2011 was another good year. Eepie was awarded the Forsvar Trophy for the highest scoring Open Dog at the Belconnen Dog Obedience Club. She earned her Open title with three straight wins and had couple of nice passes as well - the Forsvar trophy is the fourth perpetual trophy with her name engraved on it.
Nice Work, Eepie!!!
And she earned her Bronze and Silver Dunbar Awards - for achievement in conformation and obedience trials. There were three awarded last year and Eepie came home with two of them!!
And now its 2012 and our trial season is underway. So far in UD we have earned two second placings (NQ) and two third placings (NQ) - our judges have given us lots of good feedback, i have made some classic blunders and we have had a bit of bad luck - its all part of the 'game'.............
Go gettem, Eepie, my beautiful girl!!
Monday, April 16, 2012
Sunday, July 31, 2011
Eepie Earns Her CDX!
This weekend we took off to Nowra for the Shoalhaven DTC trials and we came home with two wins and a CDX title....
I am still on cloud nine. Eepie and Harpo are tired today - they're not all that excited about the ribbons and qualifying cards, but Eepie said she wants to spend her prize money on some new squeaky toys so we will go shopping later this week...
She worked beautifully earning 193 points in the morning trial and 194 points in the afternoon trial.
It was warmer than expected and sunny so i had to use her cool coat in the morning stays. Because she's black she heats up very quickly on clear, bright days. The last thing i want her to learn is that the stays make her uncomfortable. She needs to be happy and relaxed for this part of her work. In preparation for these trials we did a bit of practice with the cool coat but this was the first time i had used it in a trial - its good to know it keeps her cool enough to be comfortable working at 21C...
By the time we got to the afternoon stays the sun was setting and the ground was cold so i thought she'd be fine without the coat, and she was!!
I want to say a heartfelt THANK YOU to those wonderful ladies who kept me giggling in the hide while we were doing the stays in both trials. It is nerve-wracking going into the hide and waiting, waiting, waiting - first for three minutes then for five minutes, then marching back out in a line hoping that nothing has happened to upset my dog's concentration. In the second trial on the five minute down stay, when i came back out of the hide and saw Eepie lying there relaxed and happy with her ears nicely forward checking out the people and looking for me in the lineup, i just wanted to do a happy dance. And when the judge said "Exercise Finished" those same wonderful ladies congratulated us on our new title and i sat down and gave Eepie a great big hug.
Not just two nice wins but a new title too - Nice work Miss Eep!!!
And here's a funny coincidence:
Last year in July Eepie earned her first CCD pass with a win at Queanbeyan and followed it up with two wins at Shoalhaven for her CCD. This year in July Eepie earned her first CDX pass with a win at Queanbeyan and followed it up with two wins at Shoalhaven for her CDX.
Now we're in with the 'big kids' heading for UD and beyond. I'm happy with her training so far and looking forward to learning more - i'll need to keep improving my handling to help her keep as many UD points as possible.
Thanks to all the people who help me in my training and trialling exploits - the triallers group at BDOC for some terrific practice sessions, Di Easter for coaching and telling me where i will lose points and for encouragment to change a few things in my handling, my wonderful family and cheer squad in the USA, Michel and Caroline in Bordeaux who organised my beautiful "lucky" trialling jacket (it works!!), the hardworking stewards without whom no trial could happen, our judges and of course my beautiful little girl, Aus Ch Ieper-Rilla vd Arkiv CDX (Imp USA) - the best little Bouvier around :-)
I am still on cloud nine. Eepie and Harpo are tired today - they're not all that excited about the ribbons and qualifying cards, but Eepie said she wants to spend her prize money on some new squeaky toys so we will go shopping later this week...
She worked beautifully earning 193 points in the morning trial and 194 points in the afternoon trial.
It was warmer than expected and sunny so i had to use her cool coat in the morning stays. Because she's black she heats up very quickly on clear, bright days. The last thing i want her to learn is that the stays make her uncomfortable. She needs to be happy and relaxed for this part of her work. In preparation for these trials we did a bit of practice with the cool coat but this was the first time i had used it in a trial - its good to know it keeps her cool enough to be comfortable working at 21C...
By the time we got to the afternoon stays the sun was setting and the ground was cold so i thought she'd be fine without the coat, and she was!!
I want to say a heartfelt THANK YOU to those wonderful ladies who kept me giggling in the hide while we were doing the stays in both trials. It is nerve-wracking going into the hide and waiting, waiting, waiting - first for three minutes then for five minutes, then marching back out in a line hoping that nothing has happened to upset my dog's concentration. In the second trial on the five minute down stay, when i came back out of the hide and saw Eepie lying there relaxed and happy with her ears nicely forward checking out the people and looking for me in the lineup, i just wanted to do a happy dance. And when the judge said "Exercise Finished" those same wonderful ladies congratulated us on our new title and i sat down and gave Eepie a great big hug.
Not just two nice wins but a new title too - Nice work Miss Eep!!!
And here's a funny coincidence:
Last year in July Eepie earned her first CCD pass with a win at Queanbeyan and followed it up with two wins at Shoalhaven for her CCD. This year in July Eepie earned her first CDX pass with a win at Queanbeyan and followed it up with two wins at Shoalhaven for her CDX.
Now we're in with the 'big kids' heading for UD and beyond. I'm happy with her training so far and looking forward to learning more - i'll need to keep improving my handling to help her keep as many UD points as possible.
morning score sheet, minus the stays - Eepie was # 35
afternoon score sheet, minus the stays - Eepie was # 43
our "loot"
with our morning judge, Charlie Giles
Sunday, July 24, 2011
First CDX Pass
The Queanbeyan & District Dog Training Club winter trial is one of my favourites. I got my first ever Novice pass with my first darling Bouvier, Percy, at a QDTC trial under Jake Blight - i can't remember how many years ago that was. Harpo earned his Novice title at a QDTC trial at Burra - there were kangaroos in the next paddock that day and those Novice stays were some of the longest moments of my life. Eepie earned her first CCD pass at this trial last year .
