Monday, 9 April 2012

Bad week/ Good week

Olive has been a complete hooligan this week. Not listening to anything, wanting to play all the time... think I will blame it on adolescence !
Have tried numerous times to practise hunting. So frustrating because I know she can do it when she is storming off in the forest on walks, but when I try and do it with her she keeps walking by my side and won't run off! I'm not sure whether this has to do with her being used to walking with Wiley and so when I am trying to get her to hunt and he's not there she isn't as confident to go away from me?! Maybe, will just have to keep practising and see if she grows in confidence.
... and it's pretty bad. After seeing it on a video I am not really even sure what I am doing let alone Olive!! We have a training weekend at the end of the month so I am really hoping there will be lots of hunting training, as clearly we need help !
On retrieves she has also started to act 'dumb', I will say 'Olive back', and she will stare at me like she has no idea what I am talking about even though she has been retrieving now since she was 5 months... very odd... must be adolescence.
Thankfully this week has started better and she has managed to get back in my good books by finding a dead pigeon and retrieving it to me. I then couldn't resist the opportunity to put in some 'holds' and retrieves. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kdPhMVe8zl8&feature=youtube_gdata_player
She also came 1st in her HV Junior bitch class at District and Dunstable Open show so at least she's done something right :)

Tuesday, 3 April 2012

Water Retrieve's at 7am

Up early to fit in some water retrieves, maybe by the end of the week she will be able to do without me saying anything.


Sunday, 1 April 2012

Gundog Training at Margaret Roding


I took Olive (above left) to a fairly local Gundog class today, with her sister Dali (above right).
I haven't trained with Olive for a while so we are a bit out of touch, but she still was very good. We did lots of steadiness work to begin with, and then went to a different location to do water work. I haven't practised water retrieves with her since last summer, and she wasn't that great at it then.
We did the water work on a big lake with reeds, Olive was confident at going into the water, swimming, and she retrieved the dummy well. As soon as she got to land I could see that she wanted to shake so I have to really tell her to hold. She dropped the dummy the first time and again after a couple of go's, but did manage a few holds and presents.
So lots of water work will be needed if we ever want to do a Working Test as it's really hit and miss at the moment whether she will bring the dummy to me when out of the water. And if she does its only because I have put in a VERY loud 'HOLD!' which I don't think any judge would take as quiet handling.
We then did retrieve's and Olive failed to watch where her's landed (must remember to get her to 'mark' the dummy better!) so her's became a blind retrieve. Luckily she scented where the dummy was, but the trainer was really encouraging me to start teaching her the 'Hi Lost' command for when she picks up the dummy. I can understand the benefits of it, but am somehow put off that it is two words, I feel like it will be too confusing for a dog to understand, and I don't want to be shouting too many commands at her. I usually tell her 'steady' when I want her to slow down and hunt the ground for the dummy, but perhaps I will start saying it every time she picks up the dummy on a basic retrieve to enforce it more.
Lots of practise needed. Going to make the effort to get up extra early this week and take her out training everyday.

Tuesday, 28 February 2012

Bang!

Olive's 'play dead' trick. Although she dies much too slowly, but the look on her face when she is rolled over is too cute.

Sunday, 26 February 2012

Training day on 25th

Yesterday we went to a Gundog Training day set up by the WCGB in Hampshire. It was a bit of a drive from us, but as we don't go to a regular class I rely on these training days to get experience.
Arrived nice and early and we were in Improvers group one. We had a fairly small group with a nice trainer so we were lucky, not too much waiting around.
We started with a few steadiness exercises which I really liked as something I can never practise at home. We did sit and stays, and then recalling your individual dog from them all in a stay. We also did a great exercise where we all walked in a line with our dogs in off-lead heel and the trainer through dummies over our heads landing in front of the dogs. Exercise was to leave the dummies and stay at heel.
We did some basic retrieves such a memory and a split. Good to do these things around lots of other dogs as I do them so much on my own with her, but never know how she will fair when theres lots of distractions around.
In the afternoon we made them jump a countryside fence which was interesting. Olive jumped over without much fuss one side, but couldn't get back across from the other side as the ground was a lot lower. She tried and fell backwards on her back which I thought might have knocked her confidence, but luckily it didn't.
The trainer had a dummy that made a bang like a cap gun when he pulled the toggle. This was a good one for Olive, and she wasn't scared of the bang at all. In fact I think she was excited by it. She can be bad at marking retrieves, which results in a lot of directing from me to get her to find them and the bang really helps her pay attention to where the dummy falls. We also tried her with a dummy launcher which was really loud and fired incredibly far. She loved this one and retrieved it fine with no problems.
Lastly we did some hunting which I was pleased about as this is our real problem area, through lack of practise on my behalf. The trainer got us to hunt them up the field, stopping them to the whistle when he asked us to, and then sending them out left/right to get them on further. Good exercise and she did so well with directions considering she has only just cracked them this past week. I also finally learn't what 'back-casting' is, something I read about and never get. When I am walking along the field and she is hunting up the field, as she gets to the edge and turns I need to push her forward and tell her to get on, as if I stand still she sometimes will back-cast and turn into the ground towards me. Probably just made no sense with all of that but I understand it in my head!
Overall she was great all day and I was so chuffed with her. Her retrieves are good, and she never drops the dummy anymore, her stop whistle is 100% and her directions are good...just got to keep going with those til she really knows them well. Now it's warmer better start on the water retrieves too. Getting her too hold the dummy out of water has always been a hard one!
We had some lovely comments from our trainer and she got a rosette for being best in her class which was nice :)
Hopefully get her to some more training soon.


