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Thursday, October 4 2012

Summer Flyball

Night one and the dogs are going good..

Tonight was the first taste of Flyball for the Summer Season. Dog Sports Rotorua run this every Thursday night right through daylight savings time. However, they started daylight savings a bit early this year and our usual 6p.m. till 8p.m. time slot is really too dark, so we are doing 5p.m. till 7p.m. to catch the light, which doesn't suit everybody as they don't finish work until 5p.m. So it is a bit mucky until we get the light.

The start of the evening is an Agility and retrieve Game through a tunnel and over a hurdle which is played by two teams, a blue team and a red team. It went very well. Red team won, with me as Captain. Next week's course was then set up and practiced by all as the game course advances every week. Next week the Captain of the blue team gets to take one of our players and send us a secret weapon player, so we will see how it goes, we might lose next week.

Flyball tonight was on the flat, that is no hurdles. The Junior and new handlers played on a 12.5meter course and the Senior or old hands played on the 25meter course. The juniors beat all the seniors, as we raced juniors against seniors in the first round and then the losers were in the second tier of competition. Some dogs did very well. Keile was one, Poppy the terrier

was another, I was mega proud of my Fae making it to the semi finals.  The little darling.  The Junior Winner was Maddy, Amanda's dog and he got a purple ribbon to prove it.  The Master class or seniors, Abby Pakes was standout.  Little Bailey worked very well, but in the end my Chan was the winner.  Next week the Juniors will race a full 25meter course on the flat, with the exception of Maddy who will have one half  hurdle to get over.  The Seniors will have all their hurdles up with the exception of Chan who will have his full height to deal with as well.  So that will change the game plan significantly and I believe that Abby Pakes will come through this time.  Though Astro and Boston are promising to give a good account of themselves and Jay the lab is coming along brilliantly.

We finished late because it rained big spots for quite a while and we didn't race through the downpour. The sausages were fantastic and I enjoyed every minute of it. If ever there was a night that the dogs truly love and the people are pretty happy too, it is Summer Flyball Thursdays. I am already looking forward to next week.

Gee I nearly forgot to mention the most important people of all, the extra folk who do not run dogs. We always need someone to cook the sausage sizzle, hold other people's dogs, load boxes etc and we have a little group of keen volunteers who show up to do this. So to Rose, John and Gloria, the night just wouldn't work without you.

Raewyn Saville 4 October

Thursday, September 27 2012

How to Dog Train with fun:

Tonight was night two of training sessions for beginners before the start of Summer Flyball for the next twenty weeks.

For the past two years, this is year three, I have run a Flyball Thursday from 6p.m. till 8p.m. through Daylight Savings time. It has a barbie sausage sizzle and costs $5 per dog. This year we have a committment from 16 dogs to complete the program.

My rationale for this training was that we always have Club members at different levels who seldom socialise or do things together. The Seniors train their dogs in their time and go off and compete at High levels of Kennel Club and Flygility Association, and when we host National things we expect our new members, juniors and regular non-competitive members to carry the can and work their sox off. New people have to feel part of the action to want to do this and fair enough too. I have been there and felt like I was never going to be part of 'the Club' or 'the Sport'. The people who have been training for a year or more from nowhere, no previous experience, are ready to compete in the high levels but they lack confidence and trust in themselves and their dogs. They need a competition that makes them and their dogs work under pressure for fun. Then there are the people who really want to do the sport but are just at the start of their training and the dogs are all over the place, concentration wise., There is a need for them to get their game together with their handlers, and the handlers need to want to work harder to achieve this.

So three levels of people are deliberately involved in this games night to improve their own and their dogs' capabilities.

Let's start with the dogs who are capable of running up to the fly box, hitting it and coming back to their handler, that is all they can do, and mostly they can do it when there is no distraction level. I don't want to introduce any more equipment to these dogs and handlers until they can run twentyfive metres from the start to the flybox, hit it, collect the ball and return to their handlers without being distracted by what is happening in the other lane. So how will this be achieved. On night one of the competition (next week) the boxes and lanes will be twentyfive metres apart. As these dogs achieve at this level they will slowly learn the equipment they need to know to become full flygility dogs. The lane they stay with until they are ready to move on will be flat hurdles no heights, just a flat run. All of the dogs we had tonight, all juniors are ready for this work.

The second tier of dogs are those who can do flygility and have even been to a few competitions, but they lack confidence, speed and are spooked by dogs in the other lane when they get under pressure at a competition. These are the dogs who are 'nearly there' but can really run faster and do better. These dogs need a weekly lane competition where some dumb dog is going to run across their bows and their handler is going to be there to make it good for them and they are going to continue to run to the box under duress and they are going to go fast to beat the dog in the other lane and they will win through the junior part of the Flyball Competition and go from flat training to fly hurdle training quickly and grow ready to work their Flygility stuff much faster and with much more confidence.

The third tier of dogs are those such as my two older dogs and Lucy Prichard. These dogs are working at Senior level and Advanced NZ Flygility Dog Assoc. My Chan is FDX titled, Becki-boo and Lucy are FD. Lucy is almost to FDX. For our experienced dogs the trick is to keep them fit, fast, and practising in lanes. Our Club has four more experienced dogs who should do Summer Flyball but for some reason their owners don't see the value. I certainly do from the point of view of match fitness. Match fitness is different to physical fitness. What it means is the dog is capable of doing the course continuously without getting bored or losing the plot, and at each run gives his all. This is slightly more difficult than it sounds. So I definitely know the value of this training for my dogs.

