Showing posts with label miko. Show all posts
Showing posts with label miko. Show all posts

12/14/11

2011 in a Nutshell

Here it is, almost the winter solstice -- another year flown by. A pretty good year too, in terms of agility anyway.

Firstly (drumroll, please!): Moxie got his PDCH (USDAA Performance championship, used to be called APD) in June. The trial was held at Nunes Agility Field in Turlock.

He'd been finished with everything but his Performance Versatility Pairs Tournament leg since February, but we had to fight for that last one. PVP consists of 5 classes, combining the scores of the 2 dogs that make up the pair. It's a full day's competition, and only offered a few times a year in each region -- maybe 4 times w/in a reasonable drive from Oakland. We tried for it in March and didn't get it; the NAF trial was our next opportunity. Our partners were Patti Poindexter and her BC Gus. They were rock-solid all day, and after a rough start Mox and I settled down too. We not only got the elusive PVP Q and Moxie's title, our little team finished 3rd overall, and won a medal!

With his PDCH under his belt, I decided to move Moxie from Performance to the Championship division. This meant he would jump 22" instead of 16", there would be spread jumps, and the A-frame would be higher -- none of which presented a problem. He would also have to start over in the "babydog" ring and work his way back up to Masters level. (You move laterally from Champs to Perf at whatever level you're in at the time of the move; I guess the reasoning is that since Perf is less demanding, the dogs need to prove themselves at the lower levels.) Not a problem either, except for the additional time and expense. I weighed my options and decided that since he was just turning 6 this fall, if I wanted to run him with the "big boys" for awhile, this was the time to do it.

He got his Starters title in August and his Advanced title at the BayTeam trial 12/11, and will run in Masters classes at least until he gets his MAD title (3 Masters Standards, 1 each in Gamblers, Jumpers, Pairs Relay and Snooker; no Super Q required). After that, I may move him back to Performance. Or, I may not!

Secondly (another drumroll, please!): Miko got his CT-ATCH at the FunPaws trial in October. He actually got the last leg he needed at BayTeam back in July, but I hadn't told anybody beforehand. It was going to come down to the last class of the last day, and I wanted there to be lots of people on hand to cheer for my handsome boy. It took him a long time to get that title because he enters so few classes. His Q rate is well above 90%... In USDAA he got his Performance MAD in September. I don't intend to try for a PDCH with him -- Super Q's would be difficult, to say the least. But that's okay. He can go for titles in jumpers and standard. And since he'll be 8 next year I can run him as a veteran at 16" if I want -- though I must say he bounces over the 22" jumps almost as if they weren't there.

Thirdly: 2011 was the year I discovered ASCA trials, and they are now my favorite venue. The courses are like "old NADAC," I'm told -- open and flowing, but with enough kinks and jinks to keep your attention. Several of my Aussie-owning agility friends have been insisting for several years that Mox is actually an Aussie, and I should get him registered with ASCA. I resisted for awhile, but finally had my friend Susan Bender take the required side and head-on photos, which I sent off to ASCA. And yep, they think he's an Aussie and sent me a piece of paper that says so! Fact is, he does look a lot like the "working" or "stock-dog" Aussies -- google stock-dog Aussie and you get lots of pix of my dog! I still think he's part Border Collie, but I've pretty much shut up about it.




Both dogs love ASCA. Fast Moxie can stretch out and run, and careful Miko can relax and gallop along without me constantly in his face telling him to turn this way or that.

Of the 4 ASCA trials we went to this year, Mox was High In Trial dog at 3 of them! PASA, the local club, gives Silver Buckle awards (tooled leather collar with a fancy silver badge/plaque thing) for highest points accumulated over their 4 shows. Mox got one of them. It's so heavy he could never wear it -- think prizefighter's championship belt! -- but it's really pretty.

End of report.

Here's an ASCA gambler's run
And here's a USDAA Performance Speed Jumping run in which i prove that an old broad can still bounce!

3/24/09

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.


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!

7/22/08

Bay Team CPE, 7/18-19

Thinking it would be too hot for Miko (July, right? Sonoma County, right?), I entered only Moxie in the Bay Team midsummer CPE trial.  As it happened, the weather was cool all weekend, almost chilly on Sunday morning with the fog hanging in till after lunchtime.  Miko probably would have enjoyed a couple of runs, but who knew???

