Start Lines

Waits Inspired by HippieDogs, of course, and somewhat by my previous musings on whether to get a collar for Kim’s starts.

I haven’t talked about my start lines in a long while. Kim has a running start, because she loves to race and run and waiting is boring and stressful for her. For some courses, having a running start doesn’t work, but there are always bits of every course that you don’t think will work but with a little imagination do. Sometimes, for us, that means setting up for the first jump at an unexpected angle, sometimes even facing the wrong way so I can get a fraction further in front to cross. This is highly confusing to most ring parties and judges, but Kim and I are creative and more often than not we pull it off.

Dylan has a naughty startline. He barks madly until I say “wait”, then he sits and crosses his ears at the back of his head and stares intently at the first obstacle. This is a pretence, because as soon as I move away he starts to slowly creep forward. Sometimes I tell him to down, for variety. It doesn’t make much of a difference. I always start worried, wondering how long I have until he goes. I know this is not a good way to start our runs. Maybe I should start doing running starts with Dylan too?

I have started trying to crack down in competition, but I admit I am too competitive and too anxious to keep Dylan happy to run the “move and lose” technique. We are practising, a lot. We play race-chase games with Mollie, where Dylan has to sit and wait with Mollie sitting and waiting around 15ft behind him. They both know as soon as they move that the chase is on! Mollie is very good at waiting, but Dylan is not. He shuffles and creeps and tries to get as much of a headstart as he can, because Mollie beats him up if he can’t run fast enough. I move him back. We are making headway. He is getting faster and better at waits.

Jet has the best startline. We go and we stand and I wrestle off her collar, because she has a martingale slip and it always gets stuck on her ears. I always apologise, and she always waits patiently for me to get going. I ruffle her ruff, because Jet has lots of spare skin and it’s fun to wriggle it about, and then I walk away confidently knowing Jet will be stood exactly where I left her. She always looks frozen on the spot when I stop and look at her. People think she is going to be slow and pottle around, because she looks so anxious, but we know the truth. I say ok-go, she launches into a madcap 30s of wild unpredictability and barking.

Jet and Mollie are a lot alike.

Tailwaggers #1

Dylan was a little bit more restrained at this show than the past few months, which was a little worrying initially but he was very relaxed throughout and ran well. Watching back his videos I’m not sure there was a real difference speed wise, but our runs certainly felt smoother, and a lot less like we were teetering on the edge of losing control completely. This may have something to do with the bigger rings, Tailwaggers is a small show so they can have two big rings rather than three squashed ones, so I wasn’t falling behind with cues all the time.

Jet and I are getting it together, slowly. We are finding our wavelengths again! It helps that Jet is just a party girl at agility, as long as she’s having fun she just doesn’t care what happens.

Dylan’s NovicePlus Agility was up first, and was pretty much a “all your mistakes will return to haunt you” kind of run. Dylan was not as driven as usual, but was super-responsive and really wanted to pull-thru on everything rather than driving around the pinwheels and corners. I’m guessing this is a result of all the nagging courses we’ve had recently, so I need to remember to really push and support the lines for him on easier courses. He also decided that stopping on contacts is optional, so we had some minor arguments about that. An big messy E, basically!

Jet’s agility course started with a jump-weave-straight pipe tunnel combination, and I really wasn’t sure how Jet would handle it. I’ve never done something like that with her! I should have just trusted her, because I made her pop the last weave pole and then made lots of silly mistakes on the rest. We finished 4th with 5f because almost everyone got pulled by the weave-tunnel combi, but still not a bad result.

The NovicePlus Jumping was a challenging course, and such a fun class to run, simply because it was an interesting course and a lot of people hung around to see how other people were going to run it. It’s always fun to run in a class where there is crowd appreciation for a good run, and commiserations for the Eliminations. As it happened, Dylan rocked it, and we only made a tiny mistake towards the end where I ran way too deep into the tunnel and didn’t clearly cue the next jump. Dylan just hesitated briefly, but switched leads and we finished strong. We placed 2nd, a fraction behind Lindsay Cheshire’s Wish, so a good result!

Jet’s Primary Jumping was a perfect course for us, and Jet nailed it. 1st!

Primary Steeplechase was a bit of a weird course, but I thought it was within our capabilities. Unfortunately I hung back too long at 9, and then in rushing to 12 Jet had a pole. She then decided to run behind me at 15 instead of pulling through; I need to stand up and be a lot clearer with her, but she does have a tendency to want to work behind her handler (you can see that she thinks about jumping behind me in her Jumping run, coming off 9).