Every handler coming to Summer Flyball should have their own agenda for their dog. The weekly improvement will become obvious after three to four weeks. We have one dog who finds it a real challenge to come back to her handler - this is the dog who will 'get it' within the next three weeks. We have a greyhound cross who is so fast you would not believe it, her owners have hassled with her running off for two years solid and tonight she came back every time. Wow, this dog will go all the way this season. I have my Fae who, at eleven months, can catch the ball from the box. I want her doing a full hurdle course by the end of this season. There is little Axl who finds concentration around other dogs very difficult, but the sheer repetitiveness in itself builds the dogs' confidence. Every junior dog there tonight will become proficient at Flyball by the end of the Summer Season.

Not only that but the fun of the game, the cameraderie, the laughs and the lows are shared by the whole group, and eating together is good too, it adds to the atmosphere of the night.

I am truly looking forward to Summer Flyball, the two practice nights for juniors are over now so the real competition starts next Thursday, bring it on.

And another thing we have Rose, a Club member who is devoting herself to box loading for us this summer, she will join our perennial box loader, cum barbecue cook, John Pakes. So we have two wonderful people willing to give us time to make the night a success. That frees up the handlers to concentrate on their dogs, lets hope that works.......

I will report after opening night, which will be from 5p.m to 7p.m. because although it is daylight savings someone forgot to tell Mother Nature that we automatically needed more light. Instead of becoming dark at 6.15 it will become dark at 7.15 which means if we do 6p.m. to 8p.m. at this early stage of daylight savings, we will be well and truly in the dark, which in some ways might improve some dogs' runs as we won't be able to see the mistakes anyway. So I guess for the next four weeks until more light is available we are stuck with 5p.m. till 7p.m. which in fact makes it hard for those who work till 5. But it might enable some of the juniors to get a bit more work up their sleeves.

To all who have joined the Summer Flyball Group, Good Luck, Enjoy.

Raewyn Saville 27 September 2012

Wednesday, August 15 2012

Training for week starting 13th August

Well Julie being unwell in my household and the rain pouring down turning the farm into a mudslide for soggy birds and animals plus the Rotorua Council Sewage scheme being installed at my house this week. Midge the oldest dog recovering from her surgery last Monday,, stitches to come out tomorrow, and general winter lethargy, probably makes it hard to feel too enthusiastic about dog training.

However, yesterday in kinda patchy weather some standout things. Kelly and Jake learning weaves and actually doing exactly what I wanted and achieving a really good standard for lesson one. Dear old Colleen and Abby working their little socks off and doing remarkably well. Janina with Jay and Poppy doing wonderful weave work and Poppy jumping her full midi height and not a dropped rain in sight. Wow. Amanda and Maddy did their very good heel work and some nice agility as well. Amanda and hubby are off to UK to visit with the rellies in a couple of weeks so it will be a while before we see Maddy again. I will miss them,. but hope they have a smashing time on holiday in their 'home' country and are refreshed and ready for work when they return.

Today Tuesday, started out so well with the weather I forgot my raincoat which really is not like me,but there was a man drilling holes in my back porch and two men digging holes at the bottom of the ramp. Becki-boo dog was having a nervous fit about all these strangers on the property doing the sewage work and I had to drag her from the house to the truck. Fae the baby was with the guys digging the holes in the dirt barking because she was waiting for a rat or rabbit to run out. Fae loves holes. Chan, bless him, was waiting by the truck undeterred by all the ruckus. So for one reason and another I forgot my raincoat.

Had a wonderful lesson at 2p.m. Kelly and Jake just steadily working along, Ann and Gem had a wonderful lesson where Gem stayed with Ann for the whole hour. Ann felt so good about it. Karen and Lou the Weimarana were just great with Lou not missing a beat. She has a wonderful jumping style and just superb forward loping run . I think there is great hope of Agility achievement for this team. They are both fit and strong and lean, looks really good.

Great thing happened today as well - a woman arrived at the Park wanting to have training for her dog. She has never owned a pet dog before. She took him over from her neighbours who found him excess to requirements. He is four years old entire male, German Shepherd, Huntaway cross. BIG. She joined the 2p.m. class and her boy dog and she had a very good time. She will return. He is too big for Agility but loves a ball so I foresee a future of Flyball for this summer and Flygility down the track. Welcome Danielle and Dog. We look forward to watching your progress.

After the class had gone and I had given Keile and Lucy and my lot a good run, I started setting up the 5p.m. class for Agility. At about that time the heavens opened, so I decided to pack up, starting with the Fly equipment, and I didn't have my coat did I. Also having left my phone at home today I didn't know whether everyone had cancelled or not. Bother....

About then Janina and Dave turned up and packed the entire set of gear into the container. Thank you so much guys you are magic. So the week to date is a bit funny. The rain is pouring down as I write and tomorrow morning's lesson doesn't look good from here at the moment. Have to wait and see. I have cooked the dog treats in anticipation. Midge has to have her stitches out tomorrow and I need to do Julie's shopping. My Mother needs more box wood for her fire. So whatever happens I will be doing those things anyway.

My boy goat got stuck in a fence over last night.  He was looking very bedraggled by the time I found him at 11.30a.m. today.  Every cloud has a silver lining, he is so wild I cannot catch him and his feet needed trimming, so they got done while he was stuck in the fence.  His feet are actually in really good shape.  A good trim and snip the wire to get his head out of the wirenetting and he was off to try and get his dignity back in the right place.  His dirty looks at me over his shoulder as he ran to catch up with his girls were so funny.  He is a little feral/angora cross belonging to friends.  Before he came to me to help the girls get pregnant, he had never been off a chain , so here he runs loose.   He doesn't want a bar of getting near people in case he gets chained again.

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