The Mox came into the weekend still needing one Level 2 Snooker leg to finish his CL2 title.  Piece of cake, thought I, since Snooker was offered both days.  Two chances to get the one lonely Q we needed.  Piece of cake ... did I just say that?  He also needed just one Level 3 Jumpers leg -- 2 chances to get that as well.  

First, the good news.  He Q'd and won Saturday's Jumpers class, which meant he could do an overnight move-up and enter Level 4 Jumpers on Sunday.  Saturday's run is on video at the end of this post.  (Turn the sound down or off; he barks!!)  I wish I had Sunday's run on video as well, because it was another Q-win (his first ever at Level 4), and a lovely fast run.  Standard course time for 16" dogs was 45 seconds; his time was 24.5!

The rest of the good news: Q's in 7 of 10 classes, with 5 first places, 1 second and 1 third.  He Q'd/won his Jackpot (Gamblers) both days, which moves him up to Level 4 in that class as well.

So what about the 3 non-Q's? you ask.  Well, two of them were the 2 Snooker classes!  Yep, 2 chances to get the one single solitary leg we still need to finish out his first title, and we blew them both.  I should say I blew them both! Snooker is a strategy game, and I have no head for it.  And Moxie's so fast, if I don't get info to him right now he's halfway across the ring merrily taking whatever jumps seem like the right course to him.  This was something like our 4th and 5th tries to get that second leg ... I think he'll be in Level 2 Snooker for the rest of his life!

Our next competition will be HumDog CPE, up in Eureka, in mid-August.  It's a long drive, especially with gas costing what it does these days, but we have friends in the area and are staying an extra day and calling it a mini-vacation.  We went last year and had a great time.

Meanwhile, here are videos of Moxie's Saturday Jumpers and Jackpot runs.  See Sara almost trip over the gamble line!  Sorry about the quality ... I was getting pretty good with the old iMovie, but the new, improved version is quite different, and completely counter-intuitive.  I'm just guessing...

Jumpers above, Jackpot below.


Miko continues to do exceptionally well in his tracking classes. I hope he'll get his TD title in February. He has made me promise that the next post here will have videos of him with his nose deep in the grass, following a trail of footsteps (and bits of hot dog!) in search of the elusive "Lost Object"!

4/16/08

Fun Paws CPE and a NADAC "fun raiser"

Q: "Are you ready?
A: "I was born ready!"

April 5 and 6 found us at our favorite stomping grounds, WAG in Elk Grove, for a CPE trial sponsored by Fun Paws.  I ran only Moxie, though Miko came along for the ride.  Mox had a pretty good weekend, with 5 Q's in 10 classes, winning 3 firsts and 2 2nds.  "Really" he was 6 for 10, since he had an excellent run in Sunday's Jackpot, but I screwed up and negated the gamble at the end.  (If you are not a Dog Agility Person, I understand that I might as well be speaking Mandarin here!)  I seem to be wired to make at least one colossal mistake in every trial!

He is now in Level 3 everything except Snooker, and he's halfway through his Level 3 Standard.  So he has almost caught up with Miko!

I have to say it was relaxing to be running just one dog, and I don't think Miko was too bored.  I had set up the tent, even though we stayed at the motel at night, and there was plenty of room for the dogs to hang out inside without having to be crated.  Plus there were the exercise pens where I took him 3 or 4 times a day to stretch his legs and have a change of scene.  Next time we go, I'll plan to camp (hoping the replacement air mattress has survived 5 months storage in the garage and doesn't dump me on the ground!).  Incidentally, that was a windy weekend and I discovered that putting up that big tent by myself in the face of fairly strong gusts is, shall we say, a challenge.  Taking it down would have been an adventure too, as the wind was if anything even stronger by then, but fortunately I had some help for that task.

I found out on Monday that in addition to the 2 prizes I won in Saturday's workers' raffle, I also won another.  This one's exciting -- an 8 x 10 print of a photo by David Wong.  So now I'm waiting to see the pix Dave took that weekend, to decide whether I want one of those, or one from the early-January NADAC trial.

