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        <title>Action at  Alan&#039;s - Stories of Spur: Dogging it in competition - michelemc&apos;s Blog - SacPaws.com</title>
        <link>http://www.sacpaws.com/home/Blog/michelemc/120</link>
        <description>&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; On Monday nights, if I can sneak away from work early enough to make Alan Miller&#039;s lively advanced dog training class, you can bet that Spur and I will be there.&amp;nbsp; Alan offers beginning, intermediate and advanced dog training classes at a couple of locations in the Sacramento area, and they are more than worth the price of admission.&amp;nbsp; 

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Alan&#039;s own interest centers on larger breeds used for protection and safety, and his personal focus is on competition and training in those specialty areas.&amp;nbsp; But the same man who is a pro at teaching Rottweilers and his gorgeous new Belgian Malinois to bring down evildoers is also expert at shepherding a group of ordinary citizens through a training session that makes us all feel we are really getting somewhere.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Alan specializes in helping people whose dogs have problems with aggression, but he is every bit as expert at getting a normal group of folks to have a joyous hour teaching their dogs to retrieve, heel, respond to signals, and get along together.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Two things about Alan are especially terrific.&amp;nbsp; First is the fact that he orchestrates every one of his hour-long class sessions for maximum activity and maximum results.&amp;nbsp; There is no wasted time.&amp;nbsp; Every moment has been choreographed and planned.&amp;nbsp; From&amp;nbsp; heeling to retrieving, from scent discrimination exercises to jumps and moving stands, Alan has thought it all out in advance.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; To the observer, the result of all this movement and action is, in fact, a kind of guided chaos.&amp;nbsp; It is exactly what Spur and I are seeking these days.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Which brings me to the second thing that is great about Alan.&amp;nbsp; He is not, as some trainers tend to be . . . well, the best word I can think of is dogmatic.&amp;nbsp; Alan totally gets the flexibility that is needed for effective training, he understands that every handler and every dog are unique.&amp;nbsp; 

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; These days, when Spur and I go to Alan&#039;s, we do our own work alongside his busy class.&amp;nbsp; This is the environment we will encounter at shows.&amp;nbsp; 

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The rings at dog shows may be bordered by babygates, or perhaps only by ribbons at waist height.&amp;nbsp; To Spur, who stands 15 inches at the shoulder, that is no boundary at all.&amp;nbsp; I have to be sure he won&#039;t react to a dog running by, a handler shouting commands in the next ring, the sound of applause for awards or other dogs (or him!), or any one of a myriad of distractions that might occur.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; If Spur will respond to the signals I give him from 50 feet away when there&#039;s an entire pack of dogs and handlers practicing retrieves directly behind me . . . . then by gosh there&#039;s a chance he&#039;ll do it in the actual show ring as well.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; We&#039;ve now been getting ready for Spur&#039;s first entry into the Utility ring for a solid year.&amp;nbsp; No wait - we&#039;ve been getting ready for it for four years.&amp;nbsp; We&#039;ve been focused on it for a year.&amp;nbsp; We have 12 days to go.&amp;nbsp; I do not know if we are ready.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; For these last days I am taking every opportunity to take Spur anywhere I can to reinforce the notion that Utility exercises are fun under any and all circumstances, and that there is no more joyous experience than immediate response to the commands I will be allowed to utter only once.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; If I am grasping at straws as we approach the big day, then Alan&#039;s class is definitely a lifeline.
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;</description>
        <itunes:summary>&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; On Monday nights, if I can sneak away from work early enough to make Alan Miller&#039;s lively advanced dog training class, you can bet that Spur and I will be there.&amp;nbsp; Alan offers beginning, intermediate and advanced dog training classes at a couple of locations in the Sacramento area, and they are more than worth the price of admission.&amp;nbsp; 

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Alan&#039;s own interest centers on larger breeds used for protection and safety, and his personal focus is on competition and training in those specialty areas.&amp;nbsp; But the same man who is a pro at teaching Rottweilers and his gorgeous new Belgian Malinois to bring down evildoers is also expert at shepherding a group of ordinary citizens through a training session that makes us all feel we are really getting somewhere.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Alan specializes in helping people whose dogs have problems with aggression, but he is every bit as expert at getting a normal group of folks to have a joyous hour teaching their dogs to retrieve, heel, respond to signals, and get along together.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Two things about Alan are especially terrific.&amp;nbsp; First is the fact that he orchestrates every one of his hour-long class sessions for maximum activity and maximum results.&amp;nbsp; There is no wasted time.&amp;nbsp; Every moment has been choreographed and planned.&amp;nbsp; From&amp;nbsp; heeling to retrieving, from scent discrimination exercises to jumps and moving stands, Alan has thought it all out in advance.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; To the observer, the result of all this movement and action is, in fact, a kind of guided chaos.&amp;nbsp; It is exactly what Spur and I are seeking these days.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Which brings me to the second thing that is great about Alan.&amp;nbsp; He is not, as some trainers tend to be . . . well, the best word I can think of is dogmatic.&amp;nbsp; Alan totally gets the flexibility that is needed for effective training, he understands that every handler and every dog are unique.&amp;nbsp; 

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; These days, when Spur and I go to Alan&#039;s, we do our own work alongside his busy class.&amp;nbsp; This is the environment we will encounter at shows.&amp;nbsp; 

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The rings at dog shows may be bordered by babygates, or perhaps only by ribbons at waist height.&amp;nbsp; To Spur, who stands 15 inches at the shoulder, that is no boundary at all.&amp;nbsp; I have to be sure he won&#039;t react to a dog running by, a handler shouting commands in the next ring, the sound of applause for awards or other dogs (or him!), or any one of a myriad of distractions that might occur.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; If Spur will respond to the signals I give him from 50 feet away when there&#039;s an entire pack of dogs and handlers practicing retrieves directly behind me . . . . then by gosh there&#039;s a chance he&#039;ll do it in the actual show ring as well.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; We&#039;ve now been getting ready for Spur&#039;s first entry into the Utility ring for a solid year.&amp;nbsp; No wait - we&#039;ve been getting ready for it for four years.&amp;nbsp; We&#039;ve been focused on it for a year.&amp;nbsp; We have 12 days to go.&amp;nbsp; I do not know if we are ready.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; For these last days I am taking every opportunity to take Spur anywhere I can to reinforce the notion that Utility exercises are fun under any and all circumstances, and that there is no more joyous experience than immediate response to the commands I will be allowed to utter only once.

&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; If I am grasping at straws as we approach the big day, then Alan&#039;s class is definitely a lifeline.
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;</itunes:summary>
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