Queanbeyan is always a friendly trial with nice cold "Bouvier" weather and a relaxed feel. I swear this trial brings me good luck!
This year at Queanbeyan, Eepie earned her first CDX qualifying score under Judge John Green - and a win with 190. It was very nice to get that pass - it has been a while in coming. She wasn't working at her sparkiest but she managed nicely on grounds that she had only seen once before.
We were off to a good start with our Open exercises until we went to Albury to trial earlier this year. Nobody mentioned the freight train line that ran through the corner of the grounds - i had no idea we'd have to contend with that as a distraction.
Eepie worked nicely in the individuals at Albury and then, Murphy's Law, the train went past during the stays which led to a Very Negative Experience in the ring that has taken months to overcome both in training and competing in Open.
This made the win at Queanbeyan a big boost to my confidence.
We have travelled far and wide to compete this year. Along the way we have made new friends, found a beautiful dog-friendly cabin to stay in and met three terrific new judges to add to our list of people to trial under.
I really love being on the road with the dogs and i am looking forward to our next trials - we're halfway through winter already - i'm not enjoying the prospect of the return of warm weather and the end of our competition season.........
Lessons Learned so far in 2011: We will not be going back to Albury to trial and in future when i'm thinking about trialling in unknown places, i'll make a point of asking if there are any significant distractions right next to the competition rings. We're all set to start competing in UD but i'm not sure if we will get there this year. There's plenty of time, she has been with me for a little over two years now and Eepie has just turned three.
This year is all about building our confidence in the ring.
Queanbeyan is always a friendly trial with nice cold "Bouvier" weather and a relaxed feel. I swear this trial brings me good luck!
This year at Queanbeyan, Eepie earned her first CDX qualifying score under Judge John Green - and a win with 190. It was very nice to get that pass - it has been a while in coming. She wasn't working at her sparkiest but she managed nicely on grounds that she had only seen once before.
We were off to a good start with our Open exercises until we went to Albury to trial earlier this year. Nobody mentioned the freight train line that ran through the corner of the grounds - i had no idea we'd have to contend with that as a distraction.
Eepie worked nicely in the individuals at Albury and then, Murphy's Law, the train went past during the stays which led to a Very Negative Experience in the ring that has taken months to overcome both in training and competing in Open.
This made the win at Queanbeyan a big boost to my confidence.
We have travelled far and wide to compete this year. Along the way we have made new friends, found a beautiful dog-friendly cabin to stay in and met three terrific new judges to add to our list of people to trial under.
Lessons Learned so far in 2011: We will not be going back to Albury to trial and in future when i'm thinking about trialling in unknown places, i'll make a point of asking if there are any significant distractions right next to the competition rings. We're all set to start competing in UD but i'm not sure if we will get there this year. There's plenty of time, she has been with me for a little over two years now and Eepie has just turned three.
This year is all about building our confidence in the ring.
Monday, January 31, 2011
2011 - Onwards to CDX and UD
- its a new year and we're starting to trial at Open level in a couple of weeks.
The exercises for Open are: heelwork performed and judged at a higher level of accuracy than in Novice, retrieve on the flat and retrieve over a jump, drop on recall, stand free for exam, position changes from the stand (drop, sit and come) and stays with the handler out of sight - 3 minute sit stay and 5 minute down stay.
The work is quite a bit more complicated than Novice level. Eepie is doing it all quite well in training - but translating the training performance into competition is another story - another set of skills altogether.
For one thing, i'm getting confused by the fact that different judges have said different things about their scoring criteria for each exercise - what one judge demands in the name of "accuracy" another judge tells me looks "wooden" in its execution........i don't know how to play it. Do i lose marks for "wooden"?
I am aiming for perfection and Championship-level scores. This means paying attention to little details where points come off unnecessarily - like perfect square fronts, stands and finishes. On the other hand, i want to keep the spirit in my dog, i want to see her tail wagging when she works and i want her to be enthusiastic - too many dogs go "robotic" doing obedience routines and i don't want to get pernickety about what constitutes "success" in our training and kill the drive in my dog. its a balancing act
And then, if i may be so critical, i think the judges score different people and dogs according to different criteria. One judge has told me that the dog must not touch me during the exercises or this will incur point deductions because touching can be construed as a 'second signal' - and yet i can think of one successful trainer whose dog regularly makes contact when presenting the dumbbell and that person's scores don't seem to reflect any deductions for touching.........
So apart from the broadest guidelines, i'm not seeing any helpful consistency in the judging - which is all part of the game i suppose. I already have a "blacklist" of judges who i don't bother competing under .......... looks like this list might grow a bit in 2011 ............ and that is part of the "game" as well............
The exercises for Open are: heelwork performed and judged at a higher level of accuracy than in Novice, retrieve on the flat and retrieve over a jump, drop on recall, stand free for exam, position changes from the stand (drop, sit and come) and stays with the handler out of sight - 3 minute sit stay and 5 minute down stay.
The work is quite a bit more complicated than Novice level. Eepie is doing it all quite well in training - but translating the training performance into competition is another story - another set of skills altogether.
For one thing, i'm getting confused by the fact that different judges have said different things about their scoring criteria for each exercise - what one judge demands in the name of "accuracy" another judge tells me looks "wooden" in its execution........i don't know how to play it. Do i lose marks for "wooden"?
I am aiming for perfection and Championship-level scores. This means paying attention to little details where points come off unnecessarily - like perfect square fronts, stands and finishes. On the other hand, i want to keep the spirit in my dog, i want to see her tail wagging when she works and i want her to be enthusiastic - too many dogs go "robotic" doing obedience routines and i don't want to get pernickety about what constitutes "success" in our training and kill the drive in my dog. its a balancing act
And then, if i may be so critical, i think the judges score different people and dogs according to different criteria. One judge has told me that the dog must not touch me during the exercises or this will incur point deductions because touching can be construed as a 'second signal' - and yet i can think of one successful trainer whose dog regularly makes contact when presenting the dumbbell and that person's scores don't seem to reflect any deductions for touching.........