Speaking of NADAC, I had entered Mox in a "fun-raiser" in Santa Rosa on Sunday 4/13.  Elsa and I drove up for the day with both dogs.  It was a small show and they were taking day of show entries, so I signed Miko up for the first 2 classes, before the day got too  hot.  He was in fine form; had 2 lovely clean runs, Q'd in both classes and won one of them.  The other was strictly Q/NQ, with no placements.

Moxie's first few runs were pretty wild, but then he settled down and Q'd in his last 3 runs, with 2 firsts and a 2nd.  He was the fastest dog in Novice Jumpers by over 12 seconds!  That was his 3rd Jumpers leg at that level, so next time he moves up to Open.  He's already joined Miko in Open Regular (Standard).

Elsa took some video ... if anything's worth looking at (really poor lighting conditions in the open-sided roofed arena) I'll get them posted before long.

Now we have about 4 weeks off.  Time to head up to Portland to see my granddaughter!



3/27/08

Bay Team CPE, 3/22-3

"'Scuse my dust!"

This was a big event held in Sunnyvale, considerably closer to home than our usual Elk Grove venue.  There were 3 rings going at the same time, but things were so well organized and orchestrated that there were few to no SNAFUs.  I took both dogs, and at the end of Saturday's events was hoping for a double "perfect weekend" -- 9 Q's/9 events for Mox, 7/7 for Miko.  Miko had Q'd in all 3 of his Saturday classes, with a 1st and a 3rd place, and Moxie had Q'd in all 5 of his, with 2 1sts, a 3rd and a 4th.


However, this perfect weekend was not to be.  On Sunday, Miko Q'd in his first class and then he had clearly had enough.  I ran (okay, trotted) him in one more and then scratched from the final 2.  He gets seasonal allergies and was on meds; I don't think he felt very good.  

"I think I'll sit this one out, thanks."

"Not Me!!!"

Moxie ran either hot or ... not cold, maybe "too hot."  He Q'd and finished 2nd (on accumulated points) in his Jackpot class with an excellent run that earned us compliments from total strangers, and he was absolutely brilliant in his Jumpers -- more than 5 1/2 seconds faster than any other Level 2 dog of any size!  But in Full House we ran into some trouble, ended up not exactly where I intended, and I got flustered and patted him before sending him to the table to stop the clock.  This constituted "touching the dog on course," which is elimination.

Our primo disaster, though, was Sunday's Standard class.  The wheels came off, the boiler exploded, it rained rubber chickens and the stock market plummeted yet another 300 points.  Everything that could go wrong, did.  He broke his stay at the start (only time all weekend, and I was doing some lonnngggg lead-outs), which meant I was behind him from the gitgo.  He took an off-course jump.  Blew his weave entry.  Blew his weave entry again.  And again.  And he barked -- at me, not just his usual "look!  I'm running!" enthusiastic noise.  Babysitting the weaves put me behind him again, out of position so I had to rear-cross the teeter.  Apparently I cut it closer than I shoulda, because I tripped and went sprawling -- took most of the skin off my right knee (the one that works!).

Good going! In one class I "handle" my dog, in another I fall over an obstacle...

But I balance these mishaps against the truly excellent runs, and I feel pretty good.  I have a private lesson set up with Sandy to help me teach him directional commands, so that when he gets ahead of me I don't lose him.  I think that'll make a real difference.  I certainly don't want to try to slow him down!

The photos included with this post were taken at the WAG NADAC trial 3/15-16.  Dave Mills is the photographer, and yes, I have bought prints!

3/17/08

CPE, NADAC again, and finally some January pix

It's a bird, it's a plane ... 
... no, it's the flying Moxerati, catching serious air at the WAG NADAC trial in January (see earlier post). All the pictures here are from that trial. They were taken by David Wong, and though it took forever for them to get to me, they were definitely worth waiting for.  I'm particularly glad to have pix of Mox in action, finally.  He looks completely deranged when he's on-course, as these photos clearly show.  Just imagine a soundtrack of non-stop barking as he hurtles past ... and take 3 Advil and lie down in a darkened room :-)  

Seriously, he's an extremely promising young dog -- not only fast and talented, but dead honest and full of heart and enthusiasm.  Our main challenges have more to do with my learning to be a better handler than anything else.  If I can get info to him on time, he'll give me everything I ask for, and then some.  He has recently moved up into one of Sandy Rogers' competition classes, and is thriving there.

