, with a day off Saturday. After the farmers’ market I’ll meet a neighbor with a common interest in micro-hydro power to look at my house as a possible site for a teeny turbine in the river. It’s not a great spot for solar, but good heavens, there used to be a water powered mill in my building, you’d think we could come up with something.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

The snow is almost over

Or that’s how I read the radar at NOAA website, so we’re off to Manchester to do a little USDAA agility. P3 Jumpers and Performance Speed Jumping (PSJ). If we can get two qualifying runs between now and like, August, we can go to the USDAA nationals, Cynosport, in Tennessee this October.

When I was goal setting for 2015, I set the goal of going to Cynosport with Chico before he retires. He’s got a couple, maybe even three years of competition left, barring injury, and it would be a nice tribute to how far he’s come for us to make it to the nationals.

So, here we go, off to see if this meeting with a PSJ course goes any better than the previous ones. Since Chico just spent ten days with Julie and in class the other night ignored some jump cues to go weave instead, this ought to be fun.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Oh dear, where did Can I Bring the Dog get to?

Last week I went on a trip where there was, for all practical purposes, no internet available to me. Chico stayed with Julie and her dogs, and some other board and train visiting dogs.

I heard by text that when a reactive, scared, dog showed up for board and train, Chico appointed himself Household Ambassador and welcomed the new guy with (as it were) open arms.  Julie said Chico’s behavior said: “Hey, you’re new here – let me show you around.”  That news just plain . . . Made. My. Day.

Chico also cut his leg on Friday and the next morning tried to convince Julie that he was dying, hopping around on three legs . . . until she opened a can of his favorite food and asked him to follow the spoonfuls to both sides, then a few steps, then around the room . . . suddenly he was miraculously healed, able to bear weight on all four feet and to walk just fine.

So we’re watching it.

Me, I spent last week on the aging cruise ship Norwegian Pearl, listening to as much as I could of about forty different performers who were on stage for a floating music festival called Cayamo. My first cruise, and last for, well, quite a while because “never” is a very long time and I don’t want to be too strong, but the cruising part of it didn’t quite fit – it rubbed at me in a few place like shoes that were a bad decision. The trip was with my wonderful cousin Lisa (read about my visit to her house in San Diego two winters ago here and here), so it was impossible for me to not have fun; and the music was fantastic. And a week without long-johns or dirty dishes to do; what’s not to like?

We stopped on Saint Barts and Saint Croix for a few hours each.

I saw one little fluffy dog on St. Barts and no dogs at all on St. Croix, but I did see this bar on St. Croix.

P1030612Anyhow, we’re all at our respective homes now, there’s a big snow predicted for tomorrow, the work on my house has started, and I’m hoping Chico’s injury is better enough by Friday for us to play USDAA down in Manchester. And that the weather permits – they’re speaking of more snow for Friday, so the leg might not be an issue. The power company called to say I ought to expect to lose power this storm, so I’m off to fill the bathtub with flushing water.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

If you knew Chico when…

he came to me, you would fully understand why I am going to make this brag in public.

Last evening I went to the local conservation commission to describe some of my plans for the remodel of the mill. The meetings are in a public building, with no food served, so I took Chico with me. He did a very good down-stay for the whole time (oops, he did go on a small walkabout while I was talking to the group instead of monitoring him, but came back at a soft call of his name and resumed his position next to me on a hand signal). When I left I called him to go and the secretary of the meeting looked up and said, “There’s a dog here? I didn’t even know he was here. What’s his name? I will put it in the minutes as an attendee.”

How many ways is this wonderful for us? My formerly pushy, barky dog went un-noticed in a meeting where people came in after us (That’s often a trigger. “They were not here before, they do not belong now. Look out! Danger!). His name is now in the public record as attending a town commission meeting. And our friend Chelle Miller bragged to her fellow commissioners that Chico has one of the commissions’s Hikin’ Herons patches.

I attribute this developed self control to our agility work. Compared to having me walk away from him on the crowded start line at the trial the other day, lying quietly beside me at a meeting is a piece of cake.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Gotcha Day walk and a little about UKI

Chico’s Gotcha Day was clear and cold and windy, but at the warmest part of the day we bundled up and  took the Chico and Sophie for a walk.

