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Tracy Sklenar
KeymasterI am in my new sighthound obsession! On the demo videos, there is sighthound in the 2 main demo dogs: the blue Merle, Contraband, is 50% Whippet (and 50% Border Collie) and the little black & white girl is 25% whippet (and 25% BC and 50% Papillon). So these 2 have given me sighthound experience to prepare me for full-on sighthound Whippeting! I love the way these dogs think and really enjoy training them!
Tracy Sklenar
KeymasterThank you! I am obsessed with his cuteness LOL!
Tracy Sklenar
KeymasterHello and welcome!
We had enough interested puppies to do 2 live classes! All of the recordings will be posted in the Games Package for the week we do the class. So this week’s Wednesday class is here:The Thursday class will be posted shortly (the recording just came through). You can find all of the recordings and the games/demo videos on the Course Syllabus page:
[AU-051] MaxPup Performance Puppy Foundations: Puppy Camp (Supersized Edition)!
Click on the white text (such as Week 1 Games Package) to get a drop down list of gold-colored links for each game.
Let me know if you have any trouble finding it!
Thanks,
TracyTracy Sklenar
KeymasterGood morning!
He did a great job on the circle wraps with the MM!! It was hard indeed but he never really tried to just run to it – the hard part was remembering the sit instead of just powering through the circle. But he got it really well, with only a few wistful looks at the MM hahaha!!!
So for this skill – I think one more session just like this would be great. And if it goes well, you can begin the fading process on this one too. That basically means giving your backside wrap cue and letting him set up on the plank and do the wrap, without the sit (which is what he wanted to do anyway LOL!)
The zig zags looked great! 3 jumps, no problem!!! SUPER!!!! You can flatten out these angles a tiny bit, maybe 2 inches. That’ll make it harder to see the straight line for him, and the zig zags will be more pronounced as he jumps them. He did really well here so you can definitely move forward with this!
>> Can you remind me what the last posting date is for the class?
November 30th! We extended to the end of November so folks can work through things, and then give the dogs a break for the holiday season 🙂
Great job!!!!!
Tracy
Tracy Sklenar
KeymasterHi! You can fade the plank at the lower height. And, when raising the height, you can use the sit-on-the-flat to help keep the skill fresh. I use it especially with the backside circle wraps!
Tracy
November 18, 2022 at 6:40 am in reply to: 💗 Cindi and Ripley (Border Collie – 19 months old) 💗 #43222Tracy Sklenar
KeymasterWoke up thinking of Ripley! Have you done the Find My Face game with him on course? I believe he has played them but maybe not in course work. That game has been key to help my dogs be more chill and less aroused/not bitey when there is a ‘break’ in the action on course. This can include my screw ups as well as at the end where they are less sure about what to do. That might help too!
T
Tracy Sklenar
KeymasterWow! Congrats on the new addition! I love her name ❤️ Enjoy!!!!
Tracy
Tracy Sklenar
KeymasterHi! Sorry for the delay! I thought I replied, by clearly only replied in my mind 🙂
>> I totally agree that I up the ante a bit too quickly and push for harder faster. I know I need to stop doing that and let him be really good at doing it and get situated in a successful pattern. I saw that on some teeter work I was doing the other day! It is so hard not to think… well if he did so well, maybe I should… and then watch it backfire a bit WHEN I SHOULD HAVE JUST STOPPED!!
Ha! You can promise yourself to do 5 reps with no changes… then stop the session, assess, come back and either make it easier, or keep it the same, or make it a little harder. Or you can decide not to do another session, that is fine too LOL!
>>I have not tried the three-jump exercise and I’d really like to. If I keep the angles open enough, do you think I should try it?
Yes! Totally try it. It is a different challenge than the backsides. He has a strong stay and you can lead all the way out past jump 3. He is ready for it!
>>And that being said– I know eventually we fade the platforms out, how often should we train this concept across his career? Is it enough that he did it once for a few weeks and now he knows? Or a little tune up here or there?
Great question! I train these as tune ups and also as part of the conditioning program for the dogs – i don’t do it that often, but the tight sits are the most important part of it. I probably play the games maybe once a month, after the dogs have “learned” them.
Let me know how he does with 3 jumps!
TracyNovember 17, 2022 at 5:02 pm in reply to: 💗 Cindi and Ripley (Border Collie – 19 months old) 💗 #43195Tracy Sklenar
KeymasterYou would have enjoyed the FL courses but probably not enjoyed the hurricane LOL!! EEK!!! It was a great event and I am still sleep-deprived 🙂
I put some thoughts about the leash stuff in the other class.
