I haven't posted in a while. Nimrod and I have been tracking 2-3 times a week. I don't use the same field two times in a row. Nimrod is tracking with a FD every ten steps. When we run a 200 yard, two or three turn track I see very few distraction or extinction behaviors. When we run a 300 yard, two or three turn track I see a lot of those distraction behaviors. I'm not sure whether to keep the tracks at 200 yards and increasing the spacing of the FDs or keep the FDs at ten steps and gradually increase the length of the track. I will try to upload video soon. I've put Nimrod on a long line and his tracking improved instantly but I'm having trouble managing my phone and the long line. I got a go pro mini with a chest and head mount. The battery keeps overheating, but I'll keep working on the video piece.
Popular posts from this blog
July 6
Nimrod and I ran tracks on the 18th and 20th. On the 18th I laid a hundred-yard one R 90-degree turn track with FD every step and a bag drag. Nimrod had been successful twice on the one step FD pattern, but I elected to keep the one step FD pattern because we were in a heavily used park. I anticipated the ice-cream truck, the soccer game and loose dogs. The hoarse being put through jumps was a surprise but ok. My track was about half laid when a man in pickup pulled into the nearest parking lot. He eyed me, let his miniature Australian Shepard out of the cab, pulled a large remote controlled vehicle from the bed of the truck. He zoomed the vehicle back and forth across our track and his dog gave chase. I thought about asking him to move to the vacant half of the field, but something about his posture made me think he wanted a confrontation. I didn't have enough food to lay another track. The dog got tired of chasing the vehicle and man and dog moved off the field. I put the harnes...
Nice! At 1:37, when he looks up at the noisy car…feel free to give him a quiet “good boy” when he chooses to go back to work. Just one, quiet “good boy” nothing more.At 2:35, when he gets stuck, rather than repeating the verbal cue, call him to you, give him a good rub, toss a treat out onto the track and see if that restarts him. It usually does. We don’t gain anything by letting them stop and stare, and they don’t understand English, so giving the cue isn’t that helpful at this point in his training. When he is tracking, he looks great.
ReplyDeleteSession structure: At his level, we’d like to see three tracks of progressively longer lengths, with the food drops remaining unchanged. So, if that track was 30 feet, you would ideally do three tracks, one of 30’, one of 40’, and one of 50’. Next time out, you’d do 40, 50, 60 feet. And after that, 50, 60, 70. Just continue that pattern of progressively longer, WHILE KEEPING THE FOOD DROPS THE SAME.
Nice job on this one—let’s do more!