Tell A Friend

Stories of Spur: Dogging it in competition

Stories of Spur: Dogging it in competition
Spur competes in AKC obedience trials. He is a miniature schnauzer. This will chronicle his life on the "campaign trail" as he and his handler compete against dogs of all breeds for high titles.
About michelemc


Real Name:
Michele McCormick
Member Since:
March 19, 2008
Last Signed In:
July 19, 2009
Blog Views:
1573
Send a Message Send To A Friend Sign Guestbook Add as a Friend

Getting Back to Basics
Location: Vallejo, CA

Loading...
Larger Map
The good news is that Spur was delighted with the new tug toy I picked up for him at this weekend's Coyote Kennel Club Trials in Vallejo.  The bad news is that he was not very deserving. In fact, he was a rather bad boy.  Or maybe mommy was not such a great handler?

The short report is that we failed both classes.  There are a series of issues we have been working on, but the bottom line is that they all boil down to the classic issue of dog training:  attention.

We handlers are often frustrated when our dogs do great in training, and poorly at trials.  We blame it on our own nervousness - that tension runs down the leash, is how the saying goes.

I'm coming to recognize that the problem may be something different.  In Spur's case, it's an award-winning lack of attention.  He is fascinated by the stewards who enter and leave the ring.  He is fixated on the people or dogs who stroll by the ring during our performance.  Once he enters the ring, he is like a goldfish in a bowl yearning deeply for the wide sea outside his curtailed world.

What to do?  There is much discussion about whether I should pull him from trialing completely.  Poor performances are reinforcing, because they teach the dog that when he is in the ring there are neither corrections nor treats, and so, perhaps, no real reason to obey.

But we are excited about our first-ever schnauzer specialty, coming up in Long Beach in mid-June.  So the immediate plan is to work extra hard for the next month . . . and take a chance.

What will we do?  We have two workshops on the books, conducted by a judge who has seen us and understands our problems.  We have lessons with Mary Vogler who has great ideas and direction.  We'll try to get to Alan Miller's weekly whirlwind of an obedience class.  And we'll work on figuring out other ways to work around distractions and temptations.

If it were easy, every dog would be an Obedience Trial Champion.  We may never reach quite that level of glory, but we surely have it in us to do a lot better than our recent results portray.

As always, we post other pix and more frequent updates on our Twitter site. 

In this space: more to come!
0 comments from 0 users

Leave a Comment
Ground Rules for posting comments:
  • No profanity or personal attacks.
  • Please comment on the subject of the blog post itself.
If you do not follow these rules we will remove your comment. Please keep it civil.

To protect users from spam, we need you to prove that you're a human being.
Please enter the text from the image at left.
Make my comment anonymous Show my user name with my comment