Friday, 24 February 2012

Too much training

Olive and I have had a really busy week, with far too much training.
Started off the week with some gundog stuff thrown in on walks. I am always doing retrieves back or out to either side, but for some time have been working up to changing directions - ready for blind retrieves in novice tests. From what I hear I will need to be able to direct her to a marker where the dummy has been put in these, so that's what I have been trying to do when out.
I get Daniel to distract her and I then run off to either side and throw a dummy out. Then continue down the path with her and when we have got to a reasonable distance I set her up and send her back. Then stop her, and tell her to change direction and hope she finds the dummy! Generally when we are walking her stop whistle is brilliant, but when she is rushing off back for a retrieve and I try and stop her I notice she can be fairly slow to stop. I guess because she has all this momentum to find the dummy and takes her awhile to snap out of it and stop. So this needs abit of work. Changing direction she has finally got this week. When I said 'out' and hand gestured either side she actually knew which direction to go!! So chuffed with that. When they finally get something you have been working on it is sooo great :)
Not sure how well you can see her stop and then change direction on the video. We did a few more, and then the next day too at a different location. I was an idiot most of the time and managed to judge distances wrong and stop her in the wrong place. But then I guess this just makes us have to work even harder to find the dummy by directing her with more steps. Sending her back further, then stopping her again, then out left or whatever. Every time we always got to the dummy eventually which is the most important thing, as I know when they don't end up finding it, it does nothing for their confidence. She was so exhausted after doing this, the most I have ever seen her. I think she really must have to concentrate hard on what is being asked with my hand signals. Quite a buzz to think you are directing and communicating with your dog at a distance though.
I am still working on the 'steady' command for holding her in one area. I haven't done any hunting practise with her at all, which is just naff from me as this is what the trainer said I needed to work on :( that will have to come next week.
Gundog training aside, I have now gone into panic mode that I have barely 3 weeks left til Crufts and I haven't made any attempt to take Olive to Ringcraft or do any practise with her. I don't expect her to do well or win, but I do want her to relax and enjoy herself in the ring and not get stressed and hunch up. Olive can do a beautiful stand with me at home, but when other dogs/people/noise are around it's not so good. Cruft's will be the third show she's been too, and I'm sure the most noisiest of them all so I've had to bite the bullet and find a Ringcraft class.
We went to a 2 hour class on Thursday evening and luckily this was a friendly club and I got a lot of help. Olive was so nervous when we walked into the hall, I don't think I had realised how much of a nervous dog she can be til I saw how she behaved there. If anyone came up to talk to us she would hide between my legs and didn't want to be stroked. The man running the club tried to feed her biscuits and mini Cheddar's but she wouldn't take from his hand. He gave them to me and she ate them straight away. She didn't want to play with any of the other dogs and she tried to hide away from them. Now, I am sure she wouldn't behave like this outdoors, I walk her with a friend every morning, who owns her litter sister and another dog, and she goes up to them all wagging and isn't nervous.
We practised standing the dogs all in a line and I got shown how to hold her and place her feet. Then we practised triangles and up and down etc etc. Loads of great practise that we both needed. Gradually she relaxed and she stood really well and she wasn't too fussed at all about being felt over. By the end of the class I was really pleased with how much she had relaxed, and how much we had learnt. She let a few people stroke her and was fine with standing close to every body.
I am a little concerned after his though that maybe she does need a little more socialisation with people in a confined area, like a hall. It's never been a problem, in fact the opposite, as she never runs off to people or dogs on walks, and if people jog/cycle/walk past us she just trots past and doesn't even look at them. This is great compared to Wiley, who for the first year would run at people wagging and spinning and probably jump all over them and knock them flying.
I do not want her to be a fearful dog though, and I don't want this to turn into an issue in the future so I think I will try and work on abit of clicker training with meeting new people and having lots of positive experiences (not that she has had any bad experiences that I can think of to have made her nervous).
The next day coincidentally was her Vets appointment for her booster vaccination so I tried to do a bit of work there with praising her meeting the vet and being checked over.
just because on the odd day I don't have time to take them for an afternoon walk I do a little training session with them, but our routine has got a little repetitive and boring now, so I wanted some ideas on what else I could teach them. Its a fun book with loads of tricks in and I was a little excited after flicking through so immediately started trying to teach them some... I will have to wait til next time to post a video as they are still perfecting the ones they are learning.
Tomorrow Olive has got a full day of Gundog training, I keep telling her she needs to get an early night as she doesn't know what she's in for tomorrow!!






Wednesday, 1 February 2012

Confidence Building

At the 1-1 we also talked about encouraging Olive to build confidence in things like jumping, water entries, and swimming. The trainer said they all have the ability to do these things well, but you just need to encourage them all the time to become more and more confident. I haven't taken Olive swimming in ages, I guess thats something we will have to get working on when the weather improves. I have been trying to get her to jump over logs and things in the wood saying 'over', she can be very agile when she wants to be. She easily jumps over a single style, but I have never been able to get her over a double style, so today I encouraged her over it step by step and when she realised she could do it she thought it was great fun!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKZINeYMR30&feature=youtube_gdata_player