Agility Club of New Hampshire trial

Last weekend the agility club I belong to, Agility Club of New Hampshire, held a trial at American K9 Country. I was on the trial committee* so I entered us for Standard and Jumpers both days.

As part of on going efforts to help with the weave poles in public problem, Chico and I went to run thrus at AK9C on Friday. I took lots of the very best treats and after a very slow start (I had nothing at first, finally someone shouted “Just start running!” and I did and Chico came along), the rewards helped build drive and, eventually, Chico managed to start to run through the poles like he can at Julie’s and I was able to play Mommy Warbucks with the most divine of all goodies.

But on Saturday, we still managed very little connection, and Chico couldn’t weave.

At the end of the day, I was sitting and chatting with a nice woman and her itty-bitty little sheltie (really, he was a diminutive example of the breed, not more than 12 or 15 pounds I bet). She asked if Chico was good with dogs, I said “He’s fine with small ones like yours, an Irish Setter or Golden, maybe not so much, but your little guy, no problem.” The two dogs sniffed and wagged. They played a little treats-by-turn. Chico said he wasn’t much of a player and Shelti guy respected that. I conversed more with the handler and it turned out that Shelti guy had been the beneficiary of the club’s efforts to raise funds to pay his vet bills after being mauled by, as she said, the “American Staffordshire Terrier of a former friend.”

So here was my socially damaged dog and her socially damaged dog, getting along fine. Was it because neither of us knew that her dog was with another damaged dog and had no energy in that direction? If I had known that Chico was with a dog that had been mauled, I would have been on edge to make sure he didn’t snarl or snap; if she’d thought her dog was with a dog-aggressive dog, she might well have been on edge waiting for something to happen. And the cumulative effect of the humans’ tension surely could have caused aggression between these two mending dogs.

So, all that was not lost on me as I drove home. I decided that at this point I worry about weave poles in competition and that, since my dog can read my mind, our biggest problem is between my ears.

Soooo, the next morning I told myself that there were no poles on the jumpers course.  The goal was to think “Yes, they are there, but I am not going to do more than note their existence and plan my entry and exit.”

And while it took the allowed three tries, we managed a decent set of poles. Yay CHICO!

It would have been a qualifying run save for an off course at the end, all the handler’s fault, I assure you. Unfortunately the video cuts off before I congratulate Chico and the crowd cheers, but I assure you, they did.

I didn’t run my plan, it just didn’t work that way. At one moment I realized I was running the Katherine’s plan for that part of the course, thanks for loaning it to me! And we could have gotten those poles the second time if I had let Chico get ahead of me before he went in. I stopped and he stopped. But there ya go, that’s why we watch the video – maybe next time I can keep more awareness of myself while I direct him.

There has been a lot of talk within the exhibitors about what a fun trial it was. Everyone was relaxed, cheering the runs of others, feeling their pain (someone’s dog pooped in the ring, one of the top five most mortifying errors possible); the judge gave us fun, challenging, flowing courses, she had something nice to say about every run from every exhibitor – it was very gezellig

On a not-so-doggy note, I volunteered to take the trial recycling home and to my transfer station. The club has nice signs to put up, asking people to use the special can in the cafe, and son-of-a-gun, they DO! I patrolled the regular trash barrels, looking for mis-filed bottles or cans, and found not a one. In all my pathological recycling and trash-duty volunteering, I have never before experienced 100% compliance on recycling. Never before. Will you think I am silly, dear reader, if I say that I am proud beyond words to be a member of a group that achieves that goal?

 

*A trial committee is required by the American Kennel Club. It’s a formality, committee members are required to be there from the time the doors open each day until everything is done and cleaned up at the end of the day. If some fool acts out of line, the committee is called together to decide on any disciplinary action. In the four years I have been taking Chico to trials, there has been a committee at every one, and I’d never been on it, so figured it was my turn. And I’ve never heard of the committee being called together, so it seemed likely that I wouldn’t have to help make any big decisions.

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Approaching 300

This is post number 298 for Can I Bring the Dog dot com. As I approach post 300, there has been a big increase in readership. At least, that’s what WordPress’s stats page tells me. It looks like some new readers have found us and have been catching up by reading lots of the archived pages.