So apart from the broadest guidelines, i'm not seeing any helpful consistency in the judging - which is all part of the game i suppose. I already have a "blacklist" of judges who i don't bother competing under .......... looks like this list might grow a bit in 2011 ............ and that is part of the "game" as well............
Friday, November 26, 2010
Obedience Dog of the Year 2010!
Congratulations to my little girl!
Last night she topped off her amazing year by winning three awards at our home club - the Belconnen Dog Obedience Club (BDOC).
BDOC Obedience Dog of the Year 2010,
BDOC Novice Dog of the Year 2010, and
BDOC Highest Individual Novice Score for 2010 (192)
Thank you to our friends at BDOC who helped us this year and special thanks to our instructors Charlie, Angie, Paul and Werner. I am also very grateful to our CCD and CD classmates who stood around on freezing cold Thursday nights taking turns at being figure 8 posts - thank you
We are now on our summer break and slowly, gradually polishing our CDX and UD exercises in preparation for 2011.
Have a good break, Eepie. You have done a brilliant job this year. Time for a young dog to chill out and dream about chasing WABBITS!!
Last night she topped off her amazing year by winning three awards at our home club - the Belconnen Dog Obedience Club (BDOC).
BDOC Obedience Dog of the Year 2010,
BDOC Novice Dog of the Year 2010, and
BDOC Highest Individual Novice Score for 2010 (192)
Thank you to our friends at BDOC who helped us this year and special thanks to our instructors Charlie, Angie, Paul and Werner. I am also very grateful to our CCD and CD classmates who stood around on freezing cold Thursday nights taking turns at being figure 8 posts - thank you
We are now on our summer break and slowly, gradually polishing our CDX and UD exercises in preparation for 2011.
Have a good break, Eepie. You have done a brilliant job this year. Time for a young dog to chill out and dream about chasing WABBITS!!
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Eepie Earns her CD Title
Eepie has earned her Companion Dog title!!
She is now Australian Champion Ieper-Rilla vd Arkiv CD (Imp USA)
I love the "Imp USA" part because she is definitely an IMP................
YAAAAAAAY
We did two trials this weekend.
In the first trial she was sitting on 191 and first place (and a title) until the dog next to her rolled right into her space in the sit stay and kept on rolling around - she coped for a while but the dog kept on rolling on its back and waving its legs in the air under her nose and generally behaving like a lunatic. My beautiful girl just lay down saying "I can't cope with this, Mum!"
My heart sank..........so near and yet so far!
All i can say about this is that i wish people who are not qualifying and who know their dogs are not stable could be offered a separate opportunity to practise their stays - far, far away from dogs who are qualifying......
Fortunately, a friend with a wonderful sense of humour took us aside in the break between trials and suggested we practise a sit stay with strangeness going on right under Eepie's nose. So we set up the sit stay with our two dogs and she got down on all fours and wiggled and rolled around right in front of both dogs. Eep looked at her as though she was crazy but she held her stay..........and my friend explained that when she trains stays at her club they do this kind of stuff all the time to add distractions to the exercise.
Thanks, Kathy! Your friendship, good humour and support really made my day - and helped me turn my disappointment into success!
All through Eepie's Novice classes the dogs were very well behaved on their stays and we had never trained with a dog behaving so rudely right in front of us. So - from now on i will look for badly-behaved dogs to practise stays with - they will become my friends for those few short but important minutes.
In the second trial she worked very nicely except for the very start of the heeling pattern when she left me briefly to mark a few blades of grass - i had taken her for a pee break so this really surprised me but the judge assured me it was "just a few drops" and not a real pee. We lost ten points for misbehaviour and a few more for the loss of position. The rest of her exercises were done steadily and well with full or nearly full marks. :-)
As we were setting up for the second lot of stays i took advantage of the break before judging started and whispered in her ear "Now, i want you to be good and WAIT, OK? Can you do a good WAIT for me this time? And then we were asked to take up position and leave our dogs. I gave her command firmly "WAIT!" and walked away to the edge of the ring hoping and hoping that this time we'd be OK..........Once you leave your dog on the stays, there's not a lot you can do about what happens next.
It was a long wait for the judge to say "RETURN" but she sat there like a little princess and i got back to her side with no mishaps this time. In the down stays the dog beside her got a bit bored and started sniffing in the direction of the barbecue up at the clubhouse. His handler closed her eyes and i stood there willing him to keep it together for just a little bit longer.......he was fine, Eepie was fine.
Again the judge said "RETURN" and suddenly i was back beside Eepie smiling down at her and she was looking up at me with her happy face. She had just earned her second obedience title for the year.
We got 178 points for the second trial - and at the presentations our judge told everyone it would have been a lot more but for her pee break. Her average score for Novice was 185.3.
We have done seventeen shows and eleven obedience trials this year and earned Ch, CCD and CD titles. Its time for a summer break while we work on our long stays for Open and scent discrimination and the seekback for UD.
I'm really looking forward to 2011.
YAY Eepie!!
Eepie CD!!
She is now Australian Champion Ieper-Rilla vd Arkiv CD (Imp USA)
I love the "Imp USA" part because she is definitely an IMP................
YAAAAAAAY
We did two trials this weekend.
In the first trial she was sitting on 191 and first place (and a title) until the dog next to her rolled right into her space in the sit stay and kept on rolling around - she coped for a while but the dog kept on rolling on its back and waving its legs in the air under her nose and generally behaving like a lunatic. My beautiful girl just lay down saying "I can't cope with this, Mum!"
My heart sank..........so near and yet so far!
All i can say about this is that i wish people who are not qualifying and who know their dogs are not stable could be offered a separate opportunity to practise their stays - far, far away from dogs who are qualifying......
