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Saturday, August 30 2014

Good Dog Training Newsletter - September 2014

NEW CLASS CALLED SEARCH

Things at Dog Sports morph constantly as it becomes obvious that we need to give people and their dogs jobs to do to assist with training. All the obedience lessons in the world will not keep people sucked up to dog training in the same way as learning Agility or Flygility.

However, it goes without saying that these full on athletic sports are not for everyone. Handlers do need a degree of physical fitness and dogs also need to be of an age where they are capable. This means really young dogs, older dogs and dogs with physical disabilities such as the loss of a leg, are not involved with the club as they don't feel it is the place for them.

When handlers are learning a sport or activity with their dog they are also learning waits and stays, recall and send-aways, otherwise their dog can't participate. From all this has been born the sport of ‘Search’. I hope we can grow this and invite as many people as possible to participate. Search has four sections and can be done with any degree of proficiency. It can be done on leash or on long-line or it can be done free running. It is fun and it is very easy to train for the basics.

Course 1 is Agility Hurdles on micro and a tunnel. The target is a tent made of a tarp into which the dog must stick its head to get a piece of treat food. The course is 30 meters but run one is only 10 meters. For beginners their handler can go with them until they understand that if they travel over the hurdle and down to the tent there will be a treat. They then need to travel back over the hurdle to their handler. Once the dog can achieve this they can then attempt the 20 meters and then the thirty meters. All of the dogs last weekend managed the thirty meters perfectly so they are all ready for next week doing thirty meters only. No this is not difficult, but it acts as a confidence builder and a warm up, it uses Agility equipment and so it allows beginners to teach their dog to use that gear. It also makes a wonderful intro course to Flygility.
Snapshot_1_Chan.png

Course 2 is a blind send-away/retrieve. The handler may choose the toy or ball or object they want the dog to retrieve. So here we have to teach our dog to bring something back to us. The course lengths are 25 meters, 50 meters 75 meters and 100 meters. You must succeed on the short course before you can go on to the longer courses. The dog does not know where it is being sent, it does not know how far to go. All except one of our dogs achieved 75 meters on our first effort. We didn't do the 100 meter course, but we will at the next meeting.
Snapshot_1_Gus_2.png

Course 3 is ‘Find the Body’ and stay with it until released. We have a very short dummy for this exercise, at the moment it lacks legs but I am working on it. We put food on our dummy to teach the dogs to go there. In obedience terms it is a send-away, find, drop, stay. Some of us coped with a stand stay which is fine. The terrain is important, we used the gravel piles in the pits area at the club last time and that was fun but it always needs to be in a new place, luckily we have plenty of options at the Club. Most of us were really at the 'feeling our way into the exercise' stage with this course. However it was quite promising for some of the dogs. It is a good idea if the dog will voice when it finds the 'body' however only one of our dogs was voicing on our first attempt.

Course 4 will be new to everyone at our next lesson but I believe it will be fun. We will have a person go and hide. We and the dogs will not know exactly where. We will then send our dogs off to find the person and we will follow our dogs either on lead or free running. The person who is hiding will have food for the dog when it gets there but must not call or attract the attention of the dog in any way. This version of hide and seek is a great way to get the dogs to look for missing people or children. We will give each dog 5 minute’s total. The shorter the time it takes the greater the score for that dog.
Some of the skills that need to be learnt to participate in Search are being able to carry a variety of things such as............a set of keys, a child’s toy, a dog toy, a piece of clothing, a small first aid kit, a piece of rope, a piece of wood. The dog needs to learn to send-away and stay away, to bark on command and to retrieve over distance. It doesn't actually matter who does it the best but there will be achievers who inspire others to try harder and train more. To get some of these skills they will need to do Obedience Classes or practice a lot at home.

If you think it sounds intriguing come and join us for an hour and a half of absolute concentration at 2p.m. on Saturday. Cost of the class is $5. There may be a small surcharge for any extra gear we find that we need to have as a group, and of course the ground rent fee of $2 for the Club still applies. I will definitely put up a trophy for the end of year for the highest scoring achiever. This really is great fun. I worked with Chan and he was just terrific. I think he has it in him to do this quite well.

FLEA SEASON IS COMING UP

This is a reminder to us all that the 1st day of spring is the beginning of the Flea season. No matter what anyone says if fleas bite your dog's skin it will set up all sorts of skin conditions which follow your dog for the entire summer making him itchy, irritable and costly to maintain. Once a skin condition gets really nasty then you will be stuck with the whole veterinary visit, prednisone, cycle for the whole summer, it is expensive time consuming and unnecessary.