Full flight Chico 10-28-11

Welcome! It’s so nice that you are interested in Chico and the story of him becoming a dog who can go places with me. I hope you stick around to see how the story keeps developing, because Chico and I are in this for the long haul and until I get bored with him (which I anticipate being… oh, say, sometime around never), I’ll likely keep blathering on about us.

I was no dog trainer when this started, I read a lot, I lucked into good help when I met Julie Daniels the first time out looking for a trainer, and I wanted this dog to make it in the world. I hope that Chico’s story can show the world that with support, just about any klutz (which I am) can made a nut case (which Chico was when he came to me) into a dog you can live with.

Please feel free to use the comments to let me know what that I write about interests you, and also what doesn’t.

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A hard day for Chico

Yesterday Chico and I went to American K9 Country, where Julie teaches on Wednesdays. I asked for help with the “weave poles away from home” problem and we went there to do lots and lots and lots of weave poles, away from home.

Chico has been to AK9C plenty of times, with Julie when he’s on board and train, with me for classes and for a dozen trials. Yesterday he started to show anxiety the moment we walked in the door. He wouldn’t eat steak or cheese, two high-value treats that usually get a great response. Yesterday, about half the time they were offered, they didn’t cut it. There was panting, yawning, positioning himself to be right touching to me – it was not normal and not nice for either of us.

We went into the ring to get started and as we were all paying attention to Julie, behind me I heard Chico go into snark mode on a dog. It was a golden retriever that we’ve been with before, I don’t know what happened exactly; most likely the dog was being inquisitive and didn’t heed a silently-presented curled lip from Chico, I wasn’t watching and Chico decided to “protect” both of us.

I took him to the other side of the ring, where he hopped up on the table and did a down.

The table was waaay over in one corner of the ring.

The table was waaay over in one corner of the ring. Nice and safe.

And everyone else was waaay over on the other side of the ring.

And everyone else was waaay over on the other side of the ring.

An the rest of the day was kinda like that. There’s no more pictures because I was so focused on the dog. Chico would weave for me, but for the most part awfully slowly, he didn’t look very happy a lot of the time, I responded with pretty-forced enthusiasm that only made things worse, in retrospect I might have been stingy with my rewards – it got to be time to stop and regroup.

We have a set of weave poles for the back yard, they have gotten a bit wonky, but I’m gonna tune ’em up and practice more at home. Then maybe the thing to do is to load the poles in the car and go practice with ’em at the horse barn, in the field at the bottom of the hill, at someone else’s house…

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Mister Chico on the Saco

With company in town, it was time for a trip down the Saco River. It’s been a couple years since I went with my gal pals*; this year Mila and I tried another section of the river. Tuesday was hot and sunny, but not too hot and not too sunny. Pretty much a perfect summer day, and – what luck! – the day we had selected for our canoe trip. As soon as the shuttle dropped us off, Chico was in the water for a wade. We loaded up and set off down the river. We left late enough in the day that it was quite warm at first, but by mid-afternoon the sun was a bit behind the trees and we could catch some shade.

Here's Chico, where he can keep an eye on the bank, and on me.

Chico’s calmly watching the river bank go by.

The current carries one along fast enough that only the littlest bit of padding is needed to speed along – some steering in the stern is about all a canoe needs to make the distance in the allotted time. There’s plenty of time to stop on any of the many sandbars and take a dip or have a snack, or both. And we stopped about every half-hour or forty-five minutes to cool us all down and give us all a chance at something to drink.

Sand bars abound.

Sandbar stop.

Chico seemed to enjoy getting wet and then lying in the sun to dry off. I believe he's examining a bug.

Chico seemed to enjoy getting wet and then lying in the sun to dry off.  I believe we see him examining a bug.

It was a lazy afternoon of exploration. Later in the day I figured out a great way to cool off without having to wade out or dunk one’s self into the deeper, colder water.

The half-in, half-out thing worked great for me.

Based on Chico’s appreciation of wading, I developed the half-in half-out lounge pose.

Of course Chico joined me,

Annie & Chico waterjust to make sure I knew what I was doing.

Back in the canoe we carried on for the last mile or so,

"What's next?"