Dylan did a beautiful dogwalk in his final Agility run, but that might be all we can say for it as he got E’d at the start. Jet ran the same course for her final Agility and had a nice clear, although I was a little overcautious with her contacts. Apparently the judge felt otherwise and marked her on the Aframe, but she seemed to be marking every dog that didn’t have a stop contact.

Hung around forever waiting for Dylan’s Steeplechase, another interested-crowd kind of course. Dylan and I put a really great clear in very early, but I had a feeling it would be too wide on the turns and it was. Rob and Chloe clocked an awesome smooth run to go into the lead, and then got whipped by Gemma’s Asher, who bounced pretty much the whole thing. I don’t know who came 3rd, but a Junior handler with a red dog called Misty (?) got the last placing with a brilliant run. We hung around to see if we could get Dylan’s time, but they were running behind with the presentations and so we missed it. I’ll just have to wait until the results go up online now!

I’m not back at Tailwaggers until January now, which is a bit of a shame as I really enjoyed this show! But I agreed to flyball on the same weekend as the Christmas Tailwaggers, and flyball will be just as much fun. I’m also not sure if I’ll be running Jet in January as Katie is home. Must get all that sorted!

Lune Valley

I’m cautiously optimistic about saying that Dylan really likes working indoors. His runs at Lune were all smooth, fast and – at the end – slightly bonkers. I’m happy to roll with this! I’m normally at South Durham this weekend, but the classes weren’t as nice for Grade 4 dogs, and I’m not a huge fan of the Prissick Base venue. It was a lovely sunny day at Myerscough though, they opened the big arena doors and the whole place felt so light and airy and huge.

Combined 4-5 Jumping was a nice course with a nasty start, and we got E’d. Dylan broke his wait, panicked, and then decided to just take a bunch of jumps in the hope he’d be forgiven. He wasn’t, but we finished up the run and his jumping was lovely, very smooth and neat.

Graded 1-4 Agility was a very fast, very open course, no seesaw (!) and a little bit run-of-the-mill style course. Dylan’s Aframe was a little slower than he can do, but the rest of the course was beautiful, again with the smooth gorgeous jumping. Not as driven as his run at Ribble, but still clear and a good run. Since the placings were generous I thought we might scrape a top-10. Apparently I’m a rubbish judge of Grade 4 though, since we finished 2nd! Less than 0.4s seperate 1st and 3rd, so bit of a close finish! Incidentally, this also gives Dylan enough points for his Agility Warrant Silver, which I only realised when I got home.

Graded 1-4 Jumping was a bit of a killer course, which ran much better than it looked – if you got it right! Dylan worked the first 6 obstacles lovely, very tight on the wraps, but he and I weren’t quite on the same wavelength for the angled flick-flack. He intended to bounce it, I certainly didn’t think he would, and he ended up crashing a pole to avoid running into me. Oops! Finished up anyway with 5 faults – maybe 10 faults? – but Dylan ended running strongly, which was what I really wanted.

Last class was Combined 4-5 Agility. Probably Dylan’s best run of the day, in terms of confidence and speed, but not mine! I wasn’t expecting quite so much confidence and speed, got left behind and was way too late with my commands. I’m going to have to brush up on this because I’ve got Jet at the next show as well as Dylan, and if he carries on running like this I’m just going to spend the day flailing along behind them both. Anyway, we got E’d, but Dylan’s contacts were fantastic, and I was very happy.

Apologies for the crappy Adobe overlay on the video, but I’ve lost all my video editing stuff in the big computer reboot 2010. I will try and replace with a better version eventually!

I’d rather spend a day getting E’d in all my classes, but running with this fast, confident, and driven version of Dylan that I always believed was hidden in there. I talk a lot about wanting a certain win or t move up to a certain grade, but in the end, if I walk away knowing we both gave 100% and it was perfect, the placing is just irrelevant. But still nice to get, because the Lune trophies are really pretty frosted gold glass type things.

Agility at Crufts 2010

Lots and lots of agility, there was no way we could watch all of it and do everything else we planned, sadly! We chose to miss most of Thursday and Friday, but earmarked the International and the Championship on Saturday and Sunday as definites. We did manage to catch some of the other competitions, like the Mini/Mixi pairs and the Mini Circular Knockout, but it was a little bit hit-and-miss.

