New Layout

New layout! Hopefully this explains why the site was down all day Monday. I loved my green layout but I wanted to try a different colour and some new techniques for the pages. I know it doesn’t quite work in Internet Explorer, I’m still working on it, but as IE tends to render code totally differently to every other browser I might be fighting a losing battle. Everyone should just use Firefox instead!

Anyway, Leeds ‘Owlers had a fab weekend at the Summer Champs! Barney’s came home as Div 4 Champs and Marsh came a very respectable 4th. I’m loving hearing about everything but it’s a bit tough to listen to sometimes, I’m so disappointed we couldn’t go and it sounds like we really missed out on a great weekend with some fab racing. I’m trying not to wallow in self-pity and be miserable but it’s a bit hard at the moment!

Course Design Considerations

I’m just sat watching the Olympic Showjumping, and we’re doing pretty well! Two riders left to go. It’s the nearest thing to agility in the Olympics and it’s interesting to see all the beautiful fences and the way the course is designed. I’d like to see more subtle course design like this in agility, although I know that we obviously don’t and can’t have quite the variety of fences and jumps. Still, there are plenty of judges out there who just don’t appreciate that they can use things like Walls and Brush fences, or even double jumps, and so they don’t crop up as often as I’d like. Personally I’d also love to see some filler elements (UKA use these, and I’ve seen Adams provide a kind of bone-shape on occasion) and maybe even some differences in the jump wings, even if it doesn’t add any extra challenge for the dogs it makes it more interesting for the handlers and spectators!

I love walking a course and finding something a little out of the ordinary for me and Kim to tackle! Michelle Ainsworth at Otley used a double jump in the middle of the 1-2 Agility course and it caused several problems due to the spacing and and the angle (Kim knocked the second bar, but I didn’t give her the right command. I usually use a “jump” command which indicates that the obstacle is bigger than normal, but I totally forgot!). One of our other judges at Otley (whose name I sadly can’t remember!) used a brush fence as part of a long line of jumps in the Combined 1-4 Agility and subsequent classes and it also caused a few problems, with handlers just assuming their dogs would take it and then the dogs were running out and getting refusals. A couple of years ago at Shrewsbury, when Kim was a Large, Jo Glynn set a fab Novice Agility course with a Wall and a Wishing Well, and it added a greater element of difficulty than throwing in a pull-thru would have done.

Ben Mayer has just come into the arena to jump the third round for GB, on a lovely big mare called Roulette. Absolutely fab round, but unfortunately just one fence down. Arg!

There’s a particularly interesting line in this Olympic Showjumping course of two big oxers followed by a narrow vertical plank fence. A lot of horses are getting the plank down because they’ve done these big extended jumps and then have to shorten up and collect. I wonder if dogs could be challenged by something similar? I’m thinking here of maybe a double jump followed by a stretch (long jump), and then a single bar into a tunnel? I’m sure a lot of dogs would get the single down unless they were handled and/or trained particularly well.

I think there are a lot of opportunities for creating a more subtley difficult course design rather than filling a course with pull-thrus and UYOA handling and I think judges don’t always appreciate that. I love course design but I don’t have the patience or attention span (or the thick skin required!) to be a judge. I’ve said before how much I admire and respect the people who do have the talent to judge, but I’m not one of them. I just wish some of them would think a bit more about their courses, or maybe even ask someone else to design them (someone who isn’t competing in their class, obviously!).

Aww, I guess my Showjumping viewing is coming to an end. The great John Whitaker has withdrawn Peppermill because he has a stiff back, which is a bit of a disappointment all round. That leaves us with 16 penalties and it’s only the top 8 teams to go through … fingers crossed we aren’t pushed off the list!

NB: Thanks to www.aprilmagic.co.uk, adamsagility.com, agilitynet.com and for the photos used here!

Traumatic Afternoon Part 2

Mollie’s lip was worse than we initially thought. It’s probably a good job she’s not flyballing this weekend as we would have had to pull her now anyway, there’s no way she could have caught a ball with stitches down her lip. After she had stopped bleeding we got to take a closer look and it had literally sliced inside, so off to the vet Mollie went!

