Bromley Farm Flyball (with extra snow!)

It was -7 when we arrived at Bromley Farm on Sunday morning. That’s really very cold. Due to the cold and the snow, several teams pulled out and so Extreme re-organised the divisions from 4 to 3. Worked really well, even if it did mean two of our teams racing against one another.

Kim and Mollie were running in the bottom team, Kim ran well but made a few uncharacteristic mistakes on the box and Mollie was completely overexcited all morning and didn’t run at her best. We actually pushed most of the teams to 4 or 5 legs, but we lost everything in the end and finished 6th (oops!)

I was actually expecting Dylan to be off-form again (as per Saturday), but he actually ran pretty well. He’s running just under 5s line-to-line, which isn’t perfect but is better. He also didn’t stutter into the first hurdle at any point during the day, which was promising. Apparently it only takes him 8 months to get comfortable running into strange dogs, who knew? The team finished 1st and ran a fastest time of 19.46, which wasn’t too bad considering the 14″ height and the cold weather!

Absolutely brilliant to watch Extreme Racers break the 17s and run a 16.95 in the afternoon too!

Finally, everyone should check out the Flyball Seminar that Flyball Fever are hosting in the new year. I really hope all the flyballers out there take up the opportunity, it’s too good to miss!

Gap Farm November

Mollie was running in the second team. I was boxloading so have no idea what their fastest time was, I think something like 21.35? They all ran well; Mollie always loves running with her mini partner-in-crime Bailey, but the team was something of a last-minute jumble compared to the originally planned line-up. Really good racing for them though, especially against Monsters!

Dylan was always slated to run with the first team for this competition, but Kim got bumped up to join them at the last minute. I ran Dylan and my lovely mother took over running Kim for the day, because Kim doesn’t actually care who she runs with and my mum has the supernatural ability to change into any dog with any dog regardless of how much practise she’s had.

I think our fastest time was 19.29, or something like, which wasn’t too shabby all things considered! I was really pleased with Dylan, he didn’t stutter at all and ran into Norah with only a slight head-dip to say he wasn’t entirely comfortable being so close to such a hairy-scary girl. I honestly think having Kim on the team was such a confidence boost for him!

I also got my first ever 0.00 on the lights (out of 2 attempts, score!) and Dylan clocked a 4.95 on that run, which still isn’t perfect but is at least going in the right direction.

October Rotherdrax Flyball

I am already regretting entering anything over the winter. I always forget about the cold, and the dark, and the cold.

Kim was running with the second team, Hawk, and after a small series of minor disasters our lovely 5-dog team was down to an equally-lovely but slightly unpredictable 4 dog team. Kim and Brooke are both 12″ height dogs, and both can get a little tired running all day, and our lead-lurcher Chip is a lurcher, and he gets a little bored of flyball sometimes. However, with one full height dog gone, everyone was in and we actually had a really great days racing! We finished 1st in Div 6.

Dylan was running with the first team, Barneys, and we had to switch the order around unexpectedly after our first warm-up. Dylan was reassigned on the front, which makes me pull all kind of squirmy faces. I’m not great on the lights, but I’m even worse with Dylan! Dylan has issues approaching the first hurdle, and has started stuttering into the jump quite badly. We worked out his stride pattern and eventually worked out that he must go from 35ft into a dog he trusts, otherwise he stutters. This does not work when we go lead, because Dyl needs to run from 37ft to hit the start at the right time! This completely wrecked his stride and even when we moved back to 35ft in the afternoon he was all over the place.

His box was noticably tighter in the afternoon, he tends to go very wide in the morning (I don’t know why … ) but he’s always run better in the afternoon anyway. So now the most frustrating thing with Dylan is that he’s running at around 5s or just under over 14″ with this stupid stuttering start. Hopefully next time Norah will be back and we won’t have to go lead again! We finished 1st in Div 4 anyway, which was a bit of a happy ending.

Mollie was in the third team, Marsh, and had a great time running lead over 9″ all day. She’s completely mental. We struggled a bit in this division as we were on a declared time, and couldn’t run our fastest four dogs as they would break out! I think the team finished 3rd overall, but it was excellent racing.

Kim got her Gold Award (15,000points). She’s the 431st dog to get this award in the history of the BFA, and the 85th Crossbreed to get it. She actually got the points for it way back in June, but the BFA are so far behind on uploading the points that the awards are just starting to get presented now. Typically, this is the time of year when people don’t want to stay for presentations, and really don’t want presentations to take long when they do stay! It was freezing cold yesterday, but we had a few other dogs getting big awards as well, plus our successful day rosette-wise. Traditionally Owlers give a little bag of goodies to the dogs and handlers getting their big awards, and Kim got a lovely “gold” toy that she promptly ragged in all the dirt, a gold trophy and some very smelly chicken treats. And I got a baby box of Celebrations, so everybody wins!