Fortunately, a friend with a wonderful sense of humour took us aside in the break between trials and suggested we practise a sit stay with strangeness going on right under Eepie's nose. So we set up the sit stay with our two dogs and she got down on all fours and wiggled and rolled around right in front of both dogs. Eep looked at her as though she was crazy but she held her stay..........and my friend explained that when she trains stays at her club they do this kind of stuff all the time to add distractions to the exercise.
Thanks, Kathy! Your friendship, good humour and support really made my day - and helped me turn my disappointment into success!
All through Eepie's Novice classes the dogs were very well behaved on their stays and we had never trained with a dog behaving so rudely right in front of us. So - from now on i will look for badly-behaved dogs to practise stays with - they will become my friends for those few short but important minutes.
In the second trial she worked very nicely except for the very start of the heeling pattern when she left me briefly to mark a few blades of grass - i had taken her for a pee break so this really surprised me but the judge assured me it was "just a few drops" and not a real pee. We lost ten points for misbehaviour and a few more for the loss of position. The rest of her exercises were done steadily and well with full or nearly full marks. :-)
As we were setting up for the second lot of stays i took advantage of the break before judging started and whispered in her ear "Now, i want you to be good and WAIT, OK? Can you do a good WAIT for me this time? And then we were asked to take up position and leave our dogs. I gave her command firmly "WAIT!" and walked away to the edge of the ring hoping and hoping that this time we'd be OK..........Once you leave your dog on the stays, there's not a lot you can do about what happens next.
It was a long wait for the judge to say "RETURN" but she sat there like a little princess and i got back to her side with no mishaps this time. In the down stays the dog beside her got a bit bored and started sniffing in the direction of the barbecue up at the clubhouse. His handler closed her eyes and i stood there willing him to keep it together for just a little bit longer.......he was fine, Eepie was fine.
Again the judge said "RETURN" and suddenly i was back beside Eepie smiling down at her and she was looking up at me with her happy face. She had just earned her second obedience title for the year.
We got 178 points for the second trial - and at the presentations our judge told everyone it would have been a lot more but for her pee break. Her average score for Novice was 185.3.
We have done seventeen shows and eleven obedience trials this year and earned Ch, CCD and CD titles. Its time for a summer break while we work on our long stays for Open and scent discrimination and the seekback for UD.
I'm really looking forward to 2011.
YAY Eepie!!
Eepie CD!!
Thursday, September 16, 2010
August/September Novice Trials

We have done four Novice trials in the last four weeks.......
In the first two trials at our home club, BDOC, Peep was sitting on 189 and 190 and both times she went down on her sit-stays. NQ x 2.
I was SO disappointed. She hadn't blown a sit stay before. So i gave this new behaviour some serious thought - the 'only' thing that was different was the weather - it was a sunny 13 degrees that Saturday and hitherto we had done all our training at night in temperatures of about 4 degrees.
Her stays were so solid in training that i hadn't practised them during the day in the spring sunshine. And i hadn't practised them at all in the week before the BDOC trials.
Black dogs are like solar collectors when the sun comes out.........and we need to practise!
What was i thinking?
BAD Trainer!!
So we practised doing our sit stays everywhere - in the hallway while i loaded the car, in the training paddock in mild spring sunlight, while waiting for dinner to be served........ we practised stays alone and stays in company, stays with Unkie Harpo and stays with our Novice class buddies.........
And then we travelled to Wagga Wagga for the Kyeamba trials in early September.
Eepie won the first trial with 192 points and came third in the second trial with 186 points.
The difference in her points was, again, a trainer/handler malfunction. i was so nervous in the second trial that i kept anticipating the judge's commands and the judge was not impressed. We were docked for my lack of attention.
Bad Handler!!
I have learned some valuable training and handling lessons and my dear, patient, clever pup has earned two legs of her Novice title despite her klutz of a mother.
Our last trials for the year are in about ten days. We are entered in two Novice trials so we have two chances to finish her CD in 2010.
I'm hoping it won't be too warm and sunny on the day and yes, we will be practising our stays beforehand.....
Friday, August 6, 2010
Monday, August 2, 2010
Eepie Earns Her CCD Title
What an amazing year we have had.
In June the Peep celebrated her second birthday. She also celebrated her first anniversary as an Australian Doggy-Citizen and she earned her conformation championship.
Now in July she has earned her first obedience title - her Community Companion Dog title (CCD).
We travelled to Nowra for the Shoalhaven Dog Training Club morning and afternoon trials and the Peep won both her classes. So after one "false start" trial and one "near miss" trial she earned this title in the month of July with three first places and an average score of 92.6%. That's not too shabby for a young dog.
Throughout the day I learned lots of handling lessons at the Shoalhaven trials because i made some silly mistakes (but i also did some things well). Eep had a couple of indiscreet moments in amongst the great teamwork, too. I need to think more about what i do to keep her "up" between exercises - we managed OK but my efforts seemed a bit artificial even to me and a couple of times she looked at me as if to say "why are you acting weird?"
So now the plan is to rest and re-focus in August and prepare for our first Novice trials in September.
So - What lessons are there to learn from three wins and a new title? Where did we lose points at the Shoalhaven DTC trials? And what can we do about it?
My handling errors
Our judge at the morning trial, Andrew Parker, told me that on the Stand for Exam i returned to a different place than the one i left and this is one of his "pet hates" - so i lost two points there. He was right - When i give the command to STAND, Eepie stops dead which means that my feet are still moving when she stops and end up level with or just slightly ahead of her front feet. But on the return, i go back to "my" heeling position which is with my left knee just behind her right elbow....
In some ways i am still "trialling with Harpo" when i go to work with Eepie - Harpo is a bigger dog and he takes a couple of steps to walk into his Stand - by contrast, when Eepie hears the word STAND she just stops bang-bang on her front feet and she's standing still. I need to work on matching her speed and put in a half-step as i am coming to a halt beside her.
