Tag - adopted dog - Dog Handling

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Tuesday, February 10 2015

LIVING WITH THE PACK

I have decided this year (2015) to start a daily blog about living with my four dogs. I suspect that not too many people live in a house with four cross bred dogs and share most of their property with their pets.

My oldest dog is Becki Boo who is a Foxi Huntaway cross. She only recently became the oldest dog as I had to put my 15 and a half year old Staffie cross to sleep with cancer, So Booey as she is fondly known, isn't that comfortable in her role as Matriarch. Midge the Staffie on the other hand was very comfortable in her leadership role and bossed everyone about, all the other animals and humans included. So we have Booey who of late has become a little rotund. She is ten years old and has decided that working for a living chasing bunnies and doing agility is really not for her and sleeping takes priority. This means that the food supply needs to be cut down accordingly. When she gets too hungry she jumps the fence into the farmyard and pigs out on chicken and duck food, the odd baby rabbit that is as yet too slow to get away and absolutely any revolting mess she can swallow. She has achieve FD with the Flygility Association, purely by longeivity of association I think. She has never liked Fly as it means she has to run alone. If ever people are bemoaning that their dog will never achieve a title, I use Booey as an example. After 10 years she has 48 points and is in grave danger of ending up in Advanced class and getting FDX as well. I enter her in competitions so that other people get a chance to win points. Sometimes her work in teams and pairs elevates her opportunities but it is almost a risk to put her in pairs anymore as she has taken to running half way and quitting and coming back. On the other hand over the years Boo has excelled in Agility. When she was remeasured and ended up being a mini not a medium dog it lifted her game. Then with the split of heights occurring at Ribbon Shows she managed to win herself through to Intermediate. She has had very little training. She has a left hand only weave, doesn't like to loop off and do things on her own and generally needs me to hold her paw and babysit her around a course. She seldom hits hurdles in fact I don't know that she ever has hit even one and stays on the contacts pretty well so she is a bit of a doddle to run.

Many years ago I used to belong to the Kennel Club and go to Agility Champ Shows, and I did modestly well with my mini Rosie a collie corgi mix from the SPCA, she achieved ADX, and Midge the abovementioned Staffie pig dog. With Rosie's demise and the Staffie doing a cruciate, I sort of put Champs on the back burner. But lately I have been training people to learn Agility and they all want to step up and compete at Champs level having experienced the Ribbon thing. So we have all joined up and they are eagerly awaiting their first Show, Probably Rerewhakaaitu as run inMay? March? can't remember by the Rotorua Dog Obedience Club. Now that they insist I join up I have to look at who I am going to run at these fancy Champs. Ten year old Booey comes to mind. So the weight has got to go. Over the last week she has become much more lively with a reduction in opportunity to stuff herself and a general cutback in the food available from the family fridge, so it might be possible to get her out there working. She has a good chance of getting around an AD course in the time allowed so thats a possibility. Becki Boo might be the oldest Starter Course dog in NZ but she is still fit and uninjured and very happy out of a course. A bit more urgency with the speed would help, maybe the waistline trimming will help with that as well. Her NALA work over the years has been steady and she has won top Agility Dog for Dog Sports Rotorua once or twice. So before she becomes too geriatric we will see how her year goes as a competitor - what a laugh.......

Monday, December 23 2013

Good Dog Training Newsletter - December 2013

Wishing you all a very Happy Festive Season and a New Year full of wonderful...... Dog Training!

Santa_Fae_dec_13.JPG

TOYS FOR CHRISTMAS

By Raewyn Saville - Dec 13

I guess we have all heard the sensible people of the world telling us not to give or get animals for Christmas, as you probably won't want them by the New Year.

What rubbish. The vast majority of people who give or get a new puppy at Christmas time have planned and waited and ordered their pup or been looking at the Animal Shelters and SPCA for ages. Christmas might be a good time to get a new family pet as there will be some extra time off work for some, to settle their new animal into their lives. I can only imagine the look on the face of a child presented with an 8 week plus puppy on Christmas morning. That will have Granma's ipad working overtime sending pics to all her friends.

It is now the third Christmas since I got my puppy on the 24th December. What a thrill. It still thrills me when I think about it. I had had a sad month and a half by then as a puppy I had chosen from the SPCA had been run over on the main road near my house. I was there at the time and it was a horrible thing to see. Because I had 'Pai' I had not tempted myself with puppies that I knew had been born and that I would have dearly loved one of. The mother dog was a lovely terrier called Spirit. Spirit had been working in Conservation and coming to Agility Beginners with Amy Knopers. I just adored Spirit, she was a trier, she tried hard, she worried if she got it wrong and she had character. She was mated with a Border Terrier male. I have always had a soft spot for Border Terriers, mostly because people make a hash of their training. They say they are un-trainable, difficult, independent. I knew they were a tough wiry character but I am at a stage in my dog training life where challenge is a must or I will go off the boil.

