EMDAC April 08

Arg, what a horrible weekend. It’s weekends like this that make me want to walk away and not bother any more!

Kim

Saturday didn’t start well, Kim was very flat in her Clockwork Tunnels and it basically got worse from there! We didn’t get a decent clear round until the last run of the day in Helen Norton’s lovely Primary Jumping class, but I knew we weren’t going to get placed as it was too open and fast for Kim. She also decided to throw in a few spins because I wasn’t keeping up with her! She ended up 18th, which I was quite disappointed with to begin with. I later found out that Lucy, who is usually top-3 if she has a good run, did a blistering clear and only managed 14th. Didn’t feel so bad after that!

Primary Agility 19-04-08

That kind of set the standard for the classes though on Sunday. All the Primary courses were big, open, fast-flowing courses, lots of straight lines and big turns. Not great for my whippety Medium! Kim gains her times on sharper corners and fiddley bits, but we had none of it. My intention for Sunday was just to get her running and responsive again, which we did achieve. Her first class was agility – without an Aframe! – and I knew she wasn’t going to be quick enough even if we went clear. She doesn’t have a fast see-saw and she doesn’t have quick enough weave times, so I chose to go out and let her blast it, see what time she could get. I didn’t try to stop her on the contacts and she blew her dogwalk by miles, and we finished about 6 seconds off the winner. To be fair to Kim, she did come to a complete standstill at one point, for which we were given a very harsh refusal (several people commented on it later and said how mean it was!) but she would still have been 2-3 seconds off the winning time. Perhaps if there had been an Aframe we might have had more chance, but no such luck.

We had the same problem in the rest of her classes – too open and too fast for Kim. Her jumping run was very rough, and although her Helter Skelter was smooth, she checked her stride and turned too wide on the smaller circle, which left us nearly 5 seconds off pace. Even if she hadn’t checked or turned tighter we still wouldn’t have been in the places.

Pretty disappointing overall. The standard was very high in Primary this weekend and Kim just wasn’t quick enough over the style of courses that were on. We barely picked up any League Table points either.

Dylan

Dylan had tougher courses than Kim all weekend! Not beyond his capability and not too difficult for Introductory, and they all flowed nicely. Some tight spacings for my lanky boy but he showed he’s been paying attention and actually bounced a couple of sections!

Amazingly Dylan was also the one who brought home some rosettes this weekend. I was amazed! Especially considering how the weekend started, when I had to pull him out half way through his Agility run because he was so freaked out by the dogwalk. I also decided not to run Power and Speed with him, as I thought the spacings were a bit tight for him and I wanted to get his confidence back up. I know from training that he shuts down easily if he thinks he’s done something wrong, his self-confidence can be a bit lacking. For the Intro Jumping (Part 1) I tried to get him a bit more wound up, and we actually got around clear! It was a bit slow and he was still quite uneasy, but I was partying our way out of the ring. At which point the ring manager appeared and told me that sadly the timer hadn’t stopped so he’d have to run again for time. I’ve never had this happen before when running Kim so I had to get it all explained to me. So off we went again! We did slightly better the second time but Dylan was still being ultra-cautious with his jumping and he didn’t feel to be going anything like his normal speed. Still, we went clear again so another big party! Amazingly we came 16th in this class, just 4 seconds off the winner and 2 seconds off a dog (Rada the Wiemie, for those that know her!) who I know to be fantastically quick and who has won several classes already this year.

Introductory Clockwork Tunnels 19-04-08Clockwork Tunnels I thought was a tough course for Dylan, mainly because the end was very tightly spaced. He ran the first 8 obstacles at super-speed, which I was thrilled about, but then we both got a little confused because I couldn’t remember the course and he wanted to go back in the tunnel he’d just been through. Still, clear round! And then (deja vu!) the ring manager appeared. The timer hadn’t started. Two different timers on two different rings! So we ran again, and again the first 8 obstacles were brilliant. But this was Dylan’s 5th run of the day and he was one tired boy, and he slowed right down for the final couple of jumps. We still managed to finish 17th, and if he’d have been in Part 2 (same course) he’d have been 5th. The boy has potential!

Intro Helter Skelter 20-04-08

Sunday was equally successful in terms of clear rounds – we went clear in the agility (with held contacts) and clear in the Jumping again (finishing 19th, I think, but with a couple of “refusals” which don’t get marked in Intro classes). Our absolute best run of the weekend was in the Intro Helter Skelter, where we were E’d after the second jump but Dylan was full of confidence and really enjoyed the course. It was the first time I felt like he was really up for it and motivated, but he still wasn’t going anything like as fast as he works at training.

Dylan and I also spent a bit of time in the practise ring and I was really pleased with him. He loves his contacts with a passion! Every time I took my eye off him for a second he was standing in his 2o/2o on one of the obstacles, doing his cheeky grin and waiting for his ball. We also worked on 12 weaves with wooden poles, and he’s really powering through them. Powering a bit too much actually! He’s popping the last 1-4 poles occasionally, I think mainly because he hasn’t worked out how to keep up his speed without tripping up (or so my observant Emma tells me!).

Generally pleased with Dylan though, he’s showing a lot of potential!

Got to say well done to Vicki with Pippa and Inca, who picked up loads of places all weekend, and to Laura with GorgeousMerlin and her baby girl Minnie who had an amazing first show and pulled off a 5th, despite her tiny Micro legs, amongst a handful of other placings.

Swimmers Turn and a Lack of Enthusiasm

I thought Dylan might actually be tired today, considering how completely nutty he was at training yesterday, but apparently not. Even more surprising, Kim also was not tired at all, and was throwing toys at my head last night whilst I was trying to sleep. Apparently my dogs are a lot fitter than I am!

This post was going to include one of the most boring videos of Dylan you would ever see, but in the end I couldn’t bring myself to edit it — it was that dull. We brought the spare box home from flyball this weekend with the intention of working on Dylan’s swimmers turn, and I got the box out on Monday evening. It was not a good training session for us; I did 10 or so reps and then called it. I filmed all our reps to check he was getting the action that I wanted him to, but Dylan was not motivated, and I couldn’t motivate myself to make it exciting.

The problem is that I find myself getting immediately frustrated as soon as we start. Mainly with myself, of course, because I can’t see why he can’t get it. Dylan has been working on his turn since last October (with 6 weeks off over Christmas) and has done thousand of reps. He can do this turn, he does 85% of the time. But I can’t get it 100% and I can’t understand what is different on that other 15% that makes him do mess it up so badly. And because I’m so frustrated I can’t get excited or relax, which rubs off on him.

I’m going to leave it for the rest of this week and concentrate on the agility competition this weekend (which I am so excited about!). I’ll think on it and probably have a chat to Julie, and then I’ll start again next week and see how we go. Wish me luck!

Flyball, Agility, youTube Magic

After all the chaos with Dylan’s box at Selby, I wasn’t entirely looking forward to training again! But (typical dog!) he was absolutely paw-perfect on his turns. Well, almost. 4/5 times he has a perfect swimmers turn, and then on the 5th run he does something entirely new and unexpected. It’s very frustrating!

I now have a box at home and the boy is in for some serious reps for the next month. We have a cracking set of Starters running at Middlesbrough (it’s practically a multi-breed team too!) and I won’t have Dylan letting them down with shoddy boxwork.

First outdoor show of the season next weekend, and it will mainly be training runs with Kim I think. Her Primary classes have 145+ entries, and I know there is some seriously high class competition there; Kim’s nemesis from last year’s winter series (who is now winning KC 1-7 Open Medium classes and is running at Grade 6) is back, plus the normal bunch of super-collies etc. Not expecting huge results! 3/3 Dogwalk and 3/3 Seesaw contacts will be our goal for the weekend.

And of course, all Dylan’s classes will be training runs, unless a super-nice jumping course crops up. We still haven’t mastered the seesaw properly so I’m resigning myself to pulling him from the agility classes. I hate having to do it but we just haven’t the access to a seesaw at the moment, and rushing him through for the sake of next weekend could potentially wreck his seesaw for the future, and I’m determined not to make that mistake! Luckily I know that EMDAC always have a practice ring with all the contact equipment, so I’ll spend a bit of time in there proofing his other contacts and working a little on his seesaw, and so he won’t miss out entirely.

Finally, who watched Britain’s Got Talent last night? How many of you were rooting for the amazing Kate and Gin to go through?

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=3Bt4kguLPTU

Not only did they have a fantastic performance, but Gin is part of the Live Wires flyball team that won the BFA Summer Championships last year. Multi-talented flyball dogs for the win!

Carlton Towers Flyball

Well, I’ve never flyballed in the snow before.

Barking Owlers came 2nd in their Division, although to be honest we really didn’t expect to. The Beardies came into season this week and had to drop out, so we were left with four competitive dogs, plus Chewy. On the day, we also lost one of our handlers as Craig was called into work after the first race, so we had to bring in someone who had never handled in open competition before, and had never run Meg. Jo’s Dad did brilliantly considering, but obviously we weren’t as gelled as normal and Meg had to run as lead dog, which she doesn’t like, and Mollie had to run as second dog, which she doesn’t like!

