Review: Cik&Cap, the Easiest Way to Perfect Turns

Cik&Cap: the Easiest Way to Perfect Turns (Silvia Trkman)

I’m reviewing the DVD version, not the download.

Whilst it’s clearly not made to a professional-DVD standard (although really, are any agility dvds?), the quality is good and clear, it’s well edited and Silvia is an informative and engaging presenter. It’s a short dvd, running to 60mins only, split into seven sections (Intro, Why to Teach it?, Where & When to Use It, How to Teach it?, Troubleshooting, Related Tricks and Outro.

Silvia doesn’t waste time introducing herself or her dogs in the Intro, which is the first clue that this is aimed at people who are already familiar with both agility and Silvia herself already. There is also an emphasis right from the start that this is a training tool that is applicable to puppies and already competing dogs, and that dogs can go on competing throughout training as it’s a new action being introduced, not a retraining.

The Why sections produce clear visual evidence, comparing Silvia’s Border Collie Bu who utilises the cik/cap turns with another WSD, Witch, who doesn’t turn tightly but has faster groundspeed, and discusses exactly how much time is made up and where by each dog. It’s compelling to watch and the point is well made, but for someone who already knows they want to train cik/cap (as I assume most viewers will?) it’s a little overemphasised.

There is a long chapter on when and where to cue a cik/cap turn on a course, looking at both course plans and videos. This is the only part of the dvd that I felt dragged a little; it was useful, but the information could have been presented with analysis of 1-2 courses rather than 3-4, especially since some of the videos had already been seen in the previous comparison section. The DVD generally seems to be aimed at agility people who already have some experience but this section is probably going to be more useful for those who aren’t overly familiar with how to walk and then run a course.

The How section shows how to begin training with puppies and/or retrain dogs, but does assume that the viewer will either be familiar with clicker training or with successful luring for trick training. It moves through all the aspects of training, including how to incorporate it in sequences and courses. It’s really nice to see non-agility equipment being used, this is obviously something that everyone can train regardless of how much access to agility equipment they have.

The Troubleshooting section isn’t expansive, partially because Silvia outlines how to avoid problems as she goes through the dvd anyway, and the Related Tricks is just a signpost to the Tricks DVD.

Overall, clear, concise presentation and demonstration for a very useful tool. I’m still not entirely sure if this is aimed at experienced agility people or newcomers, but I’d be especially inclined to recommend it to anyone getting their second agility dog, or to Grade 1-2 handlers who have an eye on the climbing the levels. More experienced people will still find the training information on how to teach cik/cap useful, but will also probably find they can skip through some chapters without missing much.

Review: The Focused Puppy

The Focused Puppy: A Training System for Raising a Great Companion & Performance DogThe Focused Puppy: A Training System for Raising a Great Companion & Performance Dog (Deborah Jones, Ph.D. & Judy Keller (2010, Clean Run Productions)

The book is well written, well edited, and well presented. I’ve included a few thumbnails showing how the pages are laid out. There are plenty of photos and “real-life boxes” scattered throughout discussing real examples. It’s paperback and not so large that it can’t be taken places in a bag or in the car.

As might already be apparent, I really liked this book. It’s a very general, all-purpose guide to choosing a pup, bringing it home, and raising it for the first 12 months, but there is a lot of information in there that can equally be applied to older dogs, especially regarding shaping new tricks and impulse control.

One of the aspects I also liked is the FOCUS (an acronym for Fun, Obedience, Consistency and Unbelievable Success*) training system doesn’t feel over-structured, and there is a lot of scope for using your own experience and personal ideas on training without being bound to a set of strict rules. A lot of ‘training systems’ often seem to say that if one rule isn’t followed, all of the work is pointless/ruined/etc. The FOCUS system is more about simply using games, play, positive reinforcement and clicker training to make a happy and confident pup.

As a result, the authors are obviously very big on positive training methods, especially clicker training, and this is all outlined and explained at the start of the book. This ‘explaining why’ type content is actually prevalent throughout, so this isn’t the book for someone who just wants a how-to guide. That works for me, as I like having an explanation; I want to know why I’m doing something, and equally, why puppy is.

I do have a few criticisms. The Temperament Testing section feels somewhat irrelevant for UK readers. I don’t actually know of any breeders in the UK who run temperament tests in the official exam-situation way outlined in the book (which seems fairly commonplace in the US?). It’s also not something I’m convinced by personally, but it did make for interesting reading. I’m not convinced the authors are fully committed to it either, as the rest of the book does address puppies of all personality types rather than assuming you have chosen the “ideal puppy” they suggest in the Temperament Testing chapter.

It’s also worth noting that it’s not a book which really delves into how to train an agility** dog. It’s about developing a relationship with your pup which will encourage them to be enthusiastic and thoughtful about learning, which will obviously help when it comes to working on agility training in the future.

All in all, a good book and a good read. For people getting their first ever puppy, it’s a very clear, explanatory guidebook. For more experienced owners, it’s going to be a very useful reference guide.

*yes, this seems stretching things to make an acronym to me too!
**I’m saying agility, but it’s equally applicable to any sport. The authors state that this method has been used to raise herding dogs, flyball dogs, obedience dogs, etc etc, and there is very little specific to agility or any of those other sports.

2010 Review: Dylan

Our 2010 goals.

