6/26/09

More catch-up, more video

I've fallen behind again! Since Bay Team Santa Rosa in March, we've been to WAG twice (Fun Paws and Haute Dawgs CPE trials), and Dixon once for another foray into USDAA. Last weekend we came full circle, with another Bay Team CPE trial, this time in Palo Alto.

Last things first. In Palo Alto, Moxie finally, FINALLY, got his last Level 4 Snooker leg! After who knows how many tries (I think at one point we were 0 for 9!) This finishes his Level 4 title at long last. He also got his final Level 5 Jackpot (with a gi-normous 67 point score) and Wildcard. This leaves him needing 5 L5 Snookers, 5 L5 Standards, and 2 L5 Colors ... a grand total of just 12 legs for his C-ATCH title. I can taste it :-P

Miko has almost completed the re-do of his L3 classes, necessitated by my switching him from the Regular to Enthusiast category. I had assumed that they would combine legs toward his title, but they don't, so we had to repeat about 50% of his classes he'd already qualified in. He's been marching steadily along in his unspectacular way since last fall, and now needs only 1 Standard leg to get back to Go.


Our second USDAA trial, in April, was pretty successful. Mox ran in Performance Level 1 (for babydogs) -- needed 1 Standard to move up, and got it; 1 Gambler (Jackpot) to move up and got it; needed 2 Jumpers and got 1, 3 Snookers and got 2. We entered the pairs relay with Tammy Damon and her Aussie, Simon Says. Neither dog was at his best and we NQ'd ... but we're trying again in Prudedale this weekend. Tammy and her partner, Elena, are also Ace students.

I still haven't made up my mind whether to switch to USDAA as my primary venue after Moxie gets his C-ATCH. CPE is much more casual and laid back. Also, Miko doesn't have the drive to do well in USDAA, so it would be pointless to enter him. Not that he'd care one way or the other. As long as he gets to go tracking, he's happy!


3/31/09

Finally, some video!

But unfortunately, blogspot isn't allowing even the low-res ones to upload. They're on my Facebook page, so friend me if you want to see them!

3/24/09

Bay Team CPE, 3/21-2 09

Video coming!!  I was able to talk Elsa into coming to Santa Rosa with me for the Bay Team's spring CPE trial -- the idea was that, among other things, she could take some videos. A rash of battery failures squelched that plan.  Oh well!  Luckily, a professional video service was there to save the day, and Moxie's first-ever Level C Jumpers run has been captured in all its noisy barking glory for posterity. I also ordered one of his L5 Standard runs (the fastest run out of 80+ dogs, but a bar down, so a "dirty" 5-fault Q and no placement), Miko's Standard run, and Moxie's blazing 13-second Colors run. The neat thing about the video is that I could look at it and see exactly what I did that caused him to knock that bar.

In addition to Jumpers, Mox got his final L4 Colors leg, which completes his CL4-H category title. He also Q'd in L5 Jackpot (barely! not our finest run!), Fullhouse and Wildcard, going 6/8 for the weekend.  Did I mention that we did NOT Q in Snooker ... again!?

Miko went 2 for 2.  He seemed particularly up and happy all weekend (maybe he liked having Elsa there!), doing his boing-boing! jump-in-place routine while waiting his turn to run.  Some guy was so taken with him that he kept snapping his picture, "What a cute dog!" Which he certainly is. 

Catch-up

Moxie at VAST CPE trial, Turlock CA 3/7-8

Mox and Miko have been to several trial since I last posted anything here.  I've been sucked into the Facebook morass, and am trying to figure out if I want to keep this blog going or not.  Meanwhile, here's what's been happening:

The Haute Dawgs CPE trial at WAG, 1/17-18, was another teeter-free trial for Mox.  He Q'd in L4 Colors and Fullhouse, and got 2 more L5 Jumpers legs -- he only needs one more! Yet again I managed to blow our Snooker run :-(.  It's all in my mind, I know ... but it's really stuck there, but good!  You Suck At Snooker With This Dog!  Emphasis on "with this dog," since Miko Q's regularly in Snooker.  He's slower and less impetuous, and perhaps more forgiving of certain types of handler errors :-)  Meex also got his final L3 and first L4 Jackpot Q's, going 4/4 again.

Oh, and I won a very cool prize in the workers' raffle: a $50 gift certificate toward my entries at my next Haute Dawgs trial (in May, I believe).

WAG CPE, 1/31-2/1: Moxie's return to Standard runs and the dreaded teeter obstacle.  Huzzah! Huzzah! He had 4 teeter "opportunities," and all went pretty well.  Twice he kind of shied away on the approach, but when I called him he scampered on up the board and rode it down without excessive crouching. He looked a little uncertain, but not scared. The other 2 times he didn't hesitate at all.  Those Standard Qs finished his L4-R category title.  He also got his last L4 Jackpot Q, plus L5 Qs in Fullhouse and Wildcard. 

