Thursday, March 27, 2008

Love is Gone

It used to make me happy, I used to feel a rush.
Anticipation, enthusiasm, celebration, accomplishment, surprise, adrenaline. Things I used to feel why I played.
I can't get a break, I keep making mistakes.
Pushing, rewarding, reasoning, learning, pleading. Things we've tried and tried again.
So much potential, not a lot of hope.
What now.
I'm the problem, the dog is great. She's got titles, placements and stats. Good for her.
I'm tired of working toward something, of always fixing something, of always not being satisfied.

I'm tired of feeling the way I do about a hobby. I quit.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Running Contact Plan


















My main focus with Spree right now is the dogwalk contact. I plan on three stages of training for her. The first is all on the ground with no contact equipment involved.



We have her contact box which is made of PVC and will eventually sit overtop of the contact on the dogwalk. Next there is a contact hoop which is placed after the box for her to run through. This was suggested by Kathy so Spree is unable to reherse incorrect "jumping" behaviour off of the contact. Finally there are two jumps that are used to pattern her stride before the contact. They will be spaced to mimic the transition from up ramp to cross and from cross to down ramp.
For the past couple weeks we have been working on the box. Running into it, and then reward, or onto another obstacle. She is started from under 20' away at this point. The progress I've seen is good, but she still does not see the box as something to preform. I will try raising it so it's more clear that she is to jump into it. After that it will go back down.
Next step will be adding the hoop after, and then the stride bumps. After she is doing all three, we will add sequences of obstacles before and after the set up including turning after.



Once her "dogwalk of props" is concrete (notice how I didn't say perfect :P) I will begin the process over on the lowered dogwalk. Hop into the box and hoop from one step before. Then a few steps before, then over the bumps, all the way to sequences again. I will try my best to think of all the things she might see before the dogwalk that will change her stride so she will be able to work through that while still being reinforced for a proper contact behaviour.
At this point I see myself getting bored and rushing through the final stages, like I do with everything I teach my dogs. Feel free to hit me and/or take my dogs away.



At this point do I fade props on the lowered dogwalk or do I raise it and re-teach and then fade?