My last training for myself was 'Chan' the pit-bull, whippet, sharpei. He was easy to train to do what I wanted in dog sports but challenged me with his dog on dog aggression. We got that sorted and it wasn't as hard as I thought it was going to be. Well looking back it seems easier. One forgets after the dog is trained how frustrating and disappointing dog training can be on occasions.

Chan was 4 by the time I got my Christmas pup. Anyway I went to the Knopers and chose Fae Spirit. I asked Gus if he would release her to me at 7 weeks and he declined. He liked his pups with their mothers a full eight weeks. I accepted that. The man had principles and he was prepared to stand by them. That would mean that some time in the early new year my pup would be ready to come home. I tried not to get excited, but hey getting a new life to share is exciting.

I got a call from Gus Knopers on the 23rd of December, asking me to help him train a Border Collie. He was having real difficulties with it and wanted to bring it over to me on 24th December. I thought it was a bit odd but he sounded desperate (I should add that Gus Knopers is a very experienced dog handler) and we dog handler/trainers have to stick together. I had such a lot to do on the 24th, you know what Christmas Eve is like. Anyway he pitched up and parked in the shade on my front verge. I met him at the gate. He was waiting at the back of his ute. He threw up the tailgate and yanked out a Toy Border Collie on a lead. At the same time Amy got out of the truck with my baby Fae in her arms and handed her over to me. Magic. I was overcome.

So since then I have decided there are a lot worse things that could happen than for families to enrich their lives with a new puppy. Christmas and New Year were spent that year going outside every hour for pid-dles, mopping up piddles, scooping up the other, playing tiny puppy games, and watching my other three dogs involve the pup in their lives. There was never a bad word spoken by any of us. My dogs just loved Fae right from the start.

Having had a run of rescue dogs, found on the side of the road, or from the SPCA or taken into care from a family that couldn't cope anymore, the brand new straight from the mother dog puppy was something I had almost forgotten. I had forgotten the snuggling into the neck and the little sucky mouth and the 'I need you' expression on their dear little faces.

Fae turned into Fae the Fat Fairy, for the first year with her little Tutu and wings. Then last Christmas she wanted to be 'Fae the Angel on top of the Christmas Tree' with her white Tutu, wings and halo. This year she is Santa Fae. Two years on and three Christmases, Christmas will always be Fae and Fae will always mean Christmas to me.

Incidentally if you want to do your own rendition of 'How I got my Puppy for Christmas' Pam and Dave, Club members at Dog Sports Rotorua have a delightful litter of 8 Miniature Schnauzer Pups for sale. Ready to go Christmas Eve on the sleigh with Santa Fae. If you want the ideal family pet or a hard work-ing Agility Dog this breed could suit you very well. If you have a big dog in training at the moment, get a little one to go with it.

I am training right through Christmas and New Year. If it isn't a statutory holiday, I will be at the Stock Car Club training as usual. Come and join me and do some quality catch up over Christmas, I look for-ward to seeing you.

Pam & Dave’s 3 week old miniature Schnauzer pups ph: 0276788331Pam___Daves_pups.JPG

Thursday, September 12 2013

CLUB CORNER - Not Your Usual Pitbull Owner

Hi my name is Alex Jones. I am a Field Officer with the SPCA in Rotorua. My qualifications are a Certificate of Agriculture and Auxillary Officer of the SPCA.

I am currently studying a Certificate of Equestrian and next year will Study for my SPCA Inspectors qualifications.

Shadroc my Pittie came to the SPCA at about 8 weeks of age. His name just came to me, there are no exciting explanations as to how. I had him neutered at four and a half months.Alex___Shadroc.JPG

I get a lot of positive comments about him. People really admire him and see him as a regular dog.

I just can't believe how loyal and loving he is as a pet. I haven't really had any difficulties with him, he is great around other animals. He has been a bit shy of people and likes to keep to himself, maybe a little unsure in strange surroundings. Since I started doing dog training we have been working to increase his confidence under new circumstances and it has made a difference.

I am training him at Dog Sports Rotorua with Raewyn as my coach. We started him off on his own to learn about the control class, then he joined straight into the Monday Play to Learn class. He is excelling at agility. We have only been going one term and he knows all the gear now and works steadily on beginners courses.

I would like to compete with him at regular Agility Sports and show people what amazing animals Pitbull Terriers can be. I believe I have a very special animal here and our animal/human communication works very well.

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