Since that January trial we've been to 2 more, also at WAG. We hit a CPE event in mid-February, then gave trialing a rest for a few weeks so I could do little things like fly up to Portland to visit my too-adorable-for-words granddaughter, Evelyn. 

Both dogs did well despite cold wind and rain at the CPE trial, with Miko Q-ing in 6 of his 9 classes and finishing his Level 3 Standard title. Moxie went 8 for 9, with only a mental lapse on my part keeping him from a perfect weekend. He was having a brilliant run in his second jumpers class, and then my mind went blank and I forgot the course. Running 2 dogs, with events taking place simultaneously in 2 arenas, is hard on my aging brain. I scratched both dogs from one of their classes on Sunday, which took a little of the pressure off and frankly I had more fun.  













 Running With My Boys






















Comin' Through!!!






This past weekend we hit another NADAC trial.  Moxie had a stellar weekend, Q-ing in 8 of his 10 classes.  Okay, officially he Q'd in 7 of 10; I managed to get us eliminated after his very nice Touch/n/Go run because I had forgotten to take off  the treat-bag I had buckled around my waist.  No treats or toys in the ring!  Them's the rules, and it didn't matter that Mox didn't even know the bag was there.  Shame on me!  Ironically, Sandy (my instructor) had been giving me a hard time about that bag in class just last week.  "People forget and wear them into the ring and get eliminated," she said.  And I went, "I'd never do that."  Yeah right.  Betcha it won't happen again, though.  I'm-a sell that sucker on EBay!


























Why let weave-poles slow you down???

Miko's weekend left a bit to be desired.  He did have a couple of good runs, and won one of his classes, but his heart wasn't in it and he just didn't seem to be having any fun in the ring.  He seemed to feel okay; when I let him loose in the exercise field he ran around and played with Moxie, he just didn't want to do agility.  He's been less and less enthusiastic about it lately, and if I can't find a way to make it enjoyable for him again I'll find another activity that he and I can do that he'll like better.  Meanwhile, both dogs are entered in another CPE trial this coming weekend, enough closer to home that we won't need to stay overnight.  We'll see how it goes.

I've discovered a pretty nifty place to stay when I'm competing at WAG and don't want to tent-camp because of cold weather -- Extended Stay America is less than 15 minutes from the WAG facility. It's one of those suites deals, very basic but with a stove, refrigerator, microwave, desk and table with chairs, queen bed, comfy armchair, wi-fi and funky old-fashioned tv that gets basic cable + Showtime. There's a Starbux practically next door, and a Safeway and various restaurants nearby. It's reasonable, too. A lot of agility people seem to stay there.  My dogs seem to like it just fine.  They just seem a little confused about why they don't get to stay in the same room every time.  When we arrive each time they go right to the door where we stayed last.


Cold January weather calls for a warm cap from Peru!

1/14/08

NADAC Trial at WAG , 1/12 - 13

Both dogs piled into the back of the 300 hp turbocharged Dogmobile on Friday, and off we drove in a chilly rain to what's becoming our home away from home, the Western Agility Group's dog-sports facility in Elk Grove. Fortunately, I had booked a room in a motel there, because it would have been pretty miserable sleeping in my tent, even with 2 dogs as foot-warmers. Plus, I'd had a cold all week and was worried it might get worse. It didn't; despite off and on drizzle on Saturday it went away!

This weekend's trial was affiliated with the North American Dog Agility Council -- my first experience with their rules and classes. Unlike the CPE trials that Miko entered last year, NADAC doesn't use the teeter or the tire jump. The A-frame is lower and doesn't have slats for the dogs to stub their toes on. The courses tend to be open and flowing, so the dogs can really stretch out and run. I figured this would be right up Moxie's alley, which turned out to be the case. He Q'd and placed first in 3 of his 4 Regular (standard) runs, one of his 2 Jumpers runs and his Tunnelers run. In each of his other classes, one mistake caused him to NQ -- once he knocked a bar, 5 faults. The other times it was handler error; I just didn't get information to him in time so he took a jump out of order and had to come back and correct it -- 10 faults.

Because of all the emphasis on speed I was a little worried about Miko, who had been kind of a slug in practice lately, but he had his game face on for sure. He motored right along and had a perfect weekend -- 8 Q's out of 8 classes, 7 first places and 1 2nd. We don't call him St Miko the Good for nothing!

