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Tuesday, December 11, 2012

The Thrill of the Chase

Wow!!  What a fun weekend we had.  Friday was dedicated to Blake's Christmas present (sorry Blake, can't have you find out here either!)  Saturday, the Golden kids, Tiffy (Blake's chihuahua), and I packed for the weekend and headed to Harrah, OK for a running contact seminar by my friend Kelsey Kirkpatrick.  We had a blast at the seminar.  Kelsey did a wonderful job teaching all morning and then letting us work during the afternoon.  Jade is really getting to experience the thrill of the chase with our running contact reps.  Running and chasing are some of his favorite activities, so he cannot be more happy that this is part of his new job in agility!  He progressed from running on carpet to his current set up: 2 dogwalk boards against an 8 inch table.  I still have his carpet over the boards to remind him of his job- running!  Jade did fantastic.  He really amazed me.  He hits close to 100% as long as I don't throw like a girl!  His reaches are beautiful, and he hits with top speed.

After the seminar concluded, we hit the road again for Wichita Falls, TX.  It was cold and windy, but none of that seemed to bother Layla on Sunday.  She rocked the agility trial.  Layla got her 10th QQ and earned 30 points that day, including her smoking 14-point JWW run!!  I ran the jumpers run with all blinds to cue speed and extension in areas that called for it.  Layla just keeps getting faster and faster.  We are having so much fun, and we are a much more confident team then this we were this summer and before then.

Today, Jade and I worked running contacts.  We are enrolled in Silvia Trkman's December Running Contacts class, so we were working on some homework.  He is just an awesome boy.  I am so proud of him.  I used the same set up as I was using on Saturday (8 inch table, two dw boards, and carpet).  At first I was a little frustrated because Jade would jump off the table and run to the side of the boards to get the ball.  I figured that I had to point to the boards and delay throwing the ball so he would think more about his job.  I'm hoping to throw the ball sooner for our next session so I can get even more speed out of him.  Jade's hit were nice and deep and mostly rear feet hits (preferable).  The hits that I could not see as well turned out to be front foot hits when I slowed down the videos later.  Silvia Trkman says that rear foot hits are better because they are easier to see, but she still wants us to reward FF hits because the dog needs to be able to hit in many different ways.  The environment will not always favor one type of hit.  Jade did have a few misses when he jumped, but I found out that I should have just quit with him earlier.  When Jade gets tired, he tends to jump because his stride is off.  I adjusted his start point, and he hit again.  Jade and I will practice again on Thursday, and I cannot wait. We are having so much fun!!  All of Jade's exuberance for working got the better of him when he nailed me right in the lip as I was setting him up before one of his reps.  I guess I get what I asked for when I said I wanted a high drive dog!!

The Golden Kids and Tiffy at our hotel in Wichita Falls.  I was watching Tiffy for Blake's mom over the weekend, so she got to join in on the fun!

Sessions 1 and 2 from today

Thursday, December 6, 2012

It's a Masters Kind of Year

All of my time off from the regular craziness of classes has made me slack off with posting on the blog. It has been nearly a month since I last posted, and since then I have attended a blind cross seminar by Rob Bardenett, completed finals, traveled back home to Tulsa, celebrated Thanksgiving, and ran at TDTC's agility trial right here in Tulsa.  Break has been relaxing, but I have been doing enough not to get too bored.

The weekend after the Longmont trial, I attended a blind cross seminar taught by Rob Bardenett.  The seminar was conveniently located at the same dog club where I take classes.  Rob had so much insight concerning blinds.  When performed correctly, blinds are extremely effective at allowing the handler to move around the course quickly, but efficiently.  When blinds are put in the right places and timed correctly, you actually wait on your dog to catch up to you.  So despite common opinion, you do not have to be young or extremely quick to use them;  you just have to be efficient.  We went back to the basics and warmed up with blinds on the flat.  Then, we ran specific sequences to learn how to use blinds in several different ways: blinds on the flat (most obvious), blinds in serpentines, blinds on 180ยบ turns, and blind cross wraps.  At the end of the seminar, we ran the same course that we ran at the beginning of the seminar, but this time Rob wanted us to incorporate as many different kinds of blinds as we could.  I used all four that we learned!  Blinds feel so natural to me, so I am always looking for ways to include them in my runs.  The seminar was so helpful and gave me a lot of good ideas (and things that I need to practice!)