“What’s next?”

arriving at the canoe rental place a few minutes before our check-in time of 5 PM**. Perfectly perfect timing. In fact, one could say it was a perfectly perfect day. Even for Chico: he got to go on a field trip, he got to swim, and he got to lick our hamburger plates after dinner. What’s not to like?

 

* Re-reading that old post as part of my proof-reading this post, I realize that the first time Chico took a canoe trip on the Saco I noted people remarking on his good behavior, while this time, his good behavior is so well established that I didn’t mention the compliments from other boats or the fellow shuttle passenger who was surprised to have him pointed out to her a few minutes into the ride. Chico had just settled between the two front seats and was lying quietly, waiting for the next thing to happen. “Oh! He’s so quiet, I didn’t even notice him! What a good dog.” And I can now just say “Thank you!” instead of reciting his whole background and his development from the dog I got into the dog I have.

** We rented from River Run Canoe Rentals in Brownfield, Maine. You park there, they take you up river and you paddle to where your car is parked. No meeting a shuttle at a certain time. And they are completely dog-friendly. Yay.

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Last weekend’s adventure

On Sunday we went to an agility trial at All Dogs Gym, to play USDAA games. It was an early start, I got there too early – at least two and a half hours before our first run, it was hot outside and crowded inside – not the most favorable conditions, but far from the worst. In the ring, there were good moments and not-so-good moments, as you can see in the following videos, but outside the ring some really neat stuff happened.

Our first run was Standard. The opening was fine, the weaves presented a problem. When I go back to try the poles again he runs through the tunnel a second time, when started at the poles again he has absolutely no interest in them, so I decide to go on. Chico misses a jump, but gets back to me to go into the second tunnel correctly, we do great until the table, where he can’t quite stay for five seconds with me walking away . . . so we have to start over. And I sort of lose energy when he breaks the table stay – you can see it in my body language, I slump. Julie calls it “deflating” and I can really see it in this video. Needless to say, that doesn’t help my team mate. Then I’m late at the end of the dogwalk showing Chico what obstacle is next, and he goes wide and wild again for a moment, taking a big loopy path back to me, and we finish cleanly, if not 100% gracefully.

Next was Gambers, which was really interesting for us. The “gamble” is asking your dog to work at a distance (you can see me tread one side of a line on the floor made with masking tape) – and this gamble involved the weave poles. Even in our home arena, nice and safe at Auntie Julie’s, Chico weaves best with a lot of support from me (in other words, I stay pretty close to him). All I could do in the trial was try my best, and it didn’t work so well. Maybe next time things will go better for us.

Third run of the day was Pairs, in many ways my favorite of the games we play. I don’t have a regular partner that we practice with, so every time I enter us in Pairs, it’s luck of the draw who we’ll be playing with. At this trial, through some mix-up we were entered in beginner level Pairs, not intermediate level where we’ve been competing. Since we have no qualifying runs at mid-level, it is allowed for us to run at starter level, and since changing would have made an uneven number of dogs in both classes, and caused a lot of bother for everyone, I offered to compete as assigned. And we got a very nice partner, who was as relaxed as I am about not being let down if we have a clean run and the other team doesn’t. So, with no pressure, we went in there and both dogs got clean runs. My partner was sure that her dog missed the contact (the yellow zone) on the A-frame, and it looks like she did, and the judge called it, but maybe the scribe didn’t write it down for some reason? Perhaps she didn’t see the judge’s signal? Dunno, but our team Q’d and that was a new title for my partner and her dog.

I learned more about getting Chico ready for a run. Our best run, in Pairs, started with me needing about fifteen seconds more than the three minutes between walk through and dogs-in-the-ring to get Chico from the car; we came running into the building and went straight into the ring. No time to sit around and get nervous, or over amped watching other dogs run, just trot right into the ring and go. That timing is dicy, and could easily make one miss a run, so I won’t try to repeat it, but it does give me a look at what happens to our mental game when we wait too long at the gate, in semi-readiness, before a run.