On the recall i turned around on the judge's call ("about turn and HALT") with my hands on my belly and after giving her the signal i returned my hands to a lower position - lost another point.
These are both silly handling mistakes that are easy to fix - i have to be more mindful. Without my errors her score would have been 94 (!!!)
For her part, in the morning trial, Eepie lost one point for a slightly crooked front on the recall, two points for swivelling on her bum to check out the dog next to her in the sit stay and three points for taking a big look around on her first Right About Turn in the heel pattern which meant that she was at the end of her lead for a second and out of position.
*************
In the afternoon trial she lost six points on her heelwork - she took a really big look around again on the first right about turn and got way out of position for a moment - (so it must have incurred a substantial deduction) - the rest of her heelwork was very nice.
Then she moved one foot on the Stand For Exam - Our afternoon judge, Pat Looker, was wearing a big wide hat and she bent right down over Eep during the exam, i could see the expression on Eep's face - it was YUK! I am a Bouvier, i don't do Hugs With Strangers in HATS! and she stepped away politely - that was a point off for one foot moving.
And then there was the recall - smarty pants - she came OK but she knew the exercise would end with me standing beside her so she just went straight into that position and sat. Three points off......
***************
Fixes
OK - i have started shaping a "touch front" where she comes in square and touches one or both of my feet with her feet - she can't do that and sit crookedly - that will fix the recall fronts. And we get to do a flip finish in Novice (instead of "Return to Your Dog" in CCD) so i think i need to be rigorous about practising the front and the finish separately for the next month to reinforce that they are two different things.
We will have to do lots of "stand for exam with new people in strange hats" for mega rewards for keeping her feet still.
As for the heelwork, i'm not quite sure how to deal with the 'good look around' she likes to take as we do that first right about turn in the heel pattern - i guess practising with distractions on that side is the answer. Novice is all done off lead so it is really important that she stays with me - the marking in Novice will be harder and there's no "safety belt" of a lead to help us get back on track if she gets distracted.
My handling? I have to be more precise and more aware of what i am doing - it will be really silly if i lose our points by being unconscious in my handling.
The bottom line for me is that Eep enjoys what she is doing - i like it that she works wagging her tail and that she works with spirit and that irrepressible Bouvier sense of humour. So i need to proceed carefully - i don't want to "suck all the air out of the room" by drilling the exercises to death - it makes me sad to see dogs at the starting peg with a flat or worried look - dreading "what's coming next"............
Gently Gently Catchee Monkey!
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
6 weave poles, day 2
And here she is on day two of being able to do six poles - - happy, skipping and getting more fluent..........
Clever method, Clever dog!
Clever method, Clever dog!
Sunday, July 25, 2010
And For My Next Trick - Six Weave Poles!!! TaaaDaaaa!
Suddenly we have had a breakthrough with our weave training. Most of the problems we were having came from a combination of (1) having very light equipment, (2) having very wet soil in my training areas which meant that (3) being a solid, energetic dog, Eepie was knocking the weave poles out of position as she went through them - so she wasn't learning to W-E-A-V-E
First, a friend at work made me some beautiful, solid 2X2 bases (thanks, Michael!!) and then a friend at the dog club lent me her Susan Garrett 2X2* dvd (thanks, Barb!) and when Eepie and i were able to work the 2X2 method for a couple of days on proper equipment - almost overnight she could do four weave poles easily.
I noticed, though, that she didn't like stepping over the bases when they were sitting free on the ground - so i got some nice long deck nails with flat heads and hammered them in securely - suddenly the bases didn't move or wobble At ALL.........
and now she's getting the hang of it nicely -
So here she is doing her very first runs on six weave poles. She was zooming through four poles confidently and its clear on these first attempts at six that she's a bit worried and has slowed down - but this is after about half an hour of sporadic 2X2 training spread out over several days (with major breaks for tracking weekends and a sore foot!). We'll iron out the wrinkles and she'll be zooming it again soon enough.
It seems to be an excellent method of weave training and she clearly understands the task. My early observations are that the 2X2 method makes sense from the dog's perspective and it combines two of my favourite training concepts of shaping and back-chaining...(so it makes sense to this trainer, too :-)
At the end of this little vid, she also shows off the clever trick she learned for stopping on the target areas of agility contact equipment - (dogwalk, A-frame and see saw/teeter). She is such a fast doglet and she loves to FLY - so learning to control her speed (and her aspiration to be a bird) is really important.
But we don't have any contact equipment at home and we had to 'make do'.
So Eepie began her contact training on the five broad wooden steps off the back deck (not the steps in this vid). I wasn't happy with her slamming into the yard off the deck steps so her contact training had a useful spin-off - it was an opportunity to encourage her to come down into the garden in a nice, controlled manner - and to put this steady, controlled behaviour on command.
She learned to come down the deck stairs one at a time - hence my verbal cue "One". (i guess i'm not very imaginative with verbal cues :-)
Take a bow, Princess Peep - You're AMAZING!!
[Oh - by the way - her foot is much better today - for the last few days we haven't done much other than rest - and i think tomorrow we will be able to get out walking again...]
*2X2 method is the brainchild of Susan Garrett -
First, a friend at work made me some beautiful, solid 2X2 bases (thanks, Michael!!) and then a friend at the dog club lent me her Susan Garrett 2X2* dvd (thanks, Barb!) and when Eepie and i were able to work the 2X2 method for a couple of days on proper equipment - almost overnight she could do four weave poles easily.
I noticed, though, that she didn't like stepping over the bases when they were sitting free on the ground - so i got some nice long deck nails with flat heads and hammered them in securely - suddenly the bases didn't move or wobble At ALL.........
and now she's getting the hang of it nicely -
So here she is doing her very first runs on six weave poles. She was zooming through four poles confidently and its clear on these first attempts at six that she's a bit worried and has slowed down - but this is after about half an hour of sporadic 2X2 training spread out over several days (with major breaks for tracking weekends and a sore foot!). We'll iron out the wrinkles and she'll be zooming it again soon enough.
