| STITCH
the
weBlog of a Service Dog, Pet Dog, Show Dog, and Sport Dog In Training |
| 21
MONTHS |
|
Insights |
We
got a lot done in a few short days. In Michigan we spent a day
at Stitch's breeder's, then we drove to Columbus, Ohio to see
Richard Curtis doing a seminar on Freestyle. Man, that guy has
a TON of energy! Having the entire weekend to do nothing but try
things and work with Stitch gave me some really good ideas for
working with her. Basically the weekend concentrated ideas that
I've had since I got her but hadn't really noticed. I've been
saying from the beginning that this is a dog who needs to move,
who's rewarded by movement. The whole idea of her whining and
moving was pretty intimidating. In spite of me wanting to keep
her a bit more "mad" than Scuba, I've apparently done
a really good job of installing her "off button". She
can now walk into a building quietly, stay in a crate quietly,
walk on a loose leash, pee on cue, travel politely in planes,
busses and cars, and generally behave well in almost all situations.
In the seminar, though, I noticed that her "on button"
wasn't working until I started wrestling with her. And as SOON
as I started wrestling with her, she woke up, got silly, and started
having a great time. In fact, she developed her own special Freestyle
move - she lies on her back, grabs my pantleg, and I pull her
around in a circle. Very cute. There was also a jump chute down
the length of one wall. Sending her down the chute really revved
her up. So, note to self: play with the dog. Duh. |
| Presenting
her first seminar |
Back
in Michigan, Stitch and I did a three-hour clicker presentation
for Michigan Portuguese Water Dog people and friends. Stitch needs
a little more work on table-training - she occasionally decided
she'd rather be working than sitting on the table, especially
when I sat down with my back to her. That's easy to fix. And once
on the floor, she was a bit reluctant to get back on - also needs
work but not difficult. And while she DID do some shaping, she's
ten times better at home, so obviously we need to take advantage
of springtime and start going to different parks to work on shaping.
Other than those minor glitches, she was excellent. I'm very pleased
with her.
She
spent the rest of our visit wrestling all-out with her half-sister
and teaching her mom how to play. Then she crashed and spent eight
hours sleeping on a bus and in a hotel and on the plane on the
way home. |
| The
insights continue |
Tonight
we went to Rally class. It could easily have been a fiasco. My car
didn't start and I had to call a cab to go to the airport to get
the truck and then go to class, so I was a bit late and flustery,
but I managed to settle down. Curious to see if there are any repercussions
from our week alone together. And YES, there were. Stitch was eager
to work. We warmed up with an item we learned in the freestyle clinic
- facing each other, I held out my right foot, and she touched it
with her left paw, then I hold out my left foot, and she touches
it with her right paw. A few clicks for one pawtouch, and soon we
were dancing - touch left, touch right, touch left, touch right.
Very cute. She held on to her enthusiasm for about fifteen minutes,
and then started to drift off, but I wrestled a bit with her and
she came right back ready for action again. We did Rally courses
tonight, and to my amazement she gave me something I've only seen
her do in agility before - she stared diligently at the start of
the course as we were waiting for our turn, totally focussed, leaning
toward the start line, totally ready to do it. How thrilling! Her
swing finishes were superb, and her heel position was much better
than it has been. Apparently I've been interpreting lack of enthusiasm
as lack of knowledge. Whee! This is a completely different little
brain than I have ever lived with before (have I EVER mentioned
that before?). Just as she is forcing me to become a better agility
handler, she is forcing me to learn more about dogs and training.
I'm madly in love with her. |
| First
pigs in the airport, now BEARS! |
Stitch
and I were in the airport in Calgary on our way home from Ohio.
They have a 6' stuffed bear toy dressed in a Mounted Police uniform
in the mall area of the airport. We got near the bear, and Stitch
did an amazing double-take. She wasn't freaking out, screaming or
flopping around on the floor, but she tucked her tail away from
the bear, lowered her head, and moved to the opposite side of me
at the end of the leash. We had lots of space and a couple of hours'
layover until our next plane, so we worked on the bear. We went
'way down the mall until she could concentrate comfortably on me
and do some simple retrieves. We slowly got closer to the bear.
