RETRIEVER FOUNDATIONS
YARD WORK – PART 1
FOCUS, ATTENTION PAYING AND FOLLOW-ME
It is extremely important for your dog to be focussed on you. If this focus on you is not present and strong, your dog will be less likely to cope with all the distractions of other dogs and strange environments, etc. At home encourage this attention-paying by putting one of your dog’s meals into your pocket and simply go about your normal activities. Each time the dog looks at you – feed him some of the food in your pocket; each time the dog sits and looks at you, feed him. There are no commands – all you want from your dog is attention and for him/her to follow you, and to sit when you stop. This is the foundation behaviour for ALL obedience.
Getting the Behaviour
Stand still and wait for orientation. Orientation does not mean eye contact or anything specific in the beginning – ear twitch or small movements towards you can be clicked. Rate of reinforcement must be very high to start with to avoid the dog disengaging. If there is too much time between each click and treat, the dog will tend to get distracted more easily. It is very important that no coercion is used for this exercise – no leash jerks or calling the dog’s name. Either tie the leash to your belt, or drop it and stand on the handle.
This behaviour must be a default behaviour – in other words, no cue. This is a separate exercise from the name recognition game.
Once the dog is focussing on you, start backing away from the dog. The dog will follow. Make sure you continue facing the dog. At this stage of the exercise, any movement by the dog towards the handler is clicked with the treat being delivered by hand. It is important to keep moving as you may be inclined to stop and click the dog for sitting. This is not what the exercise is about. At least once a week, take your dog to a place other than the home environment such as a shopping centre or a park or an open area and play the focus game here. It is important that your dog learns to pay attention in spite of distractions.
HEELING
This exercise follows on automatically from the attention and follow exercise. After about 5 minutes of the Focus exercise, and at a point where your dog is focussed on you, simply do an about turn to your right and continue moving forward. Your dog will now be on your left. Carry on clicking and treating for movement with you and position at your left knee. Focus on a spot directly ahead and move in a straight line towards that point for about 20 steps – clicking and treating for movement and position. Do only this for the first week, gradually tapering off the clicks and treats as the behaviour becomes more solid. You can also, at this stage start asking for sit when you stop. Don’t forget to click and treat your dog for compliance.
When asking for the sit at heel when you stop, be careful to say “Sit” just before you actually stop. If you wait until you stop before you say sit, the dog’s forward momentum will carry him past you before he complies. He will then be sitting ahead of you, and not in the heel position which is what you require. With repetition, he will learn to pick up the cues from your speed and leg movements and you can drop the verbal cue.
As your dog has more of an understanding of what is required you can start adding about turns and right and left turns, remembering to watch your dog all the time so that you can click and treat for attention during the changes of direction.
Start with these exercises in your garden or some other non-distracting environment and then take them “on the road”.
When taking the heeling exercise on the road, you need to lower your criteria and raise your rate of reinforcement until your dog desensitizes to the distractions. Also, do not try and walk all the way around the park, or around the block in one go. Rather do 10 steps of heeling and then either let your dog off lead to run, or allow him to sniff. Then do another 10 steps. Gradually extend the distance to 15 steps, then 20 steps, and so on.
REMEMBER, THAT HEELING SHOULD BE FUN. KEEP THE EXPERIENCE EXCITING FOR YOUR DOG WITH NO CORRECTIONS AND STACKS OF REWARDS. TO QUOTE THE TOP EUROPEAN AGILITY TRAINER SILVIA TRKMAN “HEELING IS JUST ANOTHER TRICK”.
SIT AND STAY
The first criterion for this exercise is that your dog sits each and every time you ask for it. Not just when your dog feels like it – not just when you are waving food around in his face – not just when you are feeding him his dinner – but always, no arguments, no cajoling,- every time.
If your dog is not popping his rear down when he hears the word “Sit”, you need to go back and practise, practise, practise. Not just at home, but when you take your dog for a walk, in your kitchen, before you go out of the gate, before you put his lead on. Repeat, repeat, repeat until it becomes a HABIT! Remember that once your dog has learnt the meaning of the word “Sit” it is no longer necessary to use the clicker to mark the behaviour. The word has taken over the function of the clicker. What is the function of the clicker? It is, in part, a predictor of the reward. The word “Sit” has now become the predictor of possibly a reward like a treat, going outside and/or fetching the retrieve.
Now we are going to extend the sit into a sit/stay, so it is necessary to bring out the clicker again so that we can “talk” to our dog and explain (via the clicker) what it is we want. We want our dog to sit and stay there until we release him or her from the stay. The way we do this is simply to delay the click.