One of the things I like about NADAC is the emphasis on distance handling. It was a trip to watch the elite-level dogs and handlers run, with the handlers having to stay behind a line and send the dogs halfway across the arena. The best of them made it look effortless, as if the dogs were remote-controlled ... which in a way they were! I'd love to be able to do that! It's nice to have a goal :-)

NADAC even offers classes with no jumping -- just tunnels, or tunnels and weaves ... and they're introducing a new class called Hoopers, where the dogs run a course through upright hula hoops. When I arrived on Friday they were setting up a hoopers course so I stayed to watch. The jury (mine anyway) is out ... it just seemed sort of weird to me. On the other hand, I can see that it would be a good test of handling, and a good, fun activity for a dog that was unable to jump.

David Wong the photographer was there again all weekend and got some great shots of both my guys. Moxie looks completely demented, wild-eyed and mouth wide open. Miko looks his usual handsome self, but finally I'll have some pix of him doing weave poles. When I've got 'em I'll post 'em.

11/24/07

Pix from 10/20-21 WAG CPE Agility Trial


Well, it took a while, but the CD from David Wong, the photographer who shot the Oct 21-22 CPE trial at Elk Grove, arrived last week. Well worth waiting for! There were over 100 photos, most of them in sequences of 3 - 5, giving me a good look at Miko at several points along the approach-airtime-landing continuum. When you shoot this way, not all of the pix are aesthetically pleasing, but all are instructional and there were plenty of "pretty" ones to choose from too. Here are a few of the best.

You can read an account of Miko's fabulous exploits at this event in an earlier post. However, I see that I forgot to brag that he finished all of his Level 2 titles, which makes him officially Miko, CL-2, CGC. And he's halfway to his Level 3 Standard title (CL3-R).


The A-Frame and the Teeter-totter are 2 of the 3 contact obstacles in agility (well, 4 I guess, if you count the pause table); the other one is the Dog Walk. The dogs must put at least 1 paw in the yellow "contact zone" both going up and coming down. Otherwise it's 15 faults.


11/2/07

Miko strikes again!

I'm waiting for a CD of photos from the Fun Paws CPE agility trial 10/20 -21 at WAG (and yes, it does seem as if I'm wearing a deep rut between Oakland and Elk Grove!). David Wong was there all weekend, taking pictures in the outdoor ring. He uses a motor drive, so there are multiple shots of your dog at each obstacle. Not only a great way to be sure you get just the right shot -- studying the series is also very instructional, almost like viewing a film. I'm tapping my fingers impatiently, and keeping a sharp eye on the mailbox.

Meanwhile, boring ol' text: Mr Meex had another perfect weekend. He Q'd in all 8 of his classes, got 4 blue ribbons, 3 reds and a yellow (that should have been blue, if I hadn't completely blown it at the end). Maybe the high point of the weekend was racking up 66 points in the jackpot (gamblers). Not only was this nearly 3 times the points we needed to Q, it was *almost* the high score out of all the 80+ dogs (all levels ran the same gamblers course). I didn't see anything higher on the score sheets posted after the class, but when the results were actually published there was a 68, earned by a very experienced handler and champion-level dog. Didn't make me any less proud of my boy!

I camped in my tent again; spent Friday night re-pumping my brand new air bed, which turned out to have a slow leak. Found a replacement for it Saturday and expected to sleep soundly that night. Instead, I watched the sides of the tent belly and ripple in the gusting wind and listened to the sound of other people's shade canopies being blown over, too close to me for comfort, so got up at about 1 a.m., found the extra tent pegs, guy lines and a hammer, and battened down the hatches. I don't really think the tent was going anywhere. On the other hand, I wasn't 100% sure it wasn't going to try. I'm used to little backpacking tents with low profiles. My "dog tent" is over 6' high in the center -- nice for moving around in, and airy in hot weather. But not designed for wind, no way.

More when the pix come...

