Belle and I didn't do quite so well. She missed two of the three dog walk contacts in her runs. However, our Touch n Go was awesome, and I savored it despite the missed contact. On our Jumpers run, I remembered that I outran her twice last weekend, so I took a conservative lead out, thinking I'd easily beat her to the spot where I wanted to do a front cross. Wrong. I ended up doing a rear cross and got the first serpentine, but I wasn't were I planned to be for the second and pulled her off the third jump. Then I managed to pull Belle off a second jump later in the course, and finally for the final blow, I managed to get her to drop a bar. When it was Dusty's turn, I lead out to where I wanted to do my front cross, and things went much better.
Since Belle did a little stress scratching at the start line on almost all of our runs, I decided to leave not line her up between my legs for Tunnelers and see if she found that less stressful. I ran away from her and when I turned to face her from the exit of the second tunnel. I received the shock of my life when I realized she was half way through the tunnel. Belle never breaks her start lines! I was so flustered I momentarily forgot the course and omitted the first loop.
I was a little bummed that Belle and I did so poorly in terms of Q's, but when I thought about it, the Regular run was pretty good and the TnG was really nice except for the missed dog walk contacts. And both the Jumpers and Tunnelers NQ's were due to handler error. So I need to work on my handling--nothing new there and it's time to tackle the dog walk contacts again.
I don't particularly want a running dog walk contact. However, I seem to absolutely suck at teaching fast 2o2o contacts. So, my plan is to work on a running dog walk contact with Belle. It will be good practice for my next dog. For now, I'm going to prop one ramp of the dog walk on a milk crate and use the table as a starting point. I tried it this morning, and decided to also place a hoop at the end of the ramp. I simply tossed a ball and released Belle to get it, clicking when she hit the yellow and saying nothing if she missed. Actually, the only problem we encountered this morning was that initially Belle did a 2o2o. However, she quickly got the idea that I wasn't looking for a stop.
Here's wonderful video of a woman in France using Silvia Trkman's method to train a running dog walk. It makes me wish I had a set of stairs.
I signed up my pup for Silvia's Foundations class. We did the tricks class earlier this year. May do the running contact eventually, but with a corgi, may not be a problem! :)
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