Louise wore an inherited mink coat (which I hear really is a very warm solution to winter weather) and I was so delighted that she dressed for the occasion, I had her model:

Is that the perfectly perfect winter look for rural New England or what?

Is that the perfectly perfect winter look for rural New England or what? Mink coat, Boggs boots with heavy-duty grippers, and a fur-trapper hat.

Chico, for Chico, likes Sophie.

She's respectful of his space.

She’s respectful of his space.

And that respect allows Chico to let Sophie get close to him, and me.

And that respect allows Chico to let Sophie get close to him, and me.

We walked, we chatted, the dogs smelled things. It was relaxing and nice.

The wind did fun things with fresh snow that had fallen atop a layer of ice, carving out shiny spots in the matte snow layer.

This was the neatest thing like that we saw.

This was the neatest thing like that we saw.

Early Sunday Chico and I went to Sure Fire Dogs in Nahua, NH and tried another organization’s agility trial. This was UKI, United KIngdom International. and the courses were indeed international style. I made a plan for the course in each of five of classes I signed us up for. I was only able to even try to execute one (where we ran out of time before completing). The other times we hit the ring there was a big, fat, sloppy, hot mess for our allowed time. Dog refusing to stay on the start line; dog refusing to leave the start line; dog smelling every corner of the ring; dog visiting the judge; dog leaving the ring; dog running past jumps. On one run, Chico missed the opening jump, so the timer didn’t start. After a while of watching us struggle, someone said, “The timer isn’t running.” I said, “Thank you. We’ll get out of here now,” and ran a short course to the out gate. On run five we pulled things together a little, but we were still slow, and it was a Masters Challenge Jumpers course and the buzzer went off after eighteen and there were still two obstacles.

 

Here’s ours scores:

Senior Agility Anne Riecken Chico 51 sec E

Senior Jumping Anne Riecken Chico 41 sec E

Senior Speedstakes Anne Riecken Chico 40 sec E

Senior Masters Series Jumping Anne Riecken Chico E

Senior Masters Series Agility Anne Riecken Chico E

But I got at least two really good sets of weave poles during the day, and was smart enough to know I had a sticky, sticky, sticky dog that day and handled appropriately. We met a new venue and managed to overcome some of its challenges. I’m pleased for us.

And would I do it again? Yup. The courses were challenging. They were things that at Julie’s I might have to do them a few times to really nail ’em. At many trials, I look at the course and go, aww heck, we could nail that at Julie’s, the challenge is the trial setting. These courses were hard in themselves. I liked that. Do I feel better about having trouble when the course is hard too? Maybe.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Gotcha Day

Five years ago today, I drove to the Danbury Fair Mall in Danbury, Connecticut, met my sister, put Chico and his crate and toys and food in my car, and came home.

I had no idea what to do about having a dog, and I wasn’t going to keep him anyhow, because 1) as a renter I didn’t think I could keep him and 2) I didn’t like him enough to try to keep him. In DC, he was intrusive, loud, and impossible to walk on a leash. He barked like a maniac at everything passing the house, so he stayed in the back part of the house except to go in the back yard or snuggle with my niece. There didn’t seem much point in having him around.  But it soon became clear that no one else especially wanted a dog like that either.

On January 26, I was at Julie Daniels place looking for help. Sophie was a problem when she came to N&L and they advised going to  “this really nice lady in North Sandwich who helped us a lot,” so I went to see her. That nice lady, Julie Daniels, spent two and a half hours with us (a private lesson is normally an hour), taught me a lot of things, advised I try something called “agility” with Chico, gave me homework and hope. Then, as we were leaving, Chico shot out the door. I said “My vet and that Caesar Milan guy on the TV both say I should always go through the door first to maintain status over my dog. What do you think about that?” Julie’s answer was, “I think that’s a bunch of hooey. But he also shouldn’t do what he just did.”

She had me bring Chico inside, ask him to sit and wait beside me and open the door. Chico shot out again. Julie pushed my leash arm back to my side and quickly closed the glass door; leaving him standing outside in the cold on a short leash (no exploring on his own). “Don’t look at him.” I didn’t. In about a minute and a half, she told me he was thinking and I could bring him back in. I did. I asked for sit and wait, I opened the door, he rushed out, we shut the door on him again. This time it only took him about thirty seconds to think he might have made the wrong move. Back inside. “Sit. Wait.” I opened the door and instead of charging outside, Chico turned his head and looked at me to see what I was going to do. Less than five minutes. No coercion. No rough stuff. No bribing. The dog made his own, good, decision. I was instantly sold on this woman’s training methods. As you can tell, because we’re still going to her to learn more.