This is how I handle the flea thing. Bearing in mind I have three dogs and one cat sharing similar spaces. It is also important that your worming regime is up to scratch (so to speak) as the two problems go hand in hand, um paw in paw. So first of September I spray my house with a thing called Kiwicare No fleas. I buy the concentrate from Bunning’s and make it up in litre doses. I vacuum my car, and my house then I spray the inside of my car and my whole house, carpets, curtains corners, soft furnishings, couches beds etc. I put veterinary quality flea pour on on my dogs and I make sure I have a good supply of eucalyptus oil. I am a regular feeder of crushed garlic to my dogs and I do find that this helps condition the skin. Once a week I groom my dogs thoroughly and apply a little bit of eucalyptus oil to their tummies. They quite like this. My reasoning is that tummies seem to attract fleas, even if you are using the most expensive pour on a flea will often jump on to the tummy space, bite and go yuk and jump off again but in making that one or two small holes they can still set up skin issues for your dog.

All the time I hear people say, but I am using the pour on and my dog is still getting the skin condition. You also need to be aware that summer is a time when plants are doing their best to be virile and there are lots of plants in the garden and in the park that will set up an itch and scratch problem. I do find that eucalyptus oil has a calming effect on skin irritations and you can use it as often as you like. You can use common and garden salad oil if you like but the dog licks it off pretty quickly. Eucalyptus is effective because it doesn't taste that nice.

I redo my house spray on 1st December and 1st March. My last flea treatment on the dogs is usually 1st March; unless the weather is still quite warm and flea attractive, then I will do an additional pour on on 1st April. Then I am over flea treatment until September again. Get on top of the issue now ... good idea huh. Unless you have a thing for your Vets and want to pour lots of money into their lifestyle.

KNOWING YOUR LOCAL BODY DOG BY-LAWS

Do you actually read your by-laws when they are sent out with your Dog Registration request, or go online to check the law occasionally? It is subject to change at the time of the Annual District Plan revamps.

  • Picking up dog poo is not just something nice you do to make the ground user friendly for others IT IS MANDATORY. IT IS A LAW AND YOU MUST DO IT. Otherwise you can be caught up with and fined heavily.


So who is going to see my dog poo then? Well I often do and believe me I get very abused when I advise the perpetrators that they should pick up their mess. I do it nicely at first. I often show people how to do it because they don't know how to use a bag as a glove on their hand and collect the poo. At the Club I go around periodically and collect up the stuff that gets missed because of night training. I must admit I am sure my dogs have gone after dark at the club and I have not noticed, so I do a big collect of every poo I can find and there are quite a large number each time I do it. I would like to think other club members are happy to do this regularly too because otherwise we will get into trouble with our generous landlords, the Stock Car Club. Yes I know the Sumner farm dogs come each evening and do theirs there, but tough just pick it up so we don't get the blame.

The Redwood Forest dog walk area is a must see on the subject of Dog Poo. There are masses of it. I just can't go there anymore. There are places where you cannot avoid it. Honestly it is disgusting. At Hamurana we have an off lead dog walking area at the Lakefront.

In 2005 I made submissions to achieve this free run area. It was to be on lead only. The Councilors consulted with me about the closing of a portion of off lead from 15th December to 1st March during middle of day hours. I was extremely proud to be part of that local body by law. The Animal Control Department at the RDC told me to be vigilant about advising dog owners to pick up their dogs droppings because they would take the right to run off lead off us very quickly if there was deemed to be too much mess at the Hamurana Beach area where Families picnic during the summer months.

I have been abused a few times over the last ten years but recently an English couple who live along the main road really roasted me. The gentleman in particular promised to 'break my dog's back' if he approached his dog. He also decided that I had 3 dogs illegally as only two dogs per household are allowed. As I said above it pays to check your Dog Bylaws. Hamurana's Rural Aspect is outside of the ring fenced urban area that the law of two dogs applies to. I have supplied them with a copy of the salient parts of the By Laws. However I don't imagine I am flavor of the month in that household and I am left picking up after their dog as well, although I have promised to deliver it to their gate - at no charge of course.

Happy Training. Raewyn Saville


Saturday, May 10 2014

Good Dog Training Newsletter -May 2014

Dog Sports Agility Competition


Well here it is AGM time for our Dog Club again. We have a lot of enthusiastic people wanting to be on the Committee. We have always been lucky in Dog Sports Club that every year people step up to take care of the Club. This year we will lose Renee as Treasurer which is a shame, she has been a really hardworking Treasurer, but her husband thinks he needs her to help him more than we need her to help us. We are not in a position to argue with that. The AGM is coming up on the 16th May. It will be at McDonalds on Fenton in their conference room and the night will start with presentations, certificates and trophies. We have a long list of achievers to celebrate so please come along and find out who won what and you might discover that you are one of the lucky achievers.