It seems to be an excellent method of weave training and she clearly understands the task. My early observations are that the 2X2 method makes sense from the dog's perspective and it combines two of my favourite training concepts of shaping and back-chaining...(so it makes sense to this trainer, too :-)
At the end of this little vid, she also shows off the clever trick she learned for stopping on the target areas of agility contact equipment - (dogwalk, A-frame and see saw/teeter). She is such a fast doglet and she loves to FLY - so learning to control her speed (and her aspiration to be a bird) is really important.
But we don't have any contact equipment at home and we had to 'make do'.
So Eepie began her contact training on the five broad wooden steps off the back deck (not the steps in this vid). I wasn't happy with her slamming into the yard off the deck steps so her contact training had a useful spin-off - it was an opportunity to encourage her to come down into the garden in a nice, controlled manner - and to put this steady, controlled behaviour on command.
She learned to come down the deck stairs one at a time - hence my verbal cue "One". (i guess i'm not very imaginative with verbal cues :-)
Take a bow, Princess Peep - You're AMAZING!!
[Oh - by the way - her foot is much better today - for the last few days we haven't done much other than rest - and i think tomorrow we will be able to get out walking again...]
*2X2 method is the brainchild of Susan Garrett -
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Injury Time
Last weekend the dogs and i went to a tracking workshop at Suzy's - it was brilliant fun being out with the dogs laying tracks and soaking up the winter sunshine.
Mz Eep wasn't too sure about the game of "Find Your Mommy". Her first attempt was a "free track" where she broke away from the person handling her, raced up the hill after me and FLUNG herself on me as i lay in the grass. It was funny looking up to see a flying Bouvier with wide eyes bounding over the tussocks towards me - her little face was saying quite clearly "Mum, what are you DOING? and why did you LEAVE me with that person?"
On another starter track she stood still a few yards away from where i was hiding on the hillside and barked for me which was a bit heartbreaking - but i could tell she was thinking things over - on her last attempt she put her nose down and started to use her natural skills to solve the problem. I think she will take another couple of startup sessions to get the hang of it and then we can shift over to working together on tracks i have laid.
Its complicated tracking alone at the beginning.........
My beautiful Harpo boy has had a lot more experience and when it was his turn he knew exactly what to do - he LOVES this game and i was thrilled watching him with his head down reading the tracks i laid and hauling along nicely into his harness - its a fine thing tracking with a Bouvier on a perfect winter day on perfect ground - Thanks, Suzy, for a wonderful day out!
Yesterday Eep wasn't interested in anything and kept taking herself back to bed which is just not like her so i knew something was up. I went over her thoroughly and finally discovered a sore-looking left back foot. On the underside and between the pads the skin was all pink with one curious paler welt. I put some cream on it (antibacterial, anaesthetic etc) and watched her for the day - she was subdued - So this morning i figured it was time to go to the vet for some professional help.
We saw Dr Ben who pronounced the foot infected and said "looks like there has been a grass seed in here, but there's nothing in there now" - that was the pale welt i noticed. So she has to take antibiotics for a week and i'm hoping she'll be back on all four feet next weekend when we are entered in two more CCD trials - this time at Nowra on the south coast.
Its funny - my usual request in the early mornings is "Eepie, stop being so enthusiastic - please" because she bounces off the walls in her enthusiasm to get out walking. Now with her sore foot i miss her bouncing off the walls and i'll be happy to see that crazy enthusiasm back again.
Meanwhile - here are some pix of the dogs on their tracking holiday - both of them "tracked" the resident Wombat to his beautiful burrow in the ferns and thought he smelled wonderful. :-)




Mz Eep wasn't too sure about the game of "Find Your Mommy". Her first attempt was a "free track" where she broke away from the person handling her, raced up the hill after me and FLUNG herself on me as i lay in the grass. It was funny looking up to see a flying Bouvier with wide eyes bounding over the tussocks towards me - her little face was saying quite clearly "Mum, what are you DOING? and why did you LEAVE me with that person?"
On another starter track she stood still a few yards away from where i was hiding on the hillside and barked for me which was a bit heartbreaking - but i could tell she was thinking things over - on her last attempt she put her nose down and started to use her natural skills to solve the problem. I think she will take another couple of startup sessions to get the hang of it and then we can shift over to working together on tracks i have laid.
Its complicated tracking alone at the beginning.........
My beautiful Harpo boy has had a lot more experience and when it was his turn he knew exactly what to do - he LOVES this game and i was thrilled watching him with his head down reading the tracks i laid and hauling along nicely into his harness - its a fine thing tracking with a Bouvier on a perfect winter day on perfect ground - Thanks, Suzy, for a wonderful day out!
Yesterday Eep wasn't interested in anything and kept taking herself back to bed which is just not like her so i knew something was up. I went over her thoroughly and finally discovered a sore-looking left back foot. On the underside and between the pads the skin was all pink with one curious paler welt. I put some cream on it (antibacterial, anaesthetic etc) and watched her for the day - she was subdued - So this morning i figured it was time to go to the vet for some professional help.
We saw Dr Ben who pronounced the foot infected and said "looks like there has been a grass seed in here, but there's nothing in there now" - that was the pale welt i noticed. So she has to take antibiotics for a week and i'm hoping she'll be back on all four feet next weekend when we are entered in two more CCD trials - this time at Nowra on the south coast.
Its funny - my usual request in the early mornings is "Eepie, stop being so enthusiastic - please" because she bounces off the walls in her enthusiasm to get out walking. Now with her sore foot i miss her bouncing off the walls and i'll be happy to see that crazy enthusiasm back again.