It’s been so interesting getting to know this funny guy, helping him manage is pathology better, learning through that to better manage my own. Chico has gained composure and social skills, I have developed a tolerance – almost a fondness – for exercise; in our own ways we have both made friends, we’ve done a lot of traveling that I might not have done without a buddy.

Here’s one of my first, and still treasured, pictures of Chico:

I call this Chico at the Wheel.

I call this Chico at the Wheel.

I was packing up the car for errands: bags for the dump, shopping basket, library books to return – many trips from house to car. At a certain moment, I didn’t see Chico. Terrified that I had already lost him, I looked everywhere until I found him in the driver’s seat of my car with an expression that said “I see you putting many important things in the car. Please do not forget the most important thing. Me.”

I love this dog so much, we are so very much supposed to be together. As of today, he has spent half his life with me, and it has meant the world to me. We’ll do our Gotcha Day thing – take a walk some place where we don’t usually go – because what better birthday present is there for a dog than a bunch of new smells? I invited Sophie and her people because Chico tolerates Sophie pretty well (when I am present, he is not very good at actually liking any other dog, even ones he adores when I am absent); and, without that good advice from her humans, I don’t know where Chico and I would have ended up, but I doubt it would have been in this happy place.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

More about the marathon agility weekend

Last Friday Chico and I went to All Dogs Gym and did some USDAA agility. We did a jumpers run that was really nice… except for some reason at two points Chico elected to take the backside of the jump (which is the hard way) – with video I might be able to figure out what I did to make him think that was what I wanted, without video, I am still clueless as to what I did wrong. Yes, I’m sure it was me because 99% of the time, Chico does exactly what I tell him to. We also tried Performance Speed Jumping again where I got in a fancy blind cross that I thought was the right thing, that almost no one else did, and got the next obstacle but didn’t realize that I had set the wrong line with my cross and Chico went charging off in exactly the direction my feet said we were going and off course over the wrong jump. Ooops.

Since I was the hospitality committee for the Agility Club of NH trail at American Canine Country and needed to be twenty minutes away from Friday’s trial site at 7 AM, I took a room in Manchester (rather than drive two hours home and two hours back). The LaQunita in Manchester is just fine, thank you very much, and they have sausage patties at the breakfast bar. I don’t care for them, but Chico sure does.

Saturday morning we had our Jumpers and Standard runs. Jumpers was a very nice run, all clean, all on course.

Standard was going very well until the end when I didn’t set a line to the triple jump after the A-frame. Julie was watching and she said I was wrong to call him back because he went exactly where I sent him. Darn.

That night it snowed and then rained, it was quite good to be twenty minutes from the trial instead of two hours away. Sunday morning’s Jumpers run was nice save for Chico running around jump eleven.  It wasn’t 100%-smooth support on my part, but I did have the sense to just carry on instead of making him have a ‘do over.’

And the second run of Sunday, the wild and crazy Standard run, that I already shared with you in my last post. At that point Chico had spent a lot of time in the car (we did quite well in Connecticut the weekend before when we left the trial for a while, took an off-leash walk, did some errands, got a coffee and came back) for three days, a lot of time around other dogs for three days, and ten minutes with a friend while I walked the course. He was a very sticky dog and I did things that require independence. The way he jumped off the teeter as I did my blind cross – that was a hyper sensitive reaction to my movements and I didn’t see it coming, though I could have if I had more quickly synthesized the data from the previous days and half-hour. Oh well, Chico had fun and I learned more about our team’s weaknesses.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Non-qualifying runs predominate

I put up a lot of our brags because I am proud of Chico and of what we have done together. But it’s not all glory, believe me. This weekend we did agility on three days. Six competition runs, one of them qualifying. Here’s what is being sent to the American Kennel Club about our Saturday and Sunday runs:

Chiquito Mi Amorsito. MA08389401. 01-10-05. D (Male). Breeder: Unknown. By
Unknown & Unknown. All-American. Owner: Anne Riecken,  South Tamworth, NH. Chico. Handler: Anne Riecken.

