Tuesday, August 25, 2015

From the Competitive Obedience Grab Bag - Go outs and directed jumping with Lars

Oh wow, I didn't anticipate not blogging for 10 days! Transcendent Trainers has seemed to take on a little bit of a life of it's own. I ended up just getting my butt in gear and moving forward on that much more than I thought I would at the start of it. The positive feedback I've gotten on the products thus far has pushed me to make it more of a sister site than just a section in the Tasks website. Now, you can find the Transcendent Trainer Gear at www.transcendenttrainers.com and I'm planning on adding new things with new designs on a regular basis. So, so, SO excited about that project.

Things have been a little bit quiet on the training front here these past 10 to 14 days. Summer has hit us for one of those weeks...we had a heat wave which will make me (and the guys) hide in my basement where it stays cool. When I have felt motivated to train at dusk, it's been short sessions just to give the guys something to use their brains. But there was one night that I did video Lars' obedience training session of directed jumping.

Lars and I have taken a good chunk of time off from serious obedience training after the beginning of May. We both needed a break from working so hard on getting that UD. Not to mention, May was the beginning of Ocean's agility trial season. So, I just shifted gears and let Lars be a dog for a couple of months while Ocean became my focus. I've started to bring obedience back to the front training burners again. Lars and I did an obedience run thru a couple of weeks ago and a few things were rusty, as to be expected.


That was the full gamut of  what was pulled the night I worked Go Out's and directed jumping. Some of you Task fans might remember that Lars had a soft tissue injury in his shoulder last year. He earned two UD legs back to back right before the injury sidelined him for 7 months. Before that injury, he had rocking go outs and he would sit in the middle of the ring. After this 7 month rehab, his go outs became very inconsistent. Sometimes he would run straight but more often than not, he would hook hard to the right and line himself up to the high jump. That was just points. It was fine if the high jump was the jump he had to take. But....not so much if he had to run across the ring and jump the bar. Sometimes he would run somewhat straight and sit just to the right of the middle stantion. I've done a ton of thinking about this whole issue....and I more or less have come to the conclusion that Lars has forgotten where his end target it or that he feels as long as he's someplace along the back fence, that's correct.

One thing that I had done before the injury was use a target box for Lars to run and sit in a target box sort of like a picture frame. It was out there all...the...time when Lars did go outs. But it was big and clunky and a royal pain to lug around to run thrus. So, after the injury, I naively thought we didn't need it anymore. That's where the door to interpretive go out positions opened up. After these 2.5 months off from obedience, the box is coming back....but in a different form. I'm going to use a collapsible yard stick that I can make any size for Lars' go out target....and it will always be there.






Cutie pie Lars exhibiting where he must sit when he must go "AWAY!"
I bought this yard stick after we got the UD and I hadn't used it much this summer. Lars seemed to think that he should sit just to the right of the "box". Nope....Lars, that's not what I'm looking for, pal. That has become his default position when he does head out back straight.








We spent some of our directed jumping task time working on the idea of  your butt must be in the box for me to click my clicker and you get treats. (See...this is again why there are no exercise descriptions on the back of the task cards. You work on what you need to do that day.) I am big, big fan of using clickers in training and this is a perfect application for it. Lars and I use clickers for me to get across EXACTLY what I am looking for him to do. And Lars is a funny guy....because he will do things incorrectly, sort of incorrectly, and correctly to figure out what I am actually looking for. It's like...he's processing it all himself with "If I sit here....nope, okay....how about here?? Nope again huh....let's go back to where I got that click....yup, alright. Let me try 3" over from here....nope. okay." I let him be wrong....because that's how he figures it out.



Raised bed veggie garden beds make great go out distractions...

In that training session, he figured out what I wanted: his butt squarely in that v-shaped box. Then I started to add some distance with each attempt....clicking and rewarding when he nailed it. And there was no click and no cookies when he didn't. We got to this point at the end of the training session which I was very pleased with!





One thing I have to also work on is getting Lars to mark the go out spot better. That was one thing I didn't teach because I didn't know better. We're going to be adding that to our things to do list when go outs or directed jumping tasks are pulled.

Obedience trial season will be ramping up for the fall soon and this will be my project for the next several weeks. I'm sort of looking at this as a re-train instead of fixing. But, I think this will help us with our "where exactly am I supposed to be" question that seems to pop up more often than I like in the Utility ring. I will be reporting on how this turns out for us. ;)


No comments:

Post a Comment