One of my favourite competitions is the International event on Saturday, so that had a very big tick next to the Must See box. I love seeing the different handling techniques, and the difference between the dogs. I have a particular soft spot for the Polish dog, it’s been for the last couple of years and is just absolutely stunning. But of course, we were rooting for Lucy and Ben! Videos below …

International Jumping

WALES: Mark Douglas and Ag.Ch. Cories Ruby Tuesday

ENGLAND: Lucy Osborne and Ben Bombastic Mr Fantastic

International Agility

POLAND: Magdelena Ziolkowska and Leck Bohemia Alke

NETHERLANDS: Roy Fonteijn and Flynn

FINLAND: Niina Liina Linna and Tending Chimera

International Agility Final

CZECH REPUBLIC: Radovan Liska and Amulet for Luck

Sadly the camera battery died at this stage, oops! Apologies for the quality too, the Olympus is pretty old now and the videos don’t handle compression well.

The Championships on Sunday were fantastic, thoroughly enjoyed all of it! Really chuffed for Nicola Garrett and Indiana (Ag.Ch. Obay Truly Driven), this is the 3rd time they’ve won the small Championship and I genuinely don’t think I’ve ever seen him move so fast. Toni Dawkins and Kite stormed home for the Medium (second year running!) and I was rooting for Kite in the Large, but she finished up with the Reserve to Mark Laker and Kodi. I really like watching Mark Laker run, he’s super quiet and understated and it works so well, very deserving winner.

I’ve included photos of the courses we watched, both with and without numbers. The numbered courses are a larger image size.

ABC Jumping (I think?!) (Natasha Wise)
ABC Jumping
ABC Jumping (Numbered Course)

International Agility (Natasha Wise)
International Agility course
International Agility (Numbered Course)

Championship Agility (Round 2) (Andy Hudson)
Championship Agility Course
Championship Agility (Numbered Course)

Apologies if anything is wrong, I am working from memory!

Hare’n'Hounds

Lovely show, but South Durham always put on a good competition. No weaves in any of the classes though, but apparently they couldn’t peg them down. Some of the rings were a bit … oddly shaped, but I don’t really mind that. Anyone with a bit of imagination can put up an interesting course in any space, and I like interesting courses! Some judges were brilliant at this, others not so much.

Graded 1-3 Jumping, and I knew this was not going to be Dyl’s course. Very tight spacing for Dyl, and lots of boring pinwheels/boxes for me. We did a reasonable run, a bit hairy in places poles-wise but tidy turns. I was pleased to see that Dyl was clearly wanting to stretch out and have a blast around, but as soon as he picked up any speed he was braking again to get the strides in. I find it hard to handle when I’m just stood pointing too, so that probably didn’t help. We finished up 8th in the Grade 3, so not so bad in the end.

Walked both the agility courses at the same time, and would have loved to run the G1-3 first, but the Combined 1-4 was running much faster and with Dylan having a lower running order, we had to go for that first.

Five faults, oops! My fault, I early-released and he blew right over that contact. I should know better! I took my foot off the gas then and we made the pinwheel look a bit untidy, and I wasn’t clear enough with Dyl on the run to the last jump about where we were going, so he hesitated for a moment. Fractions of seconds, but if we’d gone clear we’d have placed 6th out of the 220+ dogs, so I’m quite pleased with that. Must practise pinwheels though (even if they are boring!), and look at that terrible jumping action … arg! This was his worst run in terms of fluidity of movement, by a noticable margin.

Graded 1-3 Agility was a superfast course, the only potential problem was a pull-thru at 9-10. Dyl shot off like a rocket, actually showed some of that lovely training speed! Carried that through for a nice Aframe and a really perfect seesaw, but I steadied him up a little bit too much for the pull-thru* and then made a right hash of the ending so we lost too much time there. Surprisingly came 5th regardless, which was a genuine shock!

Final run was Combined 1-7 Jumping (Part 1), and both splits had 157 dogs. I was very jealous of the Part 2 lot as they had a fab course, lots of long stretchy sections and a real flow. Part 1 was a bit more technical, lots of tight turns and those boxes and pinwheels again … Dyl actually ran this with the most enthusiasm and extension he’d had all day, but naturally I was all over the place! I was concentrating too much on remembering where I was going and not tripping over things, which meant I was late on almost all my cues. Poor Dylbert! We had a couple of late hesitations which put us waaaay out of the running, although we were never even in it to begin with as it was 1-7. We got a nice 22nd though, or so Vicki tells me (thanks!).

Congrats to all the usual gang; Julie & Charlie/Gertie/Winnie, Leah & Stan/Doris, Vicki & Diesel/Pippa, Candy & Freddie, Katie & Jet, Orienne & Woody/Murphy, Paul & Farley, all the Wakefield crew, and probably at least six people I’ve forgotten! This was a pretty sizable indoor show but I still couldn’t escape talking to at least 20 people I knew everytime I went for a stroll. Good stuff!

*Expect in-depth analysis of one small half-checked stride in the coming days. I’m becoming an obsessive …