After finals, my dad drove from Tulsa to Denver to help me pack up because I simply cannot fit everything I need for about 5ish weeks into my Mini Cooper, especially when the Golden kids take up the entire back seat.  The day before Thanksgiving, I followed him home and completed the longest drive I have ever done by myself- about 12 hours including stops for the kids.  I think I would have had a different opinion about the trip if we would have taken the route we normally take, but because my dad wanted to get home as quickly as possible, we took I-70 through Kansas- about the most boring drive you can imagine.  And to think that I get to do it all again three weeks from today!

This past weekend, we went to TDTC's agility trial.  This trial is only a few miles away from my house at the Tulsa State Fairgrounds.  Layla did very well all three days.  She couldn't seem to get both the aframe and dogwalk in standard.  She was certainly having an off weekend in standard compared to her performances this fall.  Her jumpers runs were fast and beautiful.  Layla picked up her last three legs for her MJB title- Master Jumpers Bronze.  This is one of AKC's new lifetime agility titles.  The bronze title is awarded to dogs who have earned 25 qualifying scores in the Master class (there is an equivalent bronze title for standard).  I am so proud of Layla because she just earned her MXJ at the end of August!!

Other than trialing, I have been spending a lot of time training the Goldens.  I'm getting Jade ready for his first rally trial Martin Luther King's day.  We are spending a lot of time training for agility.  He does all sorts of recalls to heel- I worked serpentine recalls yesterday.  We also worked lateral and forward sends yesterday.  Jade learned the chute yesterday and loved it.  I also opened up the channel weaves as far as they go and had him run through.  I'm not doing anything else with the weaves until he is more physically mature, but I did want him to get a visual of seeing poles on both sides of him body.  He is getting really good at fast automatic downs on a low table.  We have been running a bit on carpet in preparation for Silvia Trkman's running contacts class, which starts Monday.  I am so impressed with what this boy can do.  Never before have I met a dog that makes me smile and laugh so much.  I don't know what I was doing before he came into my life.

This weekend is going to be a busy one full of traveling.  Saturday, the kids and I go to Oklahoma City for a running contacts seminar taught by Kelsey Kirkpatrick.  Kelsey has phenomenal running contacts with her young Border Collie, Legit, so I am excited to see what knowledge she has to share. After the seminar is over, we drive from Oklahoma City to Wichita Falls, TX because Layla and I run in their agility trial on Sunday.  I only entered Sunday because we have the seminar on Saturday.  Oklahoma City is much closer to Wichita Falls than Tulsa, so I thought I might as well pick up one day that weekend.

After I get back from Wichita Falls, I will have less than two weeks until Blake comes home.  And Allison comes home a few days after I get back from the agility trial.  It seems like I have been waiting forever for Blake to come home that now it hardly seems real that I am about 2 weeks away from seeing him.  Nearly four months without him has been very difficult.  We miss each other terribly.  However, I am doing much better than I was at the beginning of the quarter especially considering he has no computer.  But if it was in my power, I would have him home in an instant.  Maybe it is all of the sweet love notes that help. Or mornings like this morning where I woke up to a surprise: a Blake original of him singing a song to the Jademan.  I haven't laughed that hard all week, but I always seem to be laughing when Blake and I are together... he and Jade are alike in more ways than one!  I love that boy so much.  Blake is most definitely my other sweet and silly half.  A couple of days after Christmas, Blake and I will return to Denver because I have a four-day agility trial New Years weekend in Colorado.  It seems like I don't sit still very long, but that is just the way I like it!