I was clicking her for looking at the bear, and for offering me
her Service Dog walk, and for retrieves. When I judged she was as
close to the bear as she could get without losing it again - when
it was obvious that she was working because she COULD work but she
wasn't at all comfortable - I clicked her once more for looking
at the bear and then we moved back down the mall and relaxed before
trying it again. It took us maybe six minutes to get right up to
the bear. At that point she was able to think and able to work -
as long as I was between her and the bear. Then I asked her to pawtouch
my foot three times, which she did, and then I asked her to pawtouch
the bear's foot. She hesitated for a moment, then reached out over
my foot and touched the bear. I clicked, treated, and we walked
back down the mall. The next time we approached, I asked her to
pawtouch the bear's foot right away, which she did. I asked for
it three times, and then we walked away. The third time we approached
the bear, she was watching me closely, and as soon as I asked her
to touch the bear, she jumped forward and whapped him on the knee,
obviously having concluded that the bear was a stuffed toy and not
worth worrying about. An hour or so later we found another, naked,
6' bear. She glanced at it, recognized it, asked me if I wanted
her to touch it, and when I declined, she walked calmly past it.
Further on we found some lifesize metal horses, which she readily
pawed-up on. |
| Her
movie premiere |
Stitch
and I went shopping in the mall this afternoon. She was lovely
- light and responsive. Tonight she went to her first movie -
duh. When you take your Service Dog to her first movie, go to
an AFTERNOON movie, with NO KIDS. Do NOT pick Ice Age 2 on its
first weekend. The entire floor from cashier to seats was a minefield
of popcorn. In spite of that, I only had to backstep once as she
headed for a piece, and her head came up. She got very tiptoe
and concentrated very hard on my face so she wouldn't have to
look at popcorn. I had kibble in my pocket and was very generous
with it. She sat up once in the middle of the movie to see if
there was something more exciting to do, but settled right down
again when I told her to. Good pup. |
| A
perfect mark in "Service Dog" |
Stitch
and I went out again this morning to do some chores and shopping.
She was unbelievably "light" - always in the right place,
awake and actually working, not just trucking along with her brain
in neutral. She watched for the doors to open so she could lead
me through, stayed brilliantly in heel position, she looked perplexed
at rude friendly people trying to con her into leaving me to go
and get petted. It was so much like having Scuba with me that I
didn't even think about how well she was doing until this evening. |
| Justin
Streufert, take a bow! |
A
brilliant Training Levels member has done up a website
giving everyone the ability to track their Levels
training and testing. It's wonderful, I just entered Scuba and Stitch
- Scuba because it makes me feel good, and Stitch so I could see
what we need to work on next. It's really motivating to see all
the little green squares marking the things we've already passed! |
| Diligently
working the Levels |
Two
more things to check off on Level 5 - scenting, which we haven't
worked on in nearly a year, and Target - pawtouch a wall from 10'
away on one cue. She likes to pawtouch the wall, and she can certainly
do it from 10' away, but not right off the bat. When I test it I
get her running out 5' and then looking back at me with a "Where
am I going and why am I in this handbasket?" We've actually
passed Level 5 - the two behaviours we have left are both optional,
but it seems only good form for us to have to pass everything, since
they're my Levels and I decided these are all important behaviours.
We've passed Come, Crate, Finish, Handling, Retrieve, Trick, and
Watch all the way through Level 7, and I find my baby Stitch at
the point I keep bragging about - where she should be able to get
pretty much any Novice title with 3 or 4 additional weeks of training.
Another month until llama shearing is done and Shearing Day is over,
and then I'll test it out getting her ready for a Draft Dog title.
Heaven knows it worked on her Rally trial - did I mention that we
attended a one-day clinic and then got two legs with 194 and 200?
I DID mention that? Oh, my bad... (snork) |
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