Actually, the two trophies Kim has from her Silver and now Gold awards are two of my favourite trophies, they get pride of place on the shelf. They represent how brilliant a flyball dog Kim is, even if she isn’t the fastest singles dog; they represent all the cold and the rain and the baking hot days, the grass, turf, mud, rubber matting. The sitting in the rain while the lights go haywire, again. Running in every position into every dog every single time. Never running off whils we set up campsite, mugging people for food, helping put the tents down again. Being incredibly noisy, silly and excited, but still doing every run perfect every time with 100% heart. The 15,000 points doesn’t necessarily mean that, but the trophies from our team do.

Redcar Flyball

The girls ran well, we broke our seed time again and clocked a 20.15 in the afternoon. Mollie was slightly off her normal form, I think Saturday took her edge away. She gets so excited and then exhausts herself by getting all wound up and silly when she’s not running. She and Kim still ran line-to-line 4.9-5.1s all day. I am especially pleased with Kim, she ran all day as she was the height dog and she clocked a 4.99 in the afternoon. No idea what she’s up to, getting faster at her age! It was really good racing though, and we finished 3rd in the Division.

Dylan’s team also finished 3rd. Dylan was not running at his best. He was running with the top-team dogs again as they were missing two of the usual dogs from that team, and he wasn’t happy. As soon as I tried to do a proper change into Norah, Dylan started stuttering into the first jump, slamming on the breaks. My assumption is that this was to avoid Norah, because on wide changes he wasn’t stuttering. I’m getting a little bit frustrated with his stuttering into the first hurdle – it’s something that has only developed this summer and it varies depending on the competition.

What made this more frustrating was that Dylan’s box was lovely! He had a few mishaps after our new boxloader dropped a ball as he was approaching the box, which confused him no end, but by the next race he was back to neat, tight turns. It’s probably the best boxwork I’ve seen him doing all summer, but instead of improving his times, he was slower due to the run-in. He clocked 5.1s consistently all day (including changeovers, not line to line), which isn’t good enough. He clocked a 4.81 in singles the day after his first ever competition, and that is the standard I have been holding him to ever since.

Luckily we went to the beach afterwards. Despite the windswept grey sky and the wild grey sea, Redcar is always worth the trip because of the Stray.

Drax

My first Drax. Events have always conspired against us in previous years, and we’ve never made it. Well, we kind of made it via Rotherdrax, but I’m not sure that counts!

I warned everyone Kim wasn’t at all fit for solid racing, but due to one of the bottom team dogs coming into season, we had to reshuffle slightly and so Kim ended up running as a equal part of a 5 dog team (on a declared time, no less!) We got very very close to breakout; I think our breakout time was 21.10, and we ran a 21.13, with a few under 21 but with lights, thankfully! Kim was absolutely exhausted by the end of the day, I felt pretty bad about running her but unfortunately Bailey came out lame on the second to last race of the day, so we didn’t really have any option. We came 3rd, I think.

17/52

Mollie was dropped down to the bottom team and promptly ran 5.1s singles times as lead dog for them, so it was probably a good job she wasn’t in Kim’s team after all! We’d definitely have broken out if she’d been running with us, eek! Even more impressively, she ran consistent 5.1′s all day and although she was over 9″, she should only get fitter and faster from this point. I’d hope that she’ll continue running 5.1s for the rest of the season with Bails over 11″, and that’s just a bit good for a dog who will be eleven in June!

Dylan’s team was down to four dogs due to the reshuffle, but they were a strong four, all young but experienced and they ran together all last summer (although not over the winter) so we slotted back together easily. I really trust all the dogs and handlers on the team, so it was nice being able just to think about getting the best out of Dyl for once! Speaking of, Dylan ran really well, especially in the afternoon. He’s very comfortable over 13″ and he really likes running third as he can get hyper-focussed and noisy at Lucy (who runs lead) and then has time to re-focus for his own run.

We ran easy 20s times all day, which was a good start to the season, especially as this group should improve – but it does depend on who we have at the next tournament! (My feeling has always been that this team should run with four dogs rather than mix/match with five, but it’s always up to the team captain in the end!) It was good to see that we were running the same kind of times at the end of the day as at the start, which just proves how fit the dogs are. I think we were 3rd in the Division, but I was frozen to death and went home before the presentations.