Our lovely vet thought it might not need stitches to begin with, but again, on closer inspection he found the inside was a lot worse than it looked. If he had left it, the scar tissue would have been very uncomfortable and so stitches it is! (8 in total, mostly on the inside of her lip). Mollie is accident-prone and our vet’s practice is only small so all the nurses know her well. She was only in for a few hours today as our appointment was early this morning so she is home again now, but she had a fab time being fussed and cuddled all morning.

As you can see she wasn’t happy she missed Dylan’s boxwork session, but apart from that she’s bright and chirpy. (Please ignore the sadly broken desk chair in the background, it’s heading for the tip later this afternoon!)

Traumatic Afternoon

I was playing with the dogs this afternoon, and had a vague idea of getting some new photos of them for the website. I got a dozen snaps or so and then I was just throwing their toy for them for a while, especially as it’s a nice day for once!

Unfortunately it all went downhill when Mollie decided she’d had enough of Kim getting her own way. Kim can turn tighter and faster than the collies and as Mollie’s eyesight is going a bit, she can’t always spot a bright yellow toy in bright sunlight as soon as Kim can so Kim often snatches the toy from under her nose as it lands. Kim apparently did it one too many times and Mollie went for her, and I had a bitch fight on my hands! Kim does not back off from a fight but in this case she was at a disadvantage as she’ss smaller and lighter than Mol, and Mollie ended up body slamming her into the wall before I got there and split them up (no hands, just an angry scream!)

When I did get there, I found Kim covered in blood but couldn’t find a wound. Turned around to check Mollie and she’s split her lip open, I’m not sure if Kim did it or not but it’s quite nasty and Mollie just keeps licking it constantly so it’s got no chance of healing. Could be another trip to the vet, although I don’t think there’s much he could do.

I still had my camera to hand so I snapped a photo of Kim’s neck and Mollie’s (blurry) lip after I’d cleaned Mollie up but before I started on Kim. I’m still a bit shaky now, I was absolutely terrified that they’d caused each other some real damage. This is the first time they’ve fought since we got Dylan, and one of the few times Mollie has started it. They rarely fought before but they’re both strong-willed girls and there were occasional spats. They’re both now feeling very sorry for themselves, and Kim’s milking her role as the victim for all she can even though she’s fine.

Bitches, who’d have ‘em?!

SuperJet

I thought Jet was due a birthday post all of her own, because she is to Katie what Kim is to me so I know what a special girl she is for her mum.

When Jet was a couple of months old she got a very serious disease and nearly died, and although nobody could really believe that Katie was going to lose the amazing, bouncy little pup she’d just brought home, it was beginning to look like there was no way to recover. But Jet proved then what an amazing little dog she really is, and survived and grew up to be a real one-in-a-million dog.

Not only is Jet gorgeous and cuddley and just lovely to have around, she’s an amazing multi-talented and enthusiastic competitor. Before her 2nd birthday she qualified and competed in Obedience at Crufts, and was sincerely told by a Championship handler that if Katie wanted her to, Jet could really go places in Obedience. But then Katie started Jet in her agility career and realised she had a potential superstar on her hands. I was lucky enough to get to compete with Jet at her first KC show and she placed 3rd despite not having her mum there. Several good agility handlers commented that Jet had bags of talent, enough to race up the Grades. But then Katie got into flyball, and Jet now runs with one of the top teams in the country and has got her Flyball Dog Advanced award before turning 3 years old. What more could you want?!

I can’t wait to see where Jet goes next because she’s one of my favourite little pooches, even though she has stumpy legs and extra skin and likes to pretend to be a Labrador. I know Katie will get the best out of Jetly because they are a perfect partnership, and I know they’re going to achieve just as much in the next three years.

HAPPY 3rd BIRTHDAY JETSOME!

(This is also a post to persuade Katie to get her arse in gear and enter some agility shows, because I want to see Jet running in Grade 5 next year where she belongs.)