Yea?.. but?.""Not sure exactly what to do whether to skip to collar fetch then return or go completely back to a couple days of simple casting with no collar."
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Yea?.. but?.""Not sure exactly what to do whether to skip to collar fetch then return or go completely back to a couple days of simple casting with no collar."
One Shooter One Spaniel One Retriever
You are saying it's easier to cast a pup through a burn from 10 yards than to move up and line the pup from 5 yards? I think you've got the dog's momentum from moving up in your favor and you are away from the burn, plus you are facing the pile. Send her for the bird without facing her away from the pile and stepping away from the dog. Use the momentum you've built up by moving towards the pile. If she gets it without much baggage then you can toss the bumper back to the pile and remote cast him from there. Work your way back to the original line. Don't make a big production out of it trying to force a barely trained dog through a burn, help her along and show her what you want.
Howard Niemi
"you don't get trapping advice from a trapper with no pelts on his wall" from Guy Burnett via Marvin Sundstom in 2013
Give it a day or two without any pressure (collar pressure).... you will still have to pinch if you get a refusal. It'll give you a chance to review 3 handed casting and give a the dog a bit of a mental break at the end of conditioning. Don't be afraid to help with body english and IDing etc. CC is obviously a stressful time and sometimes I think it helps to let them have a day or two to digest before you start the Ind. press. intro. Don't skip the step and move on, but at the same time, don't rush it and dig a hole. I can't stress enough how important it is to make sure the dog is getting plenty of marks in the field. (Birds if at all possible)
Last edited by LESTER LANGLEY; 02-28-2013 at 10:10 PM.
Its not a burn it a nick to remind them calm down pay attention.
I did it where I was literally on top of the dog. The farthes away my body was before a cast was 2 feet. There is no separation between handler and dog
the only problem I think this step is meant to correct is to get the dog to slow down and focus on the handler. 99% of the very few nicks I had to give were him anticipating my cast. Simple "no, here pulling rope back to you, sit nick" to reinforce the sit if he repeated the offense back to back. Shopping the pile wasn't ever a big deal for us, nor refusals as the bumpers were in plain sight and we had just finished walking collar fetch and I used the command fetch while moving towards a pile
Last edited by blake_mhoona; 02-28-2013 at 10:35 PM.
Agree with Howard - all this 'burning' what happened to encouragement and 'simplify' 'simplify'?
If you play their game train the way they train
My take on this: Something tells me that there is more confusion than anything else. I personally have resorted to "simplify", maybe even "oversimplify". I would simplify,change location, reteach, and make sure the dog understands the behavior that is wanted before I would add the pressure. I have Lardy's material and when I read it I just get the feeling that he makes sure the teaching end is understood but I must admit I haven't looked at his stuff for a while.
"I love the rod and gun and where they take me."
I had a similiar question not long ago regarding indirect pressure. Attached is the thread, its a bit lengthy but has some good info on this subject, if you can read past some of the sniping that went on in the thread.
http://www.retrievertraining.net/for...irect+pressure