Kim ran brilliantly all day, she was absolutely faultless. I couldn’t have asked for more from her! But as a team we just couldn’t muster much enthusiasm and the tournament just wasn’t that great. We ran some miserable times, I think our fastest was 20.55 and our slowest was over 22 seconds, which was very disappointing from a team that normally runs sub-20. We were really hoping to get Mollie the 204points she needed for her Graduate award, and we just scraped it; thanks to Julie for counting up at the end, and Jane for offering to get her a few runs at Drax if she hadn’t made it. Go the Mol! Our division was also cut to the minimum of 4 teams as Dog Friendly and Hillam had to pull out at the last minute due to Kennel Cough, so even our 2nd place didn’t feel like much of an achievement.

Video to come …

I was scribing for Barney Owlers in Division 1 who were also down to 4 dogs, as Norah the SuperBeardie was out along with our Buffy. Jet had to step in as lead dog, with a completely new handler who had never done the lights before! Having said that, James got some awesome start times, cutting it down to get a best of 0.01 … impressive! The team did an 18.46 but were mainly running low 19 second times most of the day, which again was disappointing. Jet tried her best but she just wasn’t running the kind of times she normally does, being off by 0.4-6 seconds, but I think she found it hard work running in all the heats. It’s a lot of fun getting to be on the line though!

photo by Cat Clark of http://www.themodernlove.co.uk/

Dylan also got to play at CleverDogs! I was more interested in letting him work on different equipment than really going for a time with him, which worked out quite well because we only got one recorded time in the end! He clocked a 23.– in the Starters division, not too bad. I was more concerned that he ran the course well, and he did, but boy was he a tired dog! Nothing like his normal speed and enthusiasm. Teams are allowed some time to practise on the course before being timed, so I got a chance to play with Dylan a bit first. I really need to work on being clearer with my commands, but we got some work done on rear crosses and I even layered in a jump at one point, which Dylan didn’t mind at all, although it didn’t exactly achieve the intended and Dyl still took off back towards the weaves!

The CleverDogs was being run by some of the people from the British Agility Association, and I’m apparently a recognisable name now because I was asked whether Dylan was the dog I won everything with or if I had another. I had to confess Dylan was only the baby and Kim was off flyballing today, otherwise she’d have come and done some CleverDogs too.

The weather was awful all day, but we clearly didn’t have the worst of it. All the outdoor agility shows have been cancelled, including the huge Dashin Dogs show. But the tournament just felt very ‘meh’ … nobody could muster any enthusiasm to run, possibly because so often we were against an empty lane, but mainly because the atmosphere was just dead. Other teams seemed to be feeling the same way as us, and I’m not sure if we’ll be doing Carlton Towers next year. The first year I went (2004), Kim was running in her first ever open tournament and we came 3rd in the division, only to be told that the rosettes weren’t available and we wouldn’t get any. I know there are problems with every tournament but that was the standard the first year I went, and it seems to have got worse every year since. There are other competitions on Easter Weekend and right now, even the cancelled ones seem more appealing!

I got three lights for early changovers too, which is appalling. I haven’t done that for months!

Thanks to Cat Clark of http://www.themodernlove.co.uk/ for providing the photos of Dylan in this post and the last, and for the videos. Also thanks to Jess for allowing us to borrow her camera to film the Barking Owlers.

Carlton Towers Starters

photo by Cat Clark of http://www.themodernlove.co.uk/The boy did good … ish!

Our lovely team the Little Owlers were in Division A, and we won two of six heats so not too shabby! We weren’t the fastest team in the world as we weren’t really bothering with changeovers, but all our dogs ran brilliantly

Dylan handled the pressure fantastically, he took it all in his stride and was absolutely raring to go. He was even running some fairly close changeovers with Amber towards the end, with only a bit of hesitation. He’s going to be pretty quick when he gets going too, which is great!

The only problem we had today was his box, and I’m really disappointed. All the training we’ve done just went completely out the window, he was effectively stopping in front of the box and taking the ball out before turning round, which of course messed up his stride for the return runs. Julie and I spent quite a while debating what to do! I think it’s going to be pretty much what I’d expected, which is to pull Dylan from all possible competitions until his box is perfect. I’m not willing to ruin his chance to have a perfect swimmer’s turn just to get some points or whatever — because he can do the turn, and it is absolutely perfect when he does it!

Anyway, video! It’s pretty noisy (as flyball always is!) so be careful if you have the speakers on. Also, keep an eye on the other lane in the first race, you might spot the stunning Elliot from Ruffdogs kicking our ass.

http://www.undermybed.co.uk/images/littleowlers.wmv

(This video may go up on youTube sometime next week … for now it’s only available via the download link. It’s quite a big file, just to warn!)

There’s another version of the same first race here: http://youtube.com/watch?v=pUfb0FlnAAU

The undoubted star of the day was Chip, who just got better and better and better. He was unbelievably focussed and he an old pro at recalls and changeovers by the end of the day! He is going to be a serious one-to-watch, I can’t wait to see some Chip/Murphy Lurcher Pairs later this year.