10/10/07

CPE Agility Trial at WAG


Miko, the Mox and I had a lot of fun last weekend (Oct. 6 & 7). On Friday, we drove the hour and a half to the WAG (Western Agility Group) facility near Elk Grove. Miko was competing and Mox was along for the experience and socialization. We set up camp in my wonderful new REI tent, which is big enough for crates for both dogs, plus my sleeping bag and all our stuff, with room left over. A BIG tent! but easy for me to set up by myself, at least when there isn't much wind.

I had brought along the camping stove and some propane bottles, planning to at least make coffee and breakfast each morning, but after learning that there was a Starbucks less than 3 miles away, that opened at 5 a.m., I quickly bagged the camp kitchen idea. The Starbucks, plus a Round Table Pizza (Friday nite dinner) and a Chinese restaurant (Saturday nite dinner) and a bunch of other businesses were grouped around the perimeter of a huge parking lot that was nearly empty every time I went there. Until pretty recently I guess the area was mainly ranchland -- the streets have names like Machado Ranch Blvd, etc -- but now is subdivided; big houses on tiny lots. Not many people, or maybe they were all inside. For sure they weren't having pizza, Chinese food, or lattes!

Miko had a fabulous weekend. He qualified in all 6 of the classes he entered, with 4 first places and 2 seconds. He earned his very first agility titles in the process -- his Level 2 Standard (CL2-R), and Level 2 "Handlers" (CL2-H, which involves obstacle-discrimination games).


Moxie had a pretty good weekend too. He didn't bark or whine AT ALL, he walked (fairly) calmly on leash all around the arenas and crowded warm-up areas, and when I worked him he was focused and attentive. The first couple of times I took Miko out to the ring to compete, I put Mox in his crate. But then I figured he'd behaved so well I'd try just leaving him loose in the tent. So I gave him a chew toy, crossed my fingers, and off Miko and I went. Golden silence :-) Even when the dog in the tent next to ours started to fuss, he didn't join in.

This is the first time I've been camping since I took myself off to Tuolumne Meadows for a week in September 2002 or 2003. One thing that's changed is that my older bones no longer care for sleeping on an Ensolite foam pad. Before the next trip 2 weeks from now, I'm buying an air mattress!

Just one last quick note on Moxie -- he's been doing really well in class, and in his practice sessions between classes, so the plan at this moment is to take him to a fun match at WAG on Nov. 17.

6/29/07

At the dacha

Several times recently we've spent weekends at our friends' "dacha" (friends are Russian) in the wine country. This entry is a slightly-tweaked version of an email I sent to other friends after the first visit, with Moxie's misadventures on the 2nd tacked on at the end.

Our dogs and our friends' dog get along just fine, and ours pretty much ignored the 2 cats, tho I did catch Miko standing at the foot of the stairs a few times, looking up and wagging his tail at a grumpy little grey face scowling down at him from a ledge on the landing :-)

We had a thoroughly relaxing 2 days doing nothing much (I recommend it!). Elsa and her friend Helen drove out to a nearby fruit stand where the strawberries were in full season and came home with a flat of the most delicious berries I ever put in my mouth. They were minutes off the plant, still warm from the sun.

The dacha is a rambling, much-added-onto house that started out long ago as a little 2 story box and expanded to accommodate family and visiting friends. There are now about 5 bedrooms and at least 3 baths, on 5 fenced acres of fruit trees, scrub oak and garden. Helen is a serious Rose Person -- has about 40 different varieties, from pure white to deep purple, palest lemon yellow to rich orange and of course red, redder and reddest. I helped her for a couple of hours on Sunday, deadheading blossoms and cutting back suckers, and she sent us home with a wastebasket filled with blooms. No, not thrown away -- a plastic wastebasket was all we could find to put water in that would hold all those flowers!



Perhaps the thing I enjoyed most, other than having a chance to hang out in a relaxed setting away from home, was watching the dogs do their doggie thing. not surprisingly, Miko's and Moxie's doggie things turn out to be quite different. Of course they both had to tear around for awhile, after being cooped up in the car for nearly 2 hours, and they had to get sorted out with Reggie, Helen's dog. Then Miko went on patrol. He checked the fenceline. He checked the brushpile where the groundsquirrels live. He checked the fenceline some more and dug under a fallen tree to get at whatever was under there. Then he checked the fenceline yet again. Then he checked the entire orchard, nose down, "quartering" the field the way i've seen hounds and pointers do. Then he re-checked the brushpile. etc etc etc. Even when he came in the house, he sat or lay in the doorway, facing out, keeping an eye on things.