1/3/2015
Excellent Preferred JWW – 16 Inch – Judge: Christie Bowers
Distance: 158 yards  SCT: 47 seconds
Score: 100 (Q)  Time: 35.81 seconds  1st Place

Excellent Preferred Standard – 16 Inch – Judge: Christie Bowers
Distance: 193 yards  SCT: 72 seconds
Eliminated  Time: 59.19 seconds

1/4/2015
Excellent Preferred JWW – 16 Inch – Judge: Christie Bowers
Distance: 159 yards  SCT: 47 seconds
Eliminated  Time: 38.76 seconds

Excellent Preferred Standard – 16 Inch – Judge: Christie Bowers
Distance: 180 yards  SCT: 68 seconds
Eliminated  Time: 62.40 seconds

I have video of all the runs. Two of the “eliminated” runs are really, really nice, but there’s one mistake that keeps us from meeting the AKC agility definition of “perfect” which is what we need at Excellent level to have a qualifying run; one of them goes completely off the rails. So let’s start with that one, huh? Why not. I barely have a dog at the start line, he pulls out of the poles after ten of the twelve and you can see me deflate (SO not-right reaction!), we make the course through the A-frame and I call tire when I mean table and things go to poo for a while. Actually, for most of the rest of the run it is Chico doing one thing and me doing another, though we manage to reconnect at the end.

Chico had fun out there, doing what he wanted; and he had been at trials three days in a row, two of them with an exceptionally large amount of waiting; and I had the nerve to leave him with someone he knows while I walked the course. Threw his routine all off. Ooops. Something to work on, I guess, though the familiar routine of being in the crate in the familiar car until pretty much until the last moment does allow him to be more relaxed and better concentrate on me.

More video and stories from the trials soon.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Good start to the day

image

We did well in Jumpers this morning. Great weave poles, good connection in the ring, happy proud dog after. Yay.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Exit 46 off I95 in Connecticut

Interstate 95, I95, along the eastern seaboard is a road that pretty much plain old stinks for driving, if you ask me. Traffic, cities, construction; delay, delay, delay. Just south of New Haven, at exit 46, are a few things that almost redeem this unpleasant section of the US interstate highway system. The Long Wharf food trucks (google it). A wildlife area. A memorial for people who fought in  Vietnam. An IKEA.

For me, these food trucks are the closest place to home (that I know) to get a really good taco. When passing by, I stop in if I can muster any appetite at all. This was a three day trip to the area, with agility on Saturday and Monday. On Sunday, I headed for tacos, an off leash walk, and a little kitchen cabinet perusing.

My two tacos ($1.50 each; one lengua and one carne asada) were so delightful and came so fast (before I could put away my change) that they disappeared before I even thought about a picture. The same for the churro in which I indulged. And, appropriately, Chico likes churros.

Then we went for a walk in the nature area. Marsh land, right by the water, room for a dog to sniff and wander.

Marsh land, right by the water, room for a dog to sniff and wander.

But when I turn around,

I 95 is right there.

I 95 is right there.

The place is beautiful, despite some trash.

Marshes

They make a matted path.

The flattened rushes make a matted path.

There was room for Chico to have an attack of the zoomies. I only caught the very last of it, but here it is:

The shoreline showed good bio diversity – clams, scallops, mussels, and oysters were all represented in the shells. To me, that’s a sign of clean water. And that’s a good sign.

Broken shells and goose poop. That’s my main memory of the war memorial. The pavement near the monument is a great place for a gull to drop-smash a clam for easy eating.

IKEA is about to make a complete change over from one kitchen cabinet system to another, and what I found at the store was large sections of the kitchen section closed off with drapes, like when a museum is setting a new exhibit, and a paltry selection of the old style cabinets. So, I guess I won’t be making any decisions in that area for a while. The new line of cabinets becomes available February 2, one presumes that the wraps will be dropped that day and kitchen shopping can begin.

It was a lovely break in a weekend of long days (on Saturday, I arrived at the trial at 6:45 AM, left at 8:45 PM, and was not one of the last to run), and I learned that when I go kitchen shopping, it will be a some off time when no one else is at IKEA. Sunday afternoon after christmas is not such a time.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment