I have a SH dog and have been running more and more complicated set up for the dog in prep for a run at MH next fall or perhaps this spring.
Sunday we went out and ran a series of blinds and we had a problem. I think I know what to do but I would really like to hear from you guys.
There were 3 blinds set up. 80 to 250 yards. The field had been recently mowed and there were a lot of round bales in the field. I decided to use the bales to complicate the blinds because I had seen a couple of what I heard called keyhole blinds in a recent MH test some friends ran in.
I knew we might experience some problems with going to the bales since we have in the past used bales as a point to place a blind. So I suspected the response I got in fact I expected it but did not expect it to be such a huge obstacle.
The 1st blind we ran wasn't that bad as far as a keyhole but there were hay bales withing 30 or 40 yards of the line on both sides at about 100 yards. the blind was at about 200 - 250. There were more scattered about, but not near the line, behind those bales. Once Buster got to these two bales that were on either side of the line it was like he hit a wall.
He wanted to go to those bales (I guess I should never have used the bales as markers for blinds) and he became confused and ping ponged back and forth but would not go much past (40 yards max) those initial bales.
It became a handling war and I finally won but it about took the stuffing out of the dog doing it. I mean it was ugly. He decided that the blind was at those bales and would not go past that wall. Total confusion is what it appeared to me. The dogs line was straight but swerved to the bales just as he was about to pass by the bales. In fact he looked at both and then chose one. I stopped him and handled away from the bale he chose and..yep you guessed it he decided the other one must be the blind and the handling war began. I tried whistling the dog in a bit the recasting, and I tried a "NO!!!" with a nick of the collar. Both to no avail.
We experienced this on the next blind as well. It was a similar set up.
The last blind which I thought would be the hardest, although the shortest (80 - 100 yards) wasn't near the bear the first two were.
This problem is a new one. To give you info on where he is: He handles excellently and takes a line very well. a 200 - 250 yard blind isn't anything new at all. He runs them routinely and even quite a bit beyond at times.
My solution (which we will begin this weekend) is to run these same blinds as memory blinds with lots of repetitions over the course of a couple or more weeks. My reasoning is to show him that he needs to trust his initial line and also to trust my casts and to let him know that the bales or other items in the field are not always the blind location. If he would just trust his initial line and my casting we will always succeed. I also need to work on driving him past obstacles more.
Thoughts or comments are certainly apppreciated r if you guys could recommend a drill I would appreciate that.
Sunday we went out and ran a series of blinds and we had a problem. I think I know what to do but I would really like to hear from you guys.
There were 3 blinds set up. 80 to 250 yards. The field had been recently mowed and there were a lot of round bales in the field. I decided to use the bales to complicate the blinds because I had seen a couple of what I heard called keyhole blinds in a recent MH test some friends ran in.
I knew we might experience some problems with going to the bales since we have in the past used bales as a point to place a blind. So I suspected the response I got in fact I expected it but did not expect it to be such a huge obstacle.
The 1st blind we ran wasn't that bad as far as a keyhole but there were hay bales withing 30 or 40 yards of the line on both sides at about 100 yards. the blind was at about 200 - 250. There were more scattered about, but not near the line, behind those bales. Once Buster got to these two bales that were on either side of the line it was like he hit a wall.
He wanted to go to those bales (I guess I should never have used the bales as markers for blinds) and he became confused and ping ponged back and forth but would not go much past (40 yards max) those initial bales.
It became a handling war and I finally won but it about took the stuffing out of the dog doing it. I mean it was ugly. He decided that the blind was at those bales and would not go past that wall. Total confusion is what it appeared to me. The dogs line was straight but swerved to the bales just as he was about to pass by the bales. In fact he looked at both and then chose one. I stopped him and handled away from the bale he chose and..yep you guessed it he decided the other one must be the blind and the handling war began. I tried whistling the dog in a bit the recasting, and I tried a "NO!!!" with a nick of the collar. Both to no avail.
We experienced this on the next blind as well. It was a similar set up.
The last blind which I thought would be the hardest, although the shortest (80 - 100 yards) wasn't near the bear the first two were.
This problem is a new one. To give you info on where he is: He handles excellently and takes a line very well. a 200 - 250 yard blind isn't anything new at all. He runs them routinely and even quite a bit beyond at times.
My solution (which we will begin this weekend) is to run these same blinds as memory blinds with lots of repetitions over the course of a couple or more weeks. My reasoning is to show him that he needs to trust his initial line and also to trust my casts and to let him know that the bales or other items in the field are not always the blind location. If he would just trust his initial line and my casting we will always succeed. I also need to work on driving him past obstacles more.
Thoughts or comments are certainly apppreciated r if you guys could recommend a drill I would appreciate that.