Moxie, meanwhile, did a lot of plain ol' running around. He found things to play with -- a pinecone, a big stick -- and when I wouldn't throw them for him he figured out how to do it himself. He followed Miko on some of his (Miko's) forays, but he seemed to be along more just to be in on the action than because he was really looking for anything. From time to time he'd approach Elsa or me, offering a toy or a paw, wanting human interaction. The difference between them was fascinating.





We had to bring the dogs in at dusk, because there are a lot of deer in the area and both Miko and Helen's dog are confirmed deer-chasers. Also, there are coyotes. That night we slept so soundly, dogs included, that we didn't hear the coyote chorus that Helen told us the next morning had gone on just under the windows for quite some time. I'm astonished the dogs didn't wake up, but they didn't.

Our 2nd visit was more of the same, except that poor Moxie got a foxtail up his nose and spent Sunday afternoon at the emergency vet clinic in Santa Rosa. Foxtail removal involves a general anesthetic and set us back $270, but those things are nasty! The vet showed me what he took out of Mox's nose -- 3 hard, sharp, barbed-shaft little spears, each close to 3/4 inch long. Good riddance.

Foxtails seem to be unusually bad this year. A friend's dog got one embedded between 2 toes; it worked its way in and then got infected. Several trips to the vet and many hundreds of dollars later, he's okay again. Our beloved park, Pt. Isabel, is undergoing serious renovation, a project that will take until the end of the year, at least. Meanwhile, big sections are fenced off and unavailable to the dogs while work is being done. The largest field that is still open is, unfortunately, overgrown with foxtails. It'll be great when the work is finished, but meanwhile some of the pleasure has gone out of the park. I took Miko and Mox there yesterday evening. It was lovely and warm; the water was high in the channel so they got to go swimming. But Miko prefers the gopher population on the far side of the bridge, AKA Foxtail City, and I had to keep calling him back.

6/27/07

Updates & brags...

.. but no pix.

Since my last post, Miko has been to his first 2 agility trials; Moxie has begun formal agility training AND passed his CGC (canine good citizen) test.

In late May, Miko and I made the 90 minute drive to Elk Grove, near Sacramento, for a DOCNA trial at WAG (DOCNA = Dogs on Course North America; WAG = Western Agility Group). I drove up by myself on Saturday, to scope things out -- I'd never been to an agility trial before and wanted to get a sense of things. I volunteered to set jump poles, and run leashes from the start line to the finish, which got me entered in the workers' raffle -- I went home with some very nice prizes! On Sunday, Miko and I left the house at the crack of dawn, because he had to be measured by the judge before the first class. He's 21 1/2", which is about an inch smaller than when I measured him myself but makes no difference in jump height.

My goal for this competition was to complete at least one course without getting lost and wandering off into the desert. I entertained no thought whatever of Q-ing (having a clean run w/in the allotted time). Miko was entered in 4 classes -- 2 "standard," with the full complement of jumps, weave poles and contact obstacles, and 2 "jumpers," with nothing but jumps. I decided against any of the games, figuring it would be hard enough to negotiate regular 16-jump courses when I could study the maps beforehand. Do you get the idea that mental lapses are a major concern for me? :-)

Anway ... brace yourself for a major brag! Miko Q'd and finished in 1st place in 3 of his 4 classes. In the 4th, I got momentarily confused and just stopped dead: where now? Miko stopped too and looked at me in confusion. Then he turned and jumped the nearest jump. The rest of the course then reappeared in my brain and on we went. He was clean but had .04 time fault. No Q, but still good enough for a blue ribbon, so we went home covered with glory.

I can't say enough about the WAG facility and the people who run it. Everyone is so friendly and helpful, it's just a pleasure to go there.

Miko's 2nd trial was another DOCNA at PDIA (Performance Dogs in Action) in Pleasant Grove, on the other side of Sacramento from WAG, on June 2nd. It was a hot day that probably seemed hotter to those of us from the Bay Area than to the "natives." Miko's a low-melting-point dog and I was worried about working him in the heat. Long story short, we entered 2 standards and 1 jumpers. Miko Q'd and placed 2nd in the jumpers and first standard run. By the time the 2nd standard rolled around it was 85 degrees and rising. Due to some start-line confusion, I wasn't ready when Miko's name was called, which meant he wasn't ready either. He was clean, but just loafing along, and picked up .5 time fault. Good enough for 3rd place, but no Q.

