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        <title>What&#039;s a Utility Dog? - Stories of Spur: Dogging it in competition - michelemc&apos;s Blog - SacPaws.com</title>
        <link>http://www.sacpaws.com/home/Blog/michelemc/104</link>
        <description>Friends in my non-dog life keep asking me what it is I&#039;m so worked up about these days.&amp;nbsp; Utility Dog?&amp;nbsp; What the heck is that?&amp;nbsp; 

Well.

AKC obedience titles are based on three sets of exercises, Novice, Open and Utility, Utility being the most difficult.&amp;nbsp; In a nutshell, at the April shows at Cal Expo, Spur and I will enter the ring, and in about ten minutes we&#039;ll go through five exercises.&amp;nbsp; If we complete them successfully on three different days, we&#039;ll have a new title.&amp;nbsp; Utility Dog!

But the exercises are difficult.&amp;nbsp; At the A level - dogs who don&#039;t already hold a UD, Utility Dog, title - it&#039;s routine to see only one or two dogs pass in a class of 20 or more.&amp;nbsp; Uh oh!

What&#039;s so tough?&amp;nbsp; Here are the five exercises:

1.&amp;nbsp; Signals.&amp;nbsp; Spur will heel with me on hand signals only, sitting any time the judge tells me to stop.&amp;nbsp; Until I&#039;m instructed to give him a hand signal to stand.&amp;nbsp; Then I&#039;ll walk to the other side of the ring, about 40 feet away, and signal him to down, then sit, then come.

2.&amp;nbsp; Scent discrimination.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;ll send Spur to a scattering of 9 dumbell-like articles, some leather some metal.&amp;nbsp; He must bring me the one I have touched.&amp;nbsp; Once with leather, once with metal.

3.&amp;nbsp; Directed retrieve.&amp;nbsp; Three gloves will be set out along one edge of the ring.&amp;nbsp; One in the center, one at each end.&amp;nbsp; Spur must retrieve the glove I point at.

4.&amp;nbsp; Stand for exam.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;ll heel him across the ring, then command him to stand while I continue walking without pause.&amp;nbsp; The judge will approach and examine him, then I will call him to return to me and take heel position.

5.&amp;nbsp; Directed jumping.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;ll command Spur to run away from me as fast as he can, until I tell him to sit.&amp;nbsp; A jump is set at either side of the ring.&amp;nbsp; He must return to me by taking whichever of the jumps I point at.&amp;nbsp; He&#039;ll do this twice, once for each jump.

Or at least I hope he will.&amp;nbsp; 

For this, and all obedience classes, we enter the ring with 200 points.&amp;nbsp; The judge will follow us about, and mark us down for every infraction.&amp;nbsp; A crooked sit, a lack of enthusiasm, or sloppy handling on my part all equal points off.&amp;nbsp; I must score at least 170 points to pass.&amp;nbsp; No treats allowed in the ring, no encouragement during exercises, and no commands may be repeated more than once.

It feels like there are a million ways to get marked down, and certainly more than 60 ways to fail on the spot.&amp;nbsp; If he picks the wrong article, glances away and misses a hand signal, or stops to gawk too long at another dog outside the ring . . . .we are toast.

I started introducing Spur to the concepts behind some of these exercises at the age of eight weeks.&amp;nbsp; At four years, he is about the right age to begin competition.&amp;nbsp; But a lot can go wrong.

My first obedience dog, Petra, showed in a dozen trials before she achieved the three successes necessary for a title.&amp;nbsp; My second dog, Axel, required 18 trials.

I&#039;m a better handler now, and Spur is the right dog.&amp;nbsp; What if he earned his title over the four days of shows at Cal Expo in April?&amp;nbsp; It&#039;s highly unlikely, but I can imagine it.&amp;nbsp; It&#039;s fun and scary to think about.

I can&#039;t help it.&amp;nbsp; I can&#039;t get the possibility out of my mind.&amp;nbsp;</description>
        <itunes:summary>Friends in my non-dog life keep asking me what it is I&#039;m so worked up about these days.&amp;nbsp; Utility Dog?&amp;nbsp; What the heck is that?&amp;nbsp; 

Well.

AKC obedience titles are based on three sets of exercises, Novice, Open and Utility, Utility being the most difficult.&amp;nbsp; In a nutshell, at the April shows at Cal Expo, Spur and I will enter the ring, and in about ten minutes we&#039;ll go through five exercises.&amp;nbsp; If we complete them successfully on three different days, we&#039;ll have a new title.&amp;nbsp; Utility Dog!

But the exercises are difficult.&amp;nbsp; At the A level - dogs who don&#039;t already hold a UD, Utility Dog, title - it&#039;s routine to see only one or two dogs pass in a class of 20 or more.&amp;nbsp; Uh oh!

What&#039;s so tough?&amp;nbsp; Here are the five exercises:

1.&amp;nbsp; Signals.&amp;nbsp; Spur will heel with me on hand signals only, sitting any time the judge tells me to stop.&amp;nbsp; Until I&#039;m instructed to give him a hand signal to stand.&amp;nbsp; Then I&#039;ll walk to the other side of the ring, about 40 feet away, and signal him to down, then sit, then come.

2.&amp;nbsp; Scent discrimination.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;ll send Spur to a scattering of 9 dumbell-like articles, some leather some metal.&amp;nbsp; He must bring me the one I have touched.&amp;nbsp; Once with leather, once with metal.

3.&amp;nbsp; Directed retrieve.&amp;nbsp; Three gloves will be set out along one edge of the ring.&amp;nbsp; One in the center, one at each end.&amp;nbsp; Spur must retrieve the glove I point at.

4.&amp;nbsp; Stand for exam.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;ll heel him across the ring, then command him to stand while I continue walking without pause.&amp;nbsp; The judge will approach and examine him, then I will call him to return to me and take heel position.

5.&amp;nbsp; Directed jumping.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;ll command Spur to run away from me as fast as he can, until I tell him to sit.&amp;nbsp; A jump is set at either side of the ring.&amp;nbsp; He must return to me by taking whichever of the jumps I point at.&amp;nbsp; He&#039;ll do this twice, once for each jump.

Or at least I hope he will.&amp;nbsp; 

For this, and all obedience classes, we enter the ring with 200 points.&amp;nbsp; The judge will follow us about, and mark us down for every infraction.&amp;nbsp; A crooked sit, a lack of enthusiasm, or sloppy handling on my part all equal points off.&amp;nbsp; I must score at least 170 points to pass.&amp;nbsp; No treats allowed in the ring, no encouragement during exercises, and no commands may be repeated more than once.

It feels like there are a million ways to get marked down, and certainly more than 60 ways to fail on the spot.&amp;nbsp; If he picks the wrong article, glances away and misses a hand signal, or stops to gawk too long at another dog outside the ring . . . .we are toast.

I started introducing Spur to the concepts behind some of these exercises at the age of eight weeks.&amp;nbsp; At four years, he is about the right age to begin competition.&amp;nbsp; But a lot can go wrong.

My first obedience dog, Petra, showed in a dozen trials before she achieved the three successes necessary for a title.&amp;nbsp; My second dog, Axel, required 18 trials.

I&#039;m a better handler now, and Spur is the right dog.&amp;nbsp; What if he earned his title over the four days of shows at Cal Expo in April?&amp;nbsp; It&#039;s highly unlikely, but I can imagine it.&amp;nbsp; It&#039;s fun and scary to think about.

I can&#039;t help it.&amp;nbsp; I can&#039;t get the possibility out of my mind.&amp;nbsp;</itunes:summary>
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