Today I decided to introduce the teeter to Wisp. I use the two table method to teach. I pad the tables so the teeter is stable. My goal was to get her to confidently jump up on the table and interact with the board. I didn't care what she did as long as it was with confidence. A bonus would be if she walked all the way across the board.
The first time, she hopped up on the table, put two feet on the teeter board, I clicked and treat, she went farther, c/t, etc. etc. all the way across the board. I released her and threw her toy. She came back, we did it two more times. Easy as pie. She was confident and I knew she understood the goal is to hop up on the table, walk across, I release and she earns the toy. Wow! One lesson, I had expected to spend a couple days on this. Poor Killy, this took him several lessons to learn. The board wasn't moving at all though, so I will repeat today's lesson tomorrow and then add a very slight tip. Probably remove one or two of the pads.
Killy and I will be at the ASCA trial next weekend. He has been doing really well in agility. We haven't had it together enough for a Q, but he is listening. Now I just need to learn my dog now that he actually listens and turns. We were so close to a Q on the USDAA Jumpers course a couple weeks ago. He had the best opening and closing, but in the middle, I didn't think he would turn as tight as he did and so I cued him way early and he actually listened and turned, but I caused an off course because of my position.
I just had to post a pic of my sweet boy so he didn't feel forgotten with the new pup.
I started using a mat to help her learn stay. She is struggling with the concept of not moving. I started by free shaping her to the mat, eventually clicking for all feet on and going for duration (staying on the mat). I have progressed to only rewarding for a sit on the mat and have moved it to my left side to help her understand she is to come back to that side rather than sit in front. I am trying to be proactive and combat her wanting to be in front. She is starting to learn what parallel path means and the mat is helping her achieve this. She also can hold a stay on the mat for about 5-10 sec. We are moving in the right direction.
She loves her frisbee and her yellow duck toy the most. She is starting to tug with the duck toy. When she brings them back, she must give me eye contact, she gets a food reward and then moves into position on her mat for another throw. My thought is that this will teach her to bring me into the game, look to me for direction and stay on one side or the other. After I have the behavior on the left side, then I will move the mat and work on the right. What I was getting before is a pacing in the back, in the front of me and she didn't know quite where I wanted her.
Killy has to share his blog with Wisp. So, today's post is about her training. I am very happy to say that she is starting to offer behaviors. She is retrieving, her toy drive is coming up and I got her to tug yesterday for the first time. Her best friends are the Springers because Lacey is just grouchy and refuses to even look at her:) Killy loves to play with her, but the Springers and her seem to hit it off the best.
She met several different breeds of dogs this week. It was funny to see her reaction. She really thought a sheltie was a sheep. She went into herding mode, very low and quiet and quick movements. Then Dare barked! I wish I could have caught her on camera because if a dog can look surprised, she did.
A new little girl came into my life a couple days ago named Whiskey. She is a split face red and white BC, 9 months old. Adorable doesn't even come close to describing her and she has a personality to match. Sweet, friendly, great with people and dogs. She has only been here a couple days and I am very impressed with her.
The funny part is that Killy's litter name was Scotch, so now I have Scotch and a Whiskey:)
I don't have pictures yet, but will hopefully get them this weekend if it's not raining.
We are working on crate games, quick sits and downs. I gave her a Kong this morning to play with and she had so much fun. It's nice to see her settling down and feeling comfortable so fast. One of the Springers has become her best friend and they play non stop. They both have freckles in the same spots on their legs.
This will be a fun weekend. It's a USDAA trial, so I get to see all my friends and run agility. Hopefully the weather will cooperate.
The ASCA trial was held last weekend. It was a 3 day event and Killy and I participated in all the runs. Gamblers, Jumpers and Regular(Standard). It was alot of fun and hard work. It was a small trial, so if I wasn't course building, I was running or working in some other way. The people are great and since it was small, it was alot like inviting a bunch of people over to run agility in someone's back yard. I had a blast.
Killy ran very well. We ended up with 3 Q's....2 in Standard and 1 in Jumpers. We would have had more, but I got lost on 2 Jumpers courses and didn't cue him correctly in a couple gambles. One gamble, we had it. You had to call them over the jump closest to you and then turn them and send out to the far side jump...and I had it! He had turned, but I pulled back at the last second and he came right in...when will I learn to be patient:)
Lacey was on fire too. She ran 2 Jumpers and 2 Regular on the weekend. I had her entered in exibition only so she could jump 16 in., so we technically can't qualify, but her runs were fast and clean. She looked great and we felt great together.
We won't have another trial until April. Money is a bit tight this year, so we are not traveling much and even limiting trials at home. I am trying hard to see this as a positive...I can train more. I have a yard and equipment and will just try to make each trial the best I can.