  • Dylan to win out of Primary Agility and Jumping
  • Dylan to win out of Grade 3
  • Dylan to get his 10,000pts (Silver Award) in BFA flyball
  • Dylan to get his Agility Warrant (Silver) award
  • Dylan to get his BAD-Bronze (5 BAA class wins)

We have definitely achieved 4/5 goals this year, and may actually have struck out on 5/5.

That just … I don’t know why Dylan continually amazes me, but he does. I think I am setting goals that will push us, that aren’t really attainable, but every time he steps up and up and meets it. He had 33 top-3 placings this year in agility. That’s a lot. Dylan is amazing, I don’t appreciate him enough.

He won out of Primary mid-way through the year, so I moved him up to Novice, and he promptly won several classes there too. So he’s now in Graduate. Likewise, in KC, we suddenly hit our stride (incidentally, just after winning out of Primary), and Dylan went from Grade 3 to Grade 5 in the last 6 months of the year, and then got his first Grade 5 win this December.

Flyball has been hit and miss, we’ve struggled with a lot of things this year, but it’s finally coming back together.

  • Dylan to win out of Graduate Agility and Jumping
  • Dylan to win out of Grade 5
  • Dylan to get his 15,000pts (Gold Award) in BFA flyball
  • Dylan to get his Agility Warrant (Gold) award
  • Dylan to get his BAD-Crystal (15 BAA class wins)

I’ve been intentially ambitious, since we achieved everything last year. I think his FD-Gold is probably within reach, but it’s very difficult to judge as he’s currently only on 8070pts (to August 2010). I also hope both agility wins are realistic, although I’d prefer to stay in Grade 5 for most of the year.

That’s the main thing for Dylan and I this year, to relax and let things roll. These are our goals, but I really wouldn’t mind just staying where we are and picking up again in 2012, providing we make progress in other ways.

Reflection, Patience, 2010

I read back a lot of my blog from earlier in the year to write the dog’s 2010 reviews. It does make me smile quite a lot, sometimes. With hindsight, I shouldn’t have been so impatient with Dylan and I’s lingering in Grade 3. We were balancing on the edge of winning a class for a long time, but not such a long time that I had any right to lose patience. I knew I had to get faster contacts and reams of confidence before we could go anywhere, and when we did get all the boxes ticked, I immediately wanted out of Grade 3.

You’d think I’d have learnt with Kim that sometimes it’s about pulling it all together at the right time, rather than just assuming that having the right components is going to make a car. I feel like I should have relaxed and let things roll, rather than being so focussed on getting to Grade 4.

I know I am very focussed on where I need or want to be, but I am not always appreciative enough of where I am. That’s not to say I don’t enjoy the training and work we put in to reach whatever end, because my favourite part of training is doing it. But I do need to make changes to how I train. I need to be more focussed on the small details, and less on the big picture. I need to figure out what I need from today’s training session, I need to spend more time rewarding my dogs, I have to put in more effort with the little things.

Mostly, I need to have confidence in myself, in my training methods, and in my dogs. Especially because I am optimistic that 2011 might involve some serious steps towards Future!Puppy, if everything goes to plan!

2010 Review: Kim

My one, lonely, goal for 2010:

  • Kim to get her 20,000pts (Ice Blue Moon Award) in BFA Flyball

I was perfectly aware that wouldn’t happen! We’re making good progress though, Kim has got her FD-Gold this year (15,000pts) and is currently just under 16,000pts, with the points updates only just having reached the Champs in August. I think she’ll probably level off somewhere around 17,000 for 2010, which means we should reach her FD-Blue sometime next year.

Kim and I have had kind of a strange, backward, wonderful year. I took a few new approaches to her agility, mainly throwing out her startline wait, and she fell back in love with the idea of agility and running like a crazy dog again. She won a Grade 5 Jumping class in July, and then in August won another two jumping classes and two agility classes as well, which threw us straight into Grade 6, just where I didn’t want to be! So of course, at her first Grade 6 show, she promptly won her first agility class and got her first win towards Grade 7. She also picked up around 200 AW points this year, which is somewhat surprising!

She’s very much semi-retired from agility, and only gets to run when everything meets my specifications of “nice Kim classes”, which involves a pre-entry check of good venue with good footing, good classes (no C6-7s thanks!), and then an on-the-day check of suitable weather conditions and smooth, flowing courses which will not nag or make her sad. It works for us, and I am so thankful for every single run we do.

Contrary to the normal passage of time, Kim (and Mollie) has gotten faster with age in flyball. Kim was running steady 4.8-5s times over the summer over 9″, and is currently cruising at around 5s over 12″. She has run in every team, in every position, with every old and new dog we have. She doesn’t care, she just wants to flyball.

Her heart murmur has faded, and this year (touching wood for the final few days), she has had no injuries or incidents. Kim is fit, healthy, noisy, wicked, and still dictating terms to everyone. I couldn’t ask for more!

I know some people think goal setting is something unfair on a dog, but I like to have a goal. I like to sit with Kim and say here is this thing, that doesn’t mean anything to you and doesn’t really mean anything much to me either, but it’s a measure of time and patience and love, which should mean something.

Rolling on, for 2011, just one goal.

  • Kim to get her 20,000pts (Ice Blue Moon Award) in BFA Flyball