Our next outing will be the Bay Team's CPE trial in mid-July. (CPE = Canine Performance Events.) It will be in Petaluma, and probably HOT. After that, we ride out the heat until mid-August, when we head for the (hopefully) foggy, cool north coast for a CPE trial in Arcata. Elsa will go with me to that one -- we'll make a little mini-vacation out of it. I guess Moxie will go too, for socialization. Everyone bring ear-plugs!

Speaking of Moxie, to nobody's surprise he's taken to agility training like he was born to it -- and maybe he was! He did a foundation course with Sandy Rogers at ACE (Miko's teacher), and now is at about week 12 of an ongoing beginners class taught by Blancett Reynolds. He's wildly enthusiastic about everything, including the nasty weave poles. I have to be careful when I'm practicing not to get carried away and ask him for things he's not really prepared for, just because I think he'll probably do them. He gets really amped up, and he has a low frustration threshhold. If I'm not absolutely clear about what I ask him to do, or if I'm out of position on the course, he lets me know about it -- throws a barking fit. So I'm learning all about that fine line between high drive and hysterical melt-down.

Ah well. Keeps me off the street and outta trouble (except with my wallet!)

1/2/07

How this all came to be...



Everyone who knows anything about me at all, knows that I'm a Cat Person who used to be a Horse (and Cat) person, who has no use whatever for dogs. None. So how on earth did I end up with not one but two high-energy canines of the train me and give me jobs to do or I'll destroy your house variety? I swear it's from watching Animal Planet! There was a program, kind of a mini-series, on late at night a few years ago, called "Cell Dogs." Maybe you saw it. The show highlighted inmates in various prisons who were in a program in which they learned to train dogs rescued from animal shelters to be service dogs for the disabled, or in some cases just good companion animals. In the first show I watched, 6 or 8 guys with little or no experience in dog training were paired with dogs straight from the pound, with the goal of turning those dogs into helpers for disabled people. The dogs learned to open and close doors, turn lights off and on, pick up dropped objects, take laundry out of the dryer and all manner of other useful activities. I thought it was about the coolest thing I'd seen in a long time, and I knew there was no way I was going to get Scrabble, my cat, to lift a paw to help me. Maybe I should get a ... dog?

But where? How big and what kind? Male or female? My cats have pretty much all simply found their way into my life, kittens dumped on my doorstep. They appeared. I fed them. They stayed. About dogs, though, all I knew was to avoid the puppy mills. There are a number of excellent rescue organizations around here, so we went to a mobile adoption one Saturday in September of 2004. We were charmed by a comical-looking corgi-german shepherd (?) mix, but he had some health issues and by the next morning when we had decided we wanted to take him anyway, someone else had given him a home. I was surprised at how disappointed I felt.

Long story short, we ended up that afternoon at the Berkeley East Bay Humane Society,where Miko was waiting. He was about 9 months old, a maybe shepherd mix, maybe dobie mix, the shelter people said. Later we learned he's an Australian Kelpie mix. (I'd never heard of kelpies -- they herd cattle and sheep in the outback. We don't know what the not-kelpie part is; some kind of hunting dog -- pointer or hound, perhaps, because of his talented sniffer and high prey drive.) About 45 lbs, a bit bigger than we'd planned, playful and energetic but sweet tempered. We jumped through all the necessary hoops (BEBHS is really careful about where they place their animals), and the following Tuesday our new dog came home with us.

Getting him and Scrabble to co-exist took some time, and is worth an entry of its own.

Miko started basic obedience classes immediately after we got him, and he's been in school one way or another pretty steadily ever since. He's an exceptionally smart and very willing dog. But while he as learned a few utility skills -- he'll pick up things I drop, he'll bring me my shoes, turn on a pressure-sensitive light with his paw etc -- and some cute tricks, for the past year or a little more we've been concentrating on the sport of agility. This seems like a natural progression to me, since when I had horses, they were jumpers. Makes sense to train my dog to jump too! And run through tunnels and climb A-frames and do all that other fun stuff.

And here we are.