Throughout this last year I have been running, with the help of the Club, an Agility Competition with a run every month, to help new people understand what it feels like to compete in Agility, complete with ribbons and ladder board to aggregate the points in each grade. So now at the end of the year we have some amazing scores and some fantastic achievers to celebrate.

I enjoy training people to run their dogs around an Agility course, mostly because the dogs really love it, the people get some fitness, the dogs don't get a chance to get fat and there is no reason why absolutely anyone with any dog can't do some sort of obstacle work. it is not that easy to learn at the beginning, but if people are willing to give it a full year of effort, their end result can be somewhat stunning.

Today (26th April) was the last run for the year so that we can calculate the winners in each grade. I was blown away by the standard we have achieved this year. If this is year one I can hardly wait to get to the end of year two of the competition. The runs today were all very controlled and uniform and every handler and every dog knew exactly what they had to do. You all do me proud. I am feeling so elated about the general standard I saw out there today.

Our 'Learners' grade is dogs who have only been doing agility this year, some have only been doing agility for a couple of months. The Learners stay in this grade until they have three wins and then they graduate to Beginners. Jenny and Gus are in this grade. Jenny has learnt such a lot this year, in spite of her continuous war with Gus, a Jackrussellxdashund. Gus does not necessarily do what we expect him to do. Well his run today was just lovely, he got all the way around with only one deviation. But the best news of the day is that Gus has a little sister now called 'Bree' a twelve week old Border Collie pup. Jenny so wants to do Agility with a dog who will listen a bit better than Gus . So now I can now look forward to two years of training with puppy Bree and Jen. Alex and Shadroc. Shaddy the Pitty. He won last months competition but he was one second too slow today. Shadroc is the best example of a pitbull in working condition and achieving picture perfect behavior in every way. His run today was faultless including his weaves which can be a bit dodgy. Averill and Tyson (2) came to their second competition today. Last time Averill came and entered her beautiful Sib/bord in First timers. She had always wanted to do agility and her boy dog is a mature four years old and still very playful. She won the First Timers on that first day and has been training with us over the last 7 weeks ). That training really showed today. A truly lovely round. This team have places to go in Agility. I can't wait to see what he is like in a couple of months time.

2014-04-26_14.24.48.jpg 2014-04-26_15.05.32.jpg The day truly belonged to Debbie Trimbach and Sophie. They won Learners Grade and the whole competition. Sophie had a clear round of a blistering 20.19 seconds. Chris' Boston only managed a 20.88 seconds to win Experienced. So wow to that time. Deb and Sophie got the fancy top dog ribbon today and it is just about the most wonderful culmination of twelve months of really hard work on the part of this team. Smashing effort.

At the last Competition Alex and Shaddy did much the same thing, won the fastest dog in the Competition over the Senior Competitors as well. Shadroc's run today was just one second slower than Sophie's run and the answer to that was in the weaving technique.

Last but definitely not least in Learners is the Katie and Tyson(1) team. For their efforts this year they have accumulated the most points, jointly with Alex and Shadroc and so we have a tie for Best Beginner Agility Dog in the Club Competition. Tyson(1) is an Aussie Terrier from the Rotorua District Council Pound. After a couple of years of work he is only just start-ing to get his head around Agility course work. Of course there has been a bit of a baby hump in the middle, so he missed a few months while Katie got her act together with Motherhood for baby No.2. It has not been plain sailing for this team but through consistent work and consistently attending the Competition this is one of the most deserving teams in the Club and I am so pleased that Katie has continued with Tyson, he has taught her a lot of …patience.

Beginner dogs are the in betweeners they have got to the stage where they have been training two years plus and are ready to try their paws at Kennel Club Agility. Hilary Quemby runs her two dogs Jess and Jay in this grade. Hilary has had a couple of small forays into Ribbon Shows and this coming year should see some results for her. Jess is a very steady mature Blue Heeler now and works extremely well. Jay is still yet to mature in style and is a typical heading dog when it comes to being a little bit manic. If we can nail Jay's weaves this year she has a real chance to be very successful and Hilary is such a good handler. The winner of Beginner dogs for the year are Anne and Gemma. This team is a delight. Anne has worked so hard to learn a technique to run Gemma. We really hope we can get Anne to a couple of ribbon shows to run in Elementary this year. I think they might surprise us all.