Miko entered only 2 classes.  He Q'd in Moxie's nemesis, Snooker, which finished off his L3-S category title.  (Snooker and Jackpot go together in the Strategy category.)

VAST CPE, Turlock, 3/7-8: Finally, Mox and I get a Snooker!!!  Whoopeee! Will wonders never cease??!!  He was 6 for 8 on the weekend, and got his last L5 Jumpers leg, with the fastest time out of 90+ dogs in the class!  That was one of the best runs we've ever had -- I wasn't late a single time with my commands, and consequently I was able to get really tight turns and cut corners to shave off fractions of seconds.  It felt good!!

What didn't feel so good was my butt when I slipped on frosty grass in Sunday's L5 Standard, and sat down, hard.  That of course resulted in an NQ, but I was pleased that throughout the weekend the teeter was simply a non-issue.  I found myself able to begin to relax, and actually send him to it instead of feeling like i had to babysit the approach.  

Miko was 1 for 2, with a win in L4 Colors. The high point of his weekend was the horses in the paddock next to the dogs' exercise area.  He didn't seem to want to chase them, exactly, but he was definitely interested.  There was a big handsome quarter horse that at one point was galloping around, kicking up its heels.  Meex ran along the fenceline beside it, not barking, just keeping an eye on it.  I have no idea what he would have done if he'd found a gap in the fence.


1/16/09

Mini-post: Teeter success!

It appears that Moxie's teeter fears are behind him.  He's performed flawlessly in practice and in class, not to mention here at home, with the board at full height.  Elsa went to Shamrock with me last weekend while her car was getting an oil change, and took some videos.  I've got them on my computer but haven't had a spare second to edit them and put them online.

We're off to Elk Grove in a couple of hours for the HauteDawgz CPE trial.  Both dogs will be running; with luck Miko can finish his Level 3 title.  He needs 2 Snooker legs and 1 Jackpot; like I say, "with luck"!  With equal luck Mox can finish his L4 Jackpot and L4 Fullhouse categories.  Nothing he's entered in should require a teeter.  He'd probably do it just fine, but I figure another couple of weeks just to get things rock-solid won't hurt.

(Note, 3/24) It also appears that I neglected to note results from the WAG trial, 1/03-04.  No teeters for Mox, but plenty else for him to do.  He Q'd in L4 Fullhouse, Jackpot and Wildcard, and got 2 L5 Jumpers Qs, for an almost-perfect 5 for 6 weekend.  Miko got 2 L3 Jackpot Q's, plus L3 Snooker and L4 Colors - 4 for 4 for him!  Good boys!

12/27/08

Bay Team CPE, 11/8-9, teeter meltdown

We had a pretty good weekend at the Bay Team CPE in Santa Rosa.  The trial was held under the roof at the Lyttle Cow Palace, which turned out to be a good thing since it rained on Sunday.  Miko had a fine outing, Q/blueing all 4 of his classes.  Moxie also got 4 Q's/blues, and was robbed (ROBBED, I tell you!) of a 5th.  He finished his Level 4 jumpers legs with a fast, clean run.  

However, a problem has developed.  In class on Thursday before the trial weekend, he slid off the end of the teeter, which bounced up and whacked him in the butt.  It had to hurt, but he went right back and did the obstacle properly.  I stayed after class and sent him over it 3 or 4 more times, and he seemed fine.  

He must have been fine at the trial on Saturday too, because though he had several NQs none of them involved the teeter.  But on Sunday, in his otherwise lovely Standard run, he bailed off the board halfway up.  This is a dog that had never, ever, bailed off of anything, but off he went.  I brought him back around (which is a big no-no in CPE, and earned me a warning from the judge!) and on a 2nd try he did it without hesitation.  I wondered if maybe I hadn't given him a good approach, or something -- not that that had ever mattered much to him before.

By class time the following Thursday, Mox had concluded that teeters are really monsters with huge jagged teeth and voracious appetites for little black dogs. He wouldn't even go near the one in our practice course.  It's like he'd spent the week brooding over his initial mishap, blowing it up to gigantic proportions in his mind.  In fact, just the sound of the teeter banging on the ground seemed to frighten him -- which it hadn't previously -- to the point that he kept trying to hide behind the hedge at the edge of the ring.  Poor guy!

So, we're in teeter-retraining mode.  I booked a couple of private lessons with my instructor, Sandy Rogers.  We've gone all the way back to square 1, playing "the BANG! game" (jumping onto the teeter -- set to a low height -- from the side, so that the end slams down, BANG! followed of course by lots of very yummy treats), and running back and forth over the board in both directions.  My friend Elissa let me borrow her teeter; I found a good place for it out by the storage shed under the fir tree.  I also made a wobble board out of a piece of plywood I found in the garage.  Unlike Miko, who mastered the wobble board early and easily in his training, Mox had never been comfortable on one.  Now it took him several days to put both front paws on, and over a week before we got even one back paw.  