On the backside slice video here:
Ah yes, i see the 2o2o feelings when you try to get to the center of the bar and stay in motion – it is a forward weight shift so this is great to convince him to shift back to his rear on this. We definitely want you to keep moving like you were trying too, so you might have to move very slowly 🙂 He was great with the sit when you stuck by the entry wing, so you can try a very slow shuffle forward to the center of the bar to help him shift back even though you and the MM are out ahead 🙂 When he has that concept, it will be easy to add more motion 🙂
Great job! Let me know how he does with more motion!
TracyTracy Sklenar
KeymasterHi!
I really liked this session!!!! She was doing really well! It took her a rep or two to lock onto the reward target but then she was super. She was definitely organizing herself nicely – there were maybe two spots where she was not totally perfect and one of them (:24) was because I think you started her too close to the wing. But she never touched the bar and was really high speed!! YAY!
So yes… add a bit of tugging her, to change her internal arousal. And then yo can go back to food and raise the bars a tiny bit 🙂 Or, you can go back to the front side and do the 3 jumps with progressively tighter angles.
Excellent job, she was really organizing herself and powering from her back end!
Tracy
November 17, 2022 at 4:49 pm in reply to: 💞 Cindi and Ripley (Border Collie – 19 months old)💞 #43193Tracy Sklenar
KeymasterHi!
I see what you mean about the end of run behavior! It looks “bigger” in the more stimulating trial environment! You did a great job telling the leash runner very specifically, she placed it perfectly on the last run LOL!So, when the leash is right there, he is perfect. And that is something to keep building up, including having the leash further and further, eventually hidden so he has to search for it, and adding the chair like you have been doing.
And also, I think you can add a “bridge” behavior sp he has something to do when the leash is not visible or in some fragile Zombie’s hand, to protect the zombie and your flesh. Does he love a moving down? Any tricks he loves? You can add in the down or a trick after the last jump and before the leash cue. I used a down with my dogs that wanted to give me a victory chomp 🙂 and it really helped give them one more job to channel the energy into.
I think every single opening option looked great here. The sending, the ‘marking’, the throwback – all seemed comfy! The behind-the-back also looked good but it seemed less comfy for you both. You were way ahead on all of the reps and also had beautiful position on the backside sends (and connection on the exits! So nice!). So since this went so well, try them all again but have him facing 1 on a slice angle so he jumps slicing and landing towards 2 (he was jumping perpendicularly to 1 here and had to add an additional turn. The slice will add more of a lead out for you on the sends/throwbacks/marking, but he has a great stay so I think it will be fine. And then we time them all and see which is fastest… and use the fastest one of course LOL!
Great job! Let me know what you think!
TracyTracy Sklenar
KeymasterYouTube enjoys changing settings when no one is looking lol
Tracy Sklenar
KeymasterHi!
I like shaping the pivots too, there are so many fun ways to shape them. Shaping is a great method as long as the dog’s head stays in a neutral position and he offers turns in both directions.
This link is visible… but it is the same as the decel video 🙂T
Tracy Sklenar
KeymasterHi! He was great about getting in nice and tight to your leg – that is a great thing for tiny dogs. And he was tight like a noodle to your leg, when you added the pivot. Easy peasy! And he went back to the toy really nicely.
The next step if going to be to figure out a hand-replacer for you when we add more motion to this, so you don’t have to bend over nearly as much. I think a long wooden cooking spoon with a tiny bit of cream cheese on the end would work? He is too small for us to rely on a hand in his face for decel, so we will be looking to have him read the change in your pace and then get rewarded from a spoon, so he can get used to you being upright.
You can add a little more distance on your tosses here, so he is moving faster and has to decel more.
Great job!
TracyTracy Sklenar
KeymasterHi!
He looks great here, good pup!!!! You had really good clicks and he was really strong turning both directions too!
You probably have to pay him a little to stay with you because he wants to start without you at the beginning LOL! And you can tug during cookie reloads or between cookie reward, to insert the tugging more into food sessions as well.He did really well with the tugging version of this too.
The target started to get a little far away at 2:16 and 2:25 – reward those efforts even though they aren’t perfect (because it keeps him moving and prevents the down) and bring the target in closer. If you attach it to a yoga mat, he can hit it hard like he did here and it won’t end up too far away.
We will be adding some more types of reward marker words too – stay tuned! For now, keep playing with this and ping pong the distance: sometimes you are very close to it, sometimes you are far from it, and gradually build up more distance away from it.
Great job! Onwards to decel… -
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