Meanwhile - here are some pix of the dogs on their tracking holiday - both of them "tracked" the resident Wombat to his beautiful burrow in the ferns and thought he smelled wonderful. :-)




Thursday, July 15, 2010
Lessons about Winning
Well - it was fun to win last weekend - 97/100 is a good CCD score. It tells me that when the Peep is ON - she's ON. Winning was a lot more fun than popping the stay and not qualifying at the trial the weekend before - but what lessons can i learn from a win? And - where did we lose those three points?
First - i learned the useful lesson that We Can DO It! its good to know that we can - one of the keys to competing successfully is "appropriate training history" - i can store this successful trial as a reminder that we can, indeed, do it at a high level of accuracy.
Secondly - i need to ask, What did i do that helped us get it right on the day? and what can i do to shore up the weak spots in our training? Where can i practise a down stay with a dog doing a fast seekback twenty feet away? Where can i practise precise heeling with dogs being interesting just - over - there???
I couldn't rehearse/train on the Q&DDTC grounds because we are not members of that club - so i went early to the trial and walked both dogs around to let them read this new area and get familiar with it. By the time she was due in the ring she had met and spoken to a few dogs, walked around with Harpo and just with me and she was relaxed, alert and ready to work.
She didn't have breakfast but i took some lean braised 'roo steak cut into tiny pieces and while we were familiarising ourselves with the grounds i rewarded her for checking in and paying attention to me.........i paid her for working - that was the only way she was going to get food that morning! (of course i'd have fed her if she didn't trial well and qualify - but i didn't tell her that)
At home during the week i asked the Peep to practise her stays all over the place because i didn't want another POP - this was a good strategy because in the sit-stay last weekend, the Dalmatian bitch next to Peep got up and walked at snail's pace towards her handler. It was the longest sit stay of my life and i found myself standing there breathless watching the Dal and just WILLING my pup to sit still while the Dal crept forward. It was a very long minute.
So we have reinforced our Wait command (i use Wait and not STAY) in lots of places and with all sorts of rewards - Wait sitting while i put Harpo in the car - reward is its now YOUR turn to get in the car and go out. Wait down while i fill water bowls and prepare dinners - reward - hopping into your crate for dinner - YUM, Wait down while someone interesting goes past the backyard fence - reward for quiet attentive waiting in a down is "Aff - GO!" and she is free to run again
This week i have also asked her to wait in a down while i play with Harpo - getting him to be bouncy and happy while she has to lie still and watch. This is a handy skill to develop - as it seems lots of CCD dogs have trouble on the stays........last weekend one ran out of the ring before the judge had finished giving his orders for the sit stay - and a couple more just bolted off the downs - we need to be able to ignore such behaviour, Eepie!!!
First - i learned the useful lesson that We Can DO It! its good to know that we can - one of the keys to competing successfully is "appropriate training history" - i can store this successful trial as a reminder that we can, indeed, do it at a high level of accuracy.
Secondly - i need to ask, What did i do that helped us get it right on the day? and what can i do to shore up the weak spots in our training? Where can i practise a down stay with a dog doing a fast seekback twenty feet away? Where can i practise precise heeling with dogs being interesting just - over - there???
I couldn't rehearse/train on the Q&DDTC grounds because we are not members of that club - so i went early to the trial and walked both dogs around to let them read this new area and get familiar with it. By the time she was due in the ring she had met and spoken to a few dogs, walked around with Harpo and just with me and she was relaxed, alert and ready to work.
She didn't have breakfast but i took some lean braised 'roo steak cut into tiny pieces and while we were familiarising ourselves with the grounds i rewarded her for checking in and paying attention to me.........i paid her for working - that was the only way she was going to get food that morning! (of course i'd have fed her if she didn't trial well and qualify - but i didn't tell her that)
At home during the week i asked the Peep to practise her stays all over the place because i didn't want another POP - this was a good strategy because in the sit-stay last weekend, the Dalmatian bitch next to Peep got up and walked at snail's pace towards her handler. It was the longest sit stay of my life and i found myself standing there breathless watching the Dal and just WILLING my pup to sit still while the Dal crept forward. It was a very long minute.
So we have reinforced our Wait command (i use Wait and not STAY) in lots of places and with all sorts of rewards - Wait sitting while i put Harpo in the car - reward is its now YOUR turn to get in the car and go out. Wait down while i fill water bowls and prepare dinners - reward - hopping into your crate for dinner - YUM, Wait down while someone interesting goes past the backyard fence - reward for quiet attentive waiting in a down is "Aff - GO!" and she is free to run again
This week i have also asked her to wait in a down while i play with Harpo - getting him to be bouncy and happy while she has to lie still and watch. This is a handy skill to develop - as it seems lots of CCD dogs have trouble on the stays........last weekend one ran out of the ring before the judge had finished giving his orders for the sit stay - and a couple more just bolted off the downs - we need to be able to ignore such behaviour, Eepie!!!
Saturday, July 10, 2010
Eeepie Wins CCD!

Today my clever girl won her CCD class at the Queanbeyan and District Dog Training Club trial. Our judge was John Green. This is her first qualifying pass, her third trial...she was so close last week - and this week she nailed it.
We hadn't been on those grounds before so i went a bit early so she could have a good look around - it worked and she was able to focus when we were heading into the ring - We got 27/30 for our heelwork and full points for the Stand for Exam, Recall, and Stays (sit&down).............
Sunday, July 4, 2010
Lessons From Yesterday's Trial
First lesson - i didn't lose my patience with my beautiful girl when she popped her down stay.
Second lesson - she worked beautifully except for that one glitch - so she did very well for her second outing in an obedience competition - there was a lot to be happy about.
Third lesson - i came away from the trial somewhat annoyed that the trialling environment is not structured to help dogs succeed - but more to test them to the limits of their patience and training. This is not a rewarding environment for the dogs and it seems to have a very poor effect on the humans. I saw some dreadful Primate > Canid behaviour yesterday.
I saw one handler slapping his dog in the face during his warmup work - and i mean really slapping his dog in the face - i thought "if that is what he is prepared to do in public - what does he do to this dog when he thinks nobody can see him?" and my heart broke for the poor dog.