The 3 D’s
- Duration (Time)
- Distance (Movement away from your dog)
- Distraction (Anything that will tempt your dog to break his stay).
Because we want to set things up for your dog to succeed, we can’t train him on all the three D’s at the same time. So we start with the easiest – Duration. We address the other two D’s later on.
Duration
- Say “Sit” – dog sits – (wait 2 seconds) – click and treat.
- Say “Sit” – dog sits – (wait 2 ½ seconds) – click and treat.
- Say “Sit” – dog sits – (wait 3 ½ seconds) – click and treat.
….. And so on, until you have reached 10 seconds. Do not move away at this stage, just stand next to or in front of your dog until your dog can maintain the sit for 10 seconds. Remember, the dog is waiting for the click to tell him that he has done the right thing. What the click is telling him is to wait…. The next D we will be working on is Distraction to prepare your dog for being steady to shot and throw.
SUMMARY
ATTENTION-PAYING AND FOLLOW-ME
- Click and Treat for orientation and/or eye contact. High Rate of Reinforcement.
- No coercion is used for this exercise – no leash jerks or calling the dog’s name.
- No cue – default behaviour.
- Back away – dog follows. C&T movement with you.
- Extend duration, and then
- Add distractions.
HEELING
Brief Attention-Paying and Follow exercise to get dog focussed.
- Heel for about 20 steps in a straight line. High rate of reinforcement (every 2nd or 3rd step).
- Gradually extend to 5 steps between C&T, then 8 steps, then 10 steps.
- Ask for sit when you stop. For example, walk 10 steps, stop and ask for a sit (C&T the sit) walk another 10 steps, stop and ask for a sit, and so on…
SIT AND STAY
Ensure that your “Sit” is fluent. To test this, you should be getting at least 10 to 13 sits in the space of 30 seconds.
- Gradually extend duration until the sit is held for 10 seconds both in the heel position, and in the front position.
YOUR TRAINING PLAN
If you are to take your training seriously, and more important to make progress with the skills you are teaching your dog, it is very important to do some planning before you actually get out there and have to stand around wasting time for 5 minutes while you think of what you’re going to do. The other problem with not keeping records, is that without knowing what your dog achieved with your last training session (and don’t think you’ll remember, because you won’t!), you are not in a position to raise criteria and will probably get stuck doing all the things that your dog can already do, resulting in apathy from your dog, and boredom from you, as well as absolutely no progress forward.
At the very least, make a list of your goals, and keep a running check on your progress. A simple form of goal setting with a checklist could be as illustrated:
|
OBEDIENCE GOALS |
|||
|
Exercise |
Criteria | Assessment | |
|
FOCUS |
Will pay attention and follow me for 5 seconds before the reward. Goal is 8 out of 10 correct reps. | YES! | |
| Almost | |||
| HELP! | |||
| Will pay attention and follow me for 10 seconds before the reward. Goal is 8 out of 10 correct reps. | YES! | ||
| Almost | |||
| HELP! | |||
|
SIT |
Will sit on cue 10 times in 30 seconds. | YES! | |
| Almost | |||
| HELP! | |||
|
SIT/STAY |
Will sit at heel for 5 seconds before released. Goal is 8 out of 10 correct reps. | YES! | |
| Almost | |||
| HELP! | |||
| Will sit at heel for 10 seconds before released. Goal is 8 out of 10 reps. | YES! | ||
| Almost | |||
| HELP! | |||
|
HEELING |
Will walk at heel for 20 paces in a straight line. Can C&T the sit. | YES! | |
| Almost | |||
| HELP! | |||
| Will walk at heel for 10 paces and sit when I stop. Can C&T the sit. | YES! | ||
| Almost | |||
| HELP! | |||
| Will walk at heel for 30 paces with at least 2 automatic sits. Can C&T the sit. | YES! | ||
| Almost | |||
| HELP! | |||
This is just an example for you to use. You can break down the progressions into even smaller steps if you like.
RETRIEVER FOUNDATIONS
FIELD WORK – PART 1
THE SINGLE MARKED RETRIEVE
When you start a pup–or inexperienced adult for that matter–remember that retrieve desire must precede “marking practice.” You must build a pup’s enthusiasm for simple retrieving by way of games. Start building good habits such as coming back to you with the retrieve (all part of the game) and holding the retrieve article without mouthing or mishandling the retrieve “toy”. Also, put as much effort into building your obedience skills as you do with your retrieving exercises.
Training for the “Spot on the Ground”
If you are fortunate enough to have a natural marker, your dog will understand the concept of marking the destination of the bird or dummy as a “spot on the ground” and will lock on to that spot all the way from your side to the location. He is marking with his eyes.