There were two things that happened outside the ring on Sunday that made the day for me. First, while waiting in a very confined space for our turn in the ring, the dog that was running at the time left his handler and came shooting right at us, into this narrow passage way, ready to sniff and (maybe) snarl with Chico. I was able to put my body between them, others stepped forward to grab the errant terrier, and my good, good, GOOD dog just looked at me asking for his paycheck. In class if another dog goes wild, racing around the arena, the drill is to start feeding our own dogs. And, thank you Julie, that is the best training we could have had for this day. After Mr Terrier was reunited with Caroline (yup, he belongs to the nice woman who keeps being parked near me), Chico and I ran to his treats and he was amply rewarded. As I told him how excellently he played that hand, another person waiting to run looked at me and confirmed that my dog had done a super-duper job. And she didn’t even know that Chico is reactive to other dogs.

The second thing that really knocked my socks off was a compliment from Lisa Barrett. She’s a USDAA judge that we trialed under this spring. I had a nice chat with her then, and have since competed at at events she was also entered in. On Sunday, I was walking by her and she looked at Chico and said “OH, I remember this dog, I love this dog.” Made. My. Day. That woman looks at several hundred dogs a day when she’s judging, she judged Chico in May, and she remembers Chico. And not because he was bad, or made trouble, but because he’s a cool guy, having a great time.  I could have gone home right then – I was so happy for Chico, two really-big, good, things in one day – that’s enough for me on a ninety-plus-degree day. And then we had our nice little Pairs run and went home without waiting an hour for the fourth class, Jumpers, that I had entered. “Quit on a high note,” that’s what I said as I drew a line though our entry in Jumpers. “Quit for the day on a high note.”

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What’s reasonable?

I’ve been thinking again – dangerous, I know. I’ve been thinking about being “a dog person” and what that means. My good friend from the Netherlands, Mila (who knew me first and most in my BC – before Chico – years) is in the States again, and she decided to finish up the trip with a few days relaxation in the woods at my house. More a cat person than a dog person, Mila is gracious about accepting what she must consider to be Chico’s personality quirks. I realize that to those who have known Chico since I got him he is such a vastly improved guy, in so many ways, that he can hardly do wrong. For some folks, even the new and improved Chico does things that make him hard to live with. It’s good to have someone around to help me look at what (of Chico’s behavior) is acceptable to me and might not be to others.

Sunday on the way to a trial (footage and comments in a future post, there’s lots to talk about), I had a call from a friend who is doing things for her Corgi that a lot of people wouldn’t do. The dog has lost use of her back end, she pulls herself around with her front paws, less and less all the time. But she can tell my friend when she needs out, on a gentle slope she “scoots along like a little otter” with a sparkle in her eye. She eats and drinks with pleasure. My friend has family visiting and one part of that family recently put down a dog that needed lots of “elder care” services, a dog that they determined was suffering and my friend fears being judged by them for doing what she feels is right for herself and for her dog. I assured her that in the world of dog people she is being perfectly reasonable.

At the trial, I was parked, for at least the second time this year, next to nice woman I now know is named Caroline (or was it Carolyn? Oh dear, I thought I knew her name). Her little terrier goes nuts when the car is approached if she is in the car and not when she isn’t there (so familiar, but Chico is louder). She was saying how much better he is now than when they started (gee, that’s familiar too) … anyhow, we got on to what must other people think about our dogs and how we treat them and what we consider to be OK (like, sometimes, when a behavior is even one iota closer to goal than it was last week this is a huge victory). She says she thinks people figure she doesn’t have a clue.

Caroline and I agreed that what is being done for that Corgi is not at all out of the ordinary. Not in our little part of the world.

Coming soon, video and a report on last weekend’s USDAA trial.

 

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36.65 seconds of perfect connection

Chico and I are just home from two days at the USDAA New England Regionals where we had a blast. While the teams competing there at the top level are trying to get to Cynosport, the USDAA Nationals, there is room and time for those of us at the Starters or Advanced level too. I figured it was a huge event and if we could go and keep our wits about us, it would be a major victory. I’d say we did, and it was.

The first run on Saturday, Gamblers, was good, except we didn’t get the gamble part (that’s where your dog has to do his or her part at a distance while the human stays behind a certain line) and Chico couldn’t do the weave poles. The rules are funny (to me) and we won our class, even though we didn’t qualify, because we got enough points in the opening. The second run on Saturday was good but not qualifying, no details stick in my head except that the weave poles presented a problem and the rest was pretty OK.

Today, our first run was Standard, and it was perfect…except Chico didn’t quite get the weave poles right – he skipped the last one. I could have gone back and tried again, but decided not to. He can weave like nobody’s business if he wants to, and pressuring him at a trial doesn’t feel right.

