A small dog can dream big, with the wind in her ears and the early autumn sun warming her fluffs, the world stretching away at her paws.
Monthly Archives: September 2011
Tell Me Thursday
1. What is the biggest thing that grossed you out over the past week?
This week? I haven’t had much gross out this week, it’s been a fairly boring kind of week. Kim ate some sheep poo this morning and then tried to kiss me, that was fairly icky.
2. What do you feed your dogs?
CSJ. I love the whole raw idea, but it isn’t a feasible option for us (seriously, don’t try and convince me, I have heard and understand all the arguments, but it’s really not possible). CSJ works for us and the dogs, and they’re doing very well on it. Big thumbs up for CSJ!
3. If you could move anywhere where would you live?
I actually love Yorkshire, it’s beautiful, I think right now this is a great place for me to be. On the other hand, I’d love to live out in the wilds somewhere, to drop everything and move into the darkest corner of Alaska or some such spot.
4. What is the funniest thought that occurred to you (or thing that happened to you) this week?
I have had a really boring week.
5. If you couldn’t have your breed of choice what would be next on your list?
Probably a Jack or JRT cross. Mum has a major soft spot for them and I do love me some terrier. The only reason we’ve moved away from a JRT is because of a Kim; two terrier bitches would probably not be the best move. I really like Staffie crosses as well, but again, terrier.
I do sometimes wistfully watch dogs like Scandal or the Darleyfalls dogs run and think how much I’d love a beautiful, fast collie to run in agility, but collies and I just aren’t meant to live with each other at this point in my life.
UKA DigItDogs
Soo, this was our first UKA show. It was tiny. I understand why; UKA is expensive and if you can only do 1 or 2 shows a year, it’s not worth it. Dylan needed the training in the ring aspect so I decided to shell out in the hope it would improve us elsewhere. However, because it was such a tiny show, I still only have the vaguest idea of what a UKA show is actually like. It felt more like an unaffiliated show, and I was very uncomfortable watching some of the Beginner dogs run. Some of those dogs should NOT have been near equipment, let alone be entered at a competition. Obviously not the fault of the show organisers, but it did mean I spent a lot of my time reading my book in the car.
I also feel like we cheated for our progression points, for the most part. Dyl came 1st in most of his classes, but apart from Steeplechase, he was the only dog in the class. As long as we didn’t get E’d, we came 1st. Which … eh. Also, because it was such a small show, on Saturday they elected to run all the levels over the same course. Which meant we were basically running G1-3 classes all day, super easy and all kinds of boring. Complaints, I have them.
Anyway, Saturday was a very slow day, Dyl’s jumping looked better than it had at Dog Vegas but not brilliant. It was like watching him finding his feet; cautious, testing strides, but not overly anxious. He Q’d in Senior Jumping (and came 1st), got E’d in Agility (which I wish I’d trained, in hindsight!), picked up 5R in the Speed section of Power and Speed (and came 1st, but no Q), won Steeplechase II with a Q. I trained Steeplechase I, at which point I thought we’d had a breakthrough because Dylan started pinging off taking all the jumps he possibly could from every angle with confidence and enthusiasm. He really wanted his Mouse toy. It wasn’t quite the improvement I hoped for, but the second Steeplechase was better.
Sunday was better, more course changes, lovely difficult Senior Agility. Where we got E’d. It was not our weekend for the Agility. We got 5f in Jumping, when Dyl popped the last 2 weave poles. I am pretty sure this was because they were the old minimum-distance weaves which suddenly seem very very tight, Dyl struggled to shorten up for them on Saturday and he was striding out much more on Sunday.
We did 6 obstacles in Senior TFO, oops. We cruised both Steeplechase classes and Q’d in both with a 1st, and we actually had to beat someone to do it so I feel better about those.
I should have trained more runs, I only trained one. But there was a practise ring up that we took full advantage of, and I wanted the points from the Agility classes. Training the Games classes seemed kind of stupid, because they’re Games classes, not normal classes. Next time, I will do more training. Famous last words.
On the very plus side, it was an extremely lovely venue, and I got some delicious brownies from the cake stall.
Tell Me Thursday
I am hoping this will prompt me to blog more regularly. Also, way back in the day, I used to do the “Friday Five” on LiveJournal, which was a lot of fun.
1. What five things can’t you live without?
1.Kim
2.Agility
3.Chocolate
4.Internet
5.Books
2. How do you transport your dogs?
In my twee Renault Clio. It’s custom caged out in the back, spanning the boot and the back seats (which are partially but not really removed), and is surprisingly spacious. I love it.
3. What role does obedience play in your training or running of your dog(s)?
Proper obedience doesn’t apart from a fun trick. Basic obedience – like a recall, wait, stay – is essential, I couldn’t work without it. A recall is the one thing I cannot live without, my dogs have to come when called. There is some leeway, the girls do feign deafness occasionally, but never when the cards are down.
4. At what point do you start putting commands on your dogs?
Day one, I think. I don’t know, I haven’t had a puppy in 5 years. See me weeping in the corner now?!
5. Do you talk to strangers in elevators?
Definitely not. Urg. Even getting in lifts with strangers makes me uncomfortable and tense.

(I did actually complete this post Thursday, and then for some reason wordpress decided not to bother posting my scheduled posts. Whatever, WordPress.)