The weak marker or the dog that has not learnt to use his eyes, will head out to the area of fall, immediately drop his nose to the ground and start hunting the area. Because it has not occurred to him to use his eyes to locate the bird, he often will hunt right past the bird and never see it. Unfortunately the nose-down marker tends to lose track of where to hunt and often ends up well away from the “zone” he first identified.
What we are going to do is make it possible for our young dogs to learn to use their eyes. We will…
- Use, wherever possible, dummies that can easily be identified – white or light-coloured dummies – not orange.
- Start your marking exercises in an area with light cover so that your dog can easily see the retrieve object.
- Avoid throwing long distance marks – rather start close and build the distance gradually.
- Try to avoid throwing marks that frequently require the thrower’s help to get your dog to the dummy or bird.
The ability to mark is a natural instinct among quality retrievers. All that is necessary is to enhance the gifts proper genetics has provided. This is not done by throwing repetitive, meaningless marks – all this does is promote unsteadiness and independence. In your pup’s very early days its natural retrieving “drive” is woken by tossing “fun” retrieves, but as soon as we know that pup will retrieve enthusiastically, these relatively uncontrolled retrieves must cease if we are to have a great marker. Once the dog is steady and is embarking on the more intense training, these “fun” or “happy” marks can be used to relax the dog or for a reward.
Remember these important points:
The right field. Use a field with short grass such as a park or soccer field. This should be clean with no distracting objects such as food wrappers, etc.
The right retrieve object. Use only prominent retrieve objects that the pup can readily see from a distance as he approaches. Clean white dummies are preferred for the very first marks. Don’t throw anything that the dog will have trouble seeing in the air or on the ground.
The right wind. Early marks should be thrown down wind. You want to make sure that the pup doesn’t use his nose to guide him to the fall.
Visual continuity. The pup must be able to see the dummy lying on the ground for the entire time he runs out to it.
Your thrower
It’s important that your thrower have a good throwing arm. There are real advantages to a long throw that lands well away from where the thrower stands, especially for beginning markers. Before you send your thrower out to throw for the puppy, coach him on when and how to help if the pup gets lost or tries to return without the dummy. Techniques for helping young pups include: re-attracting the lost pup with sound and throwing a second dummy while he’s looking at the thrower; attracting the pup with sound and motion so as to help direct him to find the one already thrown; or slipping in another bird or dummy while the pup is not looking and placing it in a location where the pup will easily find it.
Remember, if your marks are set up correctly the need for thrower help will be rare or nonexistent at this early stage. If you find your puppy is frequently needing thrower help, you need to simplify your marks.
Position the thrower to minimize his influence on the marking “picture”
For a young puppy’s very first retrieves that are thrown by someone else (not your own hand thrown retrieves), the distance from the dog to the fall should be less than the distance from the fall to the thrower.
This geometry helps establish the puppy’s habit of looking at the fall and not the thrower after the dummy is on the ground. It also helps the pup naturally return to you with the dummy, rather than go visit the thrower.
As you gradually lengthen the marks, you cannot maintain this geometry, of course. So now, to keep the pup’s focus on nothing but the fall as he runs out to get it, try to position the thrower where, although he will still be visible, he will be somewhat out of the picture as the pup runs toward the mark. For example, place him on the other side of a path or cover strip from where the fall lands. When this is not possible, use square (“flat”) throws, because they visually separate the thrower from the fall better than angle back throws.
As soon as your pup has learnt to track the dummy as it moves through the air to a spot on the ground, you can position the thrower behind a tree or shrub, so that he is not such an obvious part of the picture.
Another possible problem that you might encounter is that your pup does not maintain focus on the dummy before being sent to retrieve, but switches to either watch the thrower, or you. Because you want to test your dog’s steadiness as well, you will be inclined to delay sending your pup for a second or two; this delay often causes your pup to switch his focus from the fall to the thrower. If you send him when he is watching the thrower you are in danger of creating a habit that will be difficult to break later on, and might become problematic when you are marking off a retired gun. What I suggest you do in a case like this is NOT delay sending your pup. Rather send him as soon as the dummy hits the ground. This way he will maintain focus on the fall rather than on the thrower. You can then gradually extend the time you delay sending him.
However, having said all this about marking it is still very important to your training plan to remember that a retrieve is a complex behaviour consisting of a number of finite behaviours linked together to form a chain. Also, with any training of complex behaviours, the best place to start is at the end of the chain. The end of a retrieve behaviour chain is the delivery. So this is where you would start. We will discuss how to start at the end at our next lesson.


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