Our second run this afternoon, Jumpers, was magic. We were connected every fraction of every second. I could see the dog, the jumps, the judge. I was right where I wanted to be when I needed to be there to execute my plan. Chico moved, it seemed, slowly enough that I could get ahead of him when I needed to. In USDAA Jumpers there are no weave poles, nothing to slow Chico down. It was amazing, it seemed to last forever, with each second expanding into many. I had to look twice at our results to believe that it only took 36.65 of the allowed 42 seconds for us to complete the course.

And I have no video to share, nothing to show but a couple of ribbons and a check mark in my chart of Chico’s qualifying runs*. Of course, that’s only because one can’t show the feeling of accomplishment or the magic of being so tuned-in to another being, even just for a few seconds at a time.

*A chart that I keep only so I will be able to remember what level to sign up for in each of the four games I play in two organizations – a total of eight.

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Dogger loves Chico

I wrote a few weeks ago about Dogger, the dog at Eva’s who is so determined to be friends with Chico and promised to try and capture some of their interaction.

I am posting the video I shot of the two dogs but it’s been a bit scary to share it. When I reviewed the footage, I realized that I had probably let this interaction go on a bit too long, distanced as I was by being behind the camera, and I’m not proud of making an error in judgement. Chico is deeply conflicted about Dogger and by the time I stopped recording and separated them, I’d say Chico was pretty ready for it all to end.

At the same time it’s amazing to me how doggedly determined Dogger is to be friends. He does just about anything a dog can do to say “Let’s play!”  He does play bows. His face is a big, sloppy, lolling-tongued smile. He turns and puts his butt right in Chico’s face. When Chico does sniff Doggers hind end the first time, it is quite by surprise and you can see Dogger jump, but he doesn’t react negatively; instead, he turns to Chico with a look that says “Oh, so finally you’re in the game!”

Chico says “Back off” a couple times and Dogger does. But Dogger doesn’t give up. At one point Chico growls and snarls at Dogger who leans back into a joyful, bouncy, play bow, as if to say “Yes, we can turn this into play. I will show you how.”

His owner said she’s never seen anything like it. Usually if a dog says bug-off, Dogger does. And he’s no pacifist, there’s another dog that comes to work at Eva’s a few days a week and the two of them cannot be together. Simply cannot. Someone would get hurt.

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I am a Clucker Trainer

A nice piece. I suggest that not all my readers will be interested, but for those with a deeper interest in clicker training or dog psychology, this is a good read.

awesomedogs's avatarawesomedogs

Some claim that there is a new fad running rampant through dog training circles.

It is based on some of that sciencey stuff by Pavlov, Skinner, Watson and Thorndike.  A few well-known trainers such as Breland, Keller and Bailey furthered this fancy stuff by using geeky science outside the lab, causing this new age stuff to proliferate to the dog owning public.

Perhaps you have heard of some of these fads.  You’ll recognize these fancy methods because they use terms such as positive reinforcement, desensitization, counterconditioning and the charming though less scientific term clicker training… among others.  Some feel that these will quickly pass.

I’m still waiting.

It should happen at any moment.  After all, this fad has been around for at least 162 years.  Yes, you read that correctly.

One hundred sixty two years of “fancy” training and counting.

In 1882, S.T. Hammond published, “Practical Dog Training or…

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Agility Club of NH Jumpers run

Here’s video of our other run from a week ago Sunday. It’s the first run of the day and Chico is raring to go – in fact I think you can hear me think out loud, as Chico goes through the tunnel, “Holy crap, I’ve got a fast dog today.” He attacks the weave poles with vigor, but incorrectly – he’s required to enter with the first pole on his left shoulder and he goes at it from the other side, but I should have been behind him, not in front of him – and he didn’t complete them, but he was happier about the whole thing than he’d been at a trial in ages. I flub up the handling pretty well at the end, but there are parts of the run that are quite satisfying. So we’ll do it again somewhere else, some other weekend. Like next weekend in the “baby ring” at USDAA regional finals. Nice that they make room for those of us not in contention for the nationals.

Anyhow, here’s my speedy dawg:

Thanks to Paws in Action for doing the recording.

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