The winners and place-getters for the year in this competition were:

Experienced: Winner - Chris Hutchings and Boston, Runner-up - Raewyn Saville and Chan Veterans (dogs 8 years and over): Winner - Raewyn Saville and Midge(15 years) , Runner-up - Chris Hutchings and Bootz(8 years)(ably run today by Lucas - Jenni's grandson) Beginners (dogs who have been training more than twelve months): Winner - Anne Hall and Gemma, Runner-up - Anabella Vidal and Cairo Learners: as above joint Winners - Katie Douthet and Tyson and Alex Jones and Shadroc. Runner-up - Deb Trimbach and Sophie.

All points for last year will now be wiped and new scores for the 2014/15 season of club competition will begin with the session in May. Some of you have wins towards graduation to the next grade, these carry on. So if you have one win to-wards graduation then you take that with you into the new year's competition. The May Competition is a Starters Course with a full set of 12 weaves, so get plenty of practice in the next month.

Two lovely add-ons to the monthly Club Competition are the Puppy Race for all the pups under 12 months including our babies in puppy class. The winner today was none other than Charlie Fleming being run by Ellen. He is a gorgeous bonny golden retriever puppy whose family just dote on him. Runner up was Sue with Girl watch this space, Heading Dog Girl is a real goer with promise.
Bradley.jpg We also had our First Timers with us today. These are people who are not members of our group but just want to have an experience of running their dogs in an Agility Com-petition. There is also an opportunity for our members with a new pup to have one run in First Timers before they go forward into Learners. Today's winner was a young man by the name of Bradley with his Border Terrier Buddy. A great effort and Bradley is going to come to Control class to build on his dog handling skills. He is a talented junior with a great dog handling future. runner-up was Chris Hutchings and Kiki. It is a real thrill to run this day It is mid holiday time and a long weekend and we had 21 participating dogs. There are few things that are quite as enjoyable as this monthly day of friendly competition.

My congratulations to all participants, I hope we see the above achievers at the AGM presentations at 6p.m. at McDonalds Fenton Street on 16th May Friday night.



What is Lure Coursing? By Julie Wenham__


About 2 years ago we heard about the Dog Sport of Lure Coursing. We had at that stage a 1 year old Rhodesian Ridgeback. We waited till he was 18 months old and decided to take Jagga to a Lure Coursing meet held at Broadlands, Taupo. Well he was a natural and although Ridgebacks aren’t pure Sighthounds they have been allowed to course competitively by the NZKA.

In simple terms, coursing means to run or race after something. Lure coursing is a simulation of a rabbit (the lure) in flight from predators (the hounds) who chase after it. For humanitarian rea-sons, live rabbits have been replaced by white plastic bags which are moved through the coursing field by means of a special string at ground level with pulleys controlling the direction. The lure makes sudden turns, veers off in various directions, and often does the unexpected as a rabbit would if pursued. Hence, you will often hear handlers telling their hounds to "get the bunny." The object is for the hounds to course the "bunny" until it com-pletes the pre-determined pattern at which point they are allowed to catch it. A lure operator ensures that the lure always stays slightly ahead of the dogs until the course ends.

The hounds are coursed in groups of two, picked at random from the entries within the breed. The Sighthounds are awarded points on Enthusiasm, the follow, speed agility and endurance Coloured lycra coats are worn to denote the dogs and to facilitate the judges in scoring them. The coats are always bright yellow, bright pink and bright blue, and the colour worn also determines the dogs start-ing position.

The dogs are coursed in a preliminary round in the morning and then again in the afternoon with the lure moving in the opposite direction. Two judges who are positioned for optimum view, score each dog to determine the first through fourth placing dogs as well as the next best qualifying in each breed. Basically, that is lure coursing in a nutshell.

In March Jagga received his coursing Champions sash being only the second Ridgeback to do so. I would encourage anyone who has the time to bring their dogs along whether they are Sighthounds or not to have a go as the dogs get so much pleasure doing something that is pure instinct. We also normally will have separate puppy runs and fun runs for non SightHounds in which any dog can take part.

If you are interested in having a go at our next monthly meet con-tact sfcc@hotmail.co.nz for a schedule.

Photos - Debbie & Sophie (Best Performers- April) and Bradley & Buddy (First Timers- April Winner)

Bradley.jpg2014-04-26_15.05.32.jpg2014-04-26_14.24.48.jpg

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