 Now, finally, he's hopping onto it with all four, looking quite pleased with himself (and the chicken chunks he gets as a reward).  He's doing much better on the teeter as well.  I've been raising it little by little and now it's at about half official trial height.  I figure (hope!) that within a few weeks he'll be doing it with confidence at full height again.

We have a trial this weekend.  I've entered Mox  in classes where he won't have to perform the teeter at all -- Jackpot and Fullhouse, where you pick your own course, and Jumpers, which doesn't include any of the contact obstacles. No Standard runs for him for awhile.  He's also entered in Wildcard this weekend, where there might or might not be a teeter required.  If there is, I'll offer him the opportunity to do it, and however he responds will be fine with me; we'll just go on to the next obstacle.  More of the same in 2 weeks -- and continued work at home and in class, of course -- and then we'll see how he's progressing.  Never a dull moment!

11/3/08

Playing Catch-Up!

Wow ... I'm falling down on the job here!  Since my last entry, dawgz and I have been to agility trials in Eureka, Turlock (twice) and Elk Grove (twice).  We're about to take off for Santa Rosa again, for our final outing of the season, Bay Team CPE.  

Pictures if I ever get any!

But not to get ahead of myself:  I made the long haul up to Eureka in mid-August for the HumDog CPE trial by myself this year.  Last year Elsa went with me and she planned to again this year.  I don't remember, now, exactly what came up, but something did and she stayed home.  M,M & I had a very nice room with a Jacuzzi (I do draw the line at bathing with my dogs!) and I was able to visit several friends who live in the area -- one of the reasons for driving quite a ways out of my usual stomping grounds.

Assuming (correctly, as it turned out) that the weather would be fairly cool, I entered Miko in 4 classes. He Q'd and placed first in all of them, finishing his Level 3 Colors and Full House legs.  Moxie also finished his L3 Full House and Wildcard legs, and got his first 2 L4 Standard legs.  He had several NQ's that were almost really wonderful -- a non-traditional Jackpot where he did a really long send-away through a tunnel, exiting at the end of the dogwalk then coming back to me over the dogwalk. This was worth 30 points. Only 3 dogs attempted it, only one actually accomplished it. Moxie did everything perfectly but missed the down contact on the DW. Despite the fault, I was so thrilled with the gamble I forgot the rest of my plan and we ended up with time faults. I didn't care.


I also (almost) didn't care about his NQ in Jumpers. His run was so fast and pretty ... maybe i should have handled more and admired less! At any rate, he was perfect until the next to last jump, which I don't think he even saw. He just blew past it and went on to take the last one out of order.

Our Snooker woes continued. I was beginning to think we'd be stuck in L2 Snooker for the rest of our lives.

Since there weren't any CPE trials around here in September, I decided to give USDAA a try. Headed over to Nunes Agility Field in Turlock for a trial sponsored by VAST (Valley Agility Sports Team). I didn't run Miko. Moxie was entered in the Performance, rather than Championship division. His Championship jump height is 22", and that just seems like a lot for him. In Performance, he jumps his CPE height of 16".

He had a pretty good weekend: 5 Q's/7 classes, 2 firsts, 3 2nds, with the only NQ's being ... Snooker, both days.

Moving right along ... 

WAG 10/4 - 5.  A good weekend.  Moxie Q'd in 7 of 10 classes, with 6 first places.  And finally, make that FINALLY!! we got that elusive L2 Snooker leg, to FINALLY!!! finish his Level 2 Title.  Everything else was in the bag in early April!  Miko ran in 2 classes, Q'd/blued in one and had a fast, happy NQ in the other.

FunPaws at WAG 10/18 - 19. Another good weekend.  We're the Snooker gods!!  Mox not only Q'd both days, he also placed first! Another 7 for 10 weekend, 6 wins, one 2nd.  Along the way, he got his last L3 Colors leg and his CL3-H title.  Miko got his last L3 Wildcard leg and also finished his CL3-H title.  (Wildcard and Colors are the 2 events that make up the "Handlers" title.)

VAST CPE 10/24-25.  We had a great Saturday -- Mox was 4 for 4, with 3 firsts and a 2nd. AND in those 4 Q's was his last L3 Snooker, which finished his CL3 title!  Miko won his class as well.  Sunday started out auspiciously, with Miko winning his L4 Standard class and Mox having a really good Jackpot run that turned out to be NQ because we were late starting the gamble.  (I have since bought a stopwatch; this isn't the first time I've ended up on the wrong side of the ring at the whistle.)

After that, things kind of came apart.  I just wasn't with the program for some reason; stood around like a lawn jockey.  Mox soon figured out that there was nobody home, and started making up his own courses.  

Next stop, Santa Rosa!