I saw one handler storm out of the UD ring with a grizzled older bitch in tow - the dog was shoved into her crate - a bowl of food shoved under her nose and the handler said "there - see that? You're not getting it" and threw the food down on top of the crate and slammed the door shut. Then the handler proceeded to complain loudly about all the "mistakes" the dog had made in the ring......
again, my heart broke for the poor dog
Yes, i was annoyed yesterday that the judge in the next ring couldn't wait for one minute to let the young dogs doing pre-Novice do their stays in peace without distractions. Yes i was disappointed that we didn't qualify and earn that second place - but i am SO GLAD that i left the ring happy with my dog - that i didn't take out my frustration on my dog. Thinking slowly about it i am SO GLAD that i didn't leave the ring thinking that my dog had "let me down" or "failed"
Its like this - if your dog learns that a consequence of going into the ring with you is that you will abuse him/her and be upset or angry - why would you expect your dog to do well in that unnatural and stressful situation that is an Obedience Trial??
Second lesson - she worked beautifully except for that one glitch - so she did very well for her second outing in an obedience competition - there was a lot to be happy about.
Third lesson - i came away from the trial somewhat annoyed that the trialling environment is not structured to help dogs succeed - but more to test them to the limits of their patience and training. This is not a rewarding environment for the dogs and it seems to have a very poor effect on the humans. I saw some dreadful Primate > Canid behaviour yesterday.
I saw one handler slapping his dog in the face during his warmup work - and i mean really slapping his dog in the face - i thought "if that is what he is prepared to do in public - what does he do to this dog when he thinks nobody can see him?" and my heart broke for the poor dog.
I saw one handler storm out of the UD ring with a grizzled older bitch in tow - the dog was shoved into her crate - a bowl of food shoved under her nose and the handler said "there - see that? You're not getting it" and threw the food down on top of the crate and slammed the door shut. Then the handler proceeded to complain loudly about all the "mistakes" the dog had made in the ring......
again, my heart broke for the poor dog
Yes, i was annoyed yesterday that the judge in the next ring couldn't wait for one minute to let the young dogs doing pre-Novice do their stays in peace without distractions. Yes i was disappointed that we didn't qualify and earn that second place - but i am SO GLAD that i left the ring happy with my dog - that i didn't take out my frustration on my dog. Thinking slowly about it i am SO GLAD that i didn't leave the ring thinking that my dog had "let me down" or "failed"
Its like this - if your dog learns that a consequence of going into the ring with you is that you will abuse him/her and be upset or angry - why would you expect your dog to do well in that unnatural and stressful situation that is an Obedience Trial??
Saturday, July 3, 2010
CCD Trial
Oh Dear.
She got 21/30 for her heelwork - started off a little rough and missed her first position but she settled quickly after that and worked nicely - her figure 8 was almost perfect - i was very proud of her and once back at the starting peg after the exercise i realised i had held my breath nearly the whole time - must work on that!!
Then she did an almost perfect stand for exam - i think we lost one point - and a nice recall, too - so then it was the stays.
For the stays the CCD dogs were lined up facing the UD ring and it was just our luck. The sit stay was fine, Eepie looked around a bit but stayed put. On the two-minute down stay at about one minute twenty seconds, the judge in the UD ring started his next dog with LOUD commands. My heart began to sink as i notice Eepie listening intently to the commands for the heelwork/retrieve lost article exercise. The handler shouted SEEK to his dog and then i watched Eepie's eyes following the dog in the next ring - up and back, up and back.
At about 1 minute 30 seconds she popped her down-stay and sat in position watching the dog in the next ring. My heart broke.
She had been coming second. The dog who came first was trained and handled by a judge and had done a fantastic job with the exercises with some beautiful heelwork - coming second to that dog would have been an honour.
Sigh...
She maintained her position though - didn't race around and leave her place - so i was pleased about that - at some level she knows what it means when i tell her to "WAIT" - but we need more distraction work.
I am pissed off at the judge in the next ring. If he could have been thoughtful and waited one minute more, we'd have gained some good, positive ring experience, earned second place and a qualifying card.
Our judge in the CCD ring was genuinely disappointed for us - which was nice - He said "What HAPPENED? You were doing so WELL?"
Sigh again - 30 seconds can make a big difference to the outcome of a trial...................
She got 21/30 for her heelwork - started off a little rough and missed her first position but she settled quickly after that and worked nicely - her figure 8 was almost perfect - i was very proud of her and once back at the starting peg after the exercise i realised i had held my breath nearly the whole time - must work on that!!
Then she did an almost perfect stand for exam - i think we lost one point - and a nice recall, too - so then it was the stays.
For the stays the CCD dogs were lined up facing the UD ring and it was just our luck. The sit stay was fine, Eepie looked around a bit but stayed put. On the two-minute down stay at about one minute twenty seconds, the judge in the UD ring started his next dog with LOUD commands. My heart began to sink as i notice Eepie listening intently to the commands for the heelwork/retrieve lost article exercise. The handler shouted SEEK to his dog and then i watched Eepie's eyes following the dog in the next ring - up and back, up and back.
At about 1 minute 30 seconds she popped her down-stay and sat in position watching the dog in the next ring. My heart broke.
She had been coming second. The dog who came first was trained and handled by a judge and had done a fantastic job with the exercises with some beautiful heelwork - coming second to that dog would have been an honour.
Sigh...
She maintained her position though - didn't race around and leave her place - so i was pleased about that - at some level she knows what it means when i tell her to "WAIT" - but we need more distraction work.
I am pissed off at the judge in the next ring. If he could have been thoughtful and waited one minute more, we'd have gained some good, positive ring experience, earned second place and a qualifying card.
Our judge in the CCD ring was genuinely disappointed for us - which was nice - He said "What HAPPENED? You were doing so WELL?"
Sigh again - 30 seconds can make a big difference to the outcome of a trial...................
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
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