| STITCH
the
weBlog of a Service Dog, Pet Dog, Show Dog, and Sport Dog In Training |
| 16
MONTHS |
Yearning
to get back to dog training.
A
unique solution from a thinking being.
|
Next
weekend Scuba and I are away, the following two weeks are crammed
with llama show. THEN I have time to relax and start seriously
working with this marvelous puppy again
Stitch
has discovered a marvelous tool. Since she had such a problem
with picking up her metal dog dish, I've started feeding her
in a plastic container. When she's finished eating, she feels
fine about bringing me the plastic dish. When she's really,
really good at it, I'll switch to a smaller metal one, and then
to her regular metal dish. Sometimes, though, in her eagerness
to retrieve the plastic dish, she flips it over. Scuba knows
how to kick a dish into wall or onto the floor-rug joiner so
she can hook a tooth under it and flip it back over. Stitch
hasn't figured this out yet. She's come up with her own unique
solution to the problem, however - when she finds her dish upside
down, she kicks it around the room, closer and closer to Scuba,
until Scuba gets excited about it, kicks it into the wall, flips
it over and picks it up - at which point Stitch swoops down,
snatches it from Scuba, and brings it triumphantly to me for
her prize.
|
Starting
the taking-off-the-shoes-and-socks job.
|
We
work on retrieving today. I've been wearing sandals all summer,
which are easy for me to kick off, but as winter approaches,
I'll need to wear shoes, socks, and/or boots which will be harder
to take off. Time for Stitch to learn to pull off my shoes and
socks. She's parading around the house today with an elastic
stocking that's supposed to go under a cast, so we start with
that. I tie a knot in one end, and do some simple shaping to
make her love it, and to pick it up and give it to me. No problem.
Then I make sure she'll hold it firmly until I ask her to release
it - just waiting longer before clicking to emphasize that she's
not to spit it out (I'm not clicking - I'm just saying YES,
I don't want to put the clicker near her ears).
Finally
I put it back on the floor, have her pick it up and hand it
to me a couple of times, then put my foot on it so I can put
a little light pressure on it to show her that she has to put
some effort into getting it. This is hard for her to understand.
She's very savvy about how much pressure she uses with her mouth,
and she's always been very, very careful about the things we're
working with. If I asked her to pick up a credit card right
now, she might not be able to get it off a tile floor, but if
she did, I'm confident there wouldn't be a mark on it. She picks
up stocking, encounters the resistance, drops it, tries again,
drops it again, then looks at me. Darn, I should have clicked
for the second pickup. I click for each of the next two pickups,
then wait for a second the next time, which she gives me. The
time after that, I lessen the pressure to almost nothing, and
she picks up the stocking and gives it to me. I make a big fuss
about it, put it back down, put my foot on it, and wait. She
tries to pick it up, drops it, then reaches down, grabs the
knot in her molars, and gives it a tentative tug. Click, treat,
big fuss. By the time we're at the end of the meal, she's really
putting her back into it. Now I'm not letting her have the stocking,
she's actually pulling it out from under my foot. Tomorrow I'll
go through the divorced-sock bag and start working on the real
task.
|
Clipping
her wings on that have-to-do-laps thing.
|
We
continue to work on her penchant for doing laps around the yard.
She's been wearing her harness all day, every day. I especially
don't want her to get the idea that she can do laps when she's
naked but not when she's wearing something. Several times a
day, I try to quietly slip the long line on the harness when
I'm schnoogying her. Several minutes later, I open the front
door and send them both out into the yard with a flurry. Scuba
goes ripping off to the barn after the cats, with Stitch in
hot pursuit. When Stitch is half-way out the line (about 15'),
I quietly call "Stitch, c'mere". I can't see her at
this point, as there's a large pine tree in the way, but I CAN
see the line stop paying out, and then she comes back. When
she does come, we have a big party, dancing around the front
hall like fools, screaming, petting, wrestling. Then Scuba comes
back, and we try it again.
Once
in the last three days she didn't come back, but she didn't
keep going, either, just stopped and stood in the middle of
the yard. I backed up into the parlour, and after a little pressure
on the line, she came back. I need to get out and go for walks
- I want to go to the dog park, too, but it's been really windy,
cold and wet the last few days and I haven't gotten around to
that yet.
|
Adding
wrestling to her list of acceptable rewards.
|
Pursuant
to my resolve from last weekend's agility clinic, we have started
working on Heeling without food. I ask her to come into Heel position,
we Heel four steps, click, and wrestle. Now that we've worked
on pulling on the stocking, she decides she could wrestle with
my pant leg - which is OK as long as I can stop her if (when)
I want to. She has a great time alternately Heeling and wrestling.
This could easily get to be a default way of playing with her.
I seem to have the energy to do it right now. I would LOVE to
be tired and sore some day, ask her to Heel, and have her perk
up and leap into position! |
| Reengaging
dog's brain. |
Recovering
from the llama show, we spend one meal just starting to think
about cues again - randomly alternating Sit, Down, and Stand.
Not great, but not bad either. She occasionally disengages her
brain and just guesses at the next one - particularly when I ask
for one she's already giving me, like Down when she's already
Down. I want her to mentally check, realize she's already there,
and consciously stay there. When I ask for something and she doesn't
give it to me, Scuba gets the treat that was available for that
behaviour. This is a particularly inspiring way of working for
Stitch, and when she makes a mistake, she doesn't make one again
for maybe fifteen more repititions. |
| Engaging
the human's brain. |
Stitch and I spend a few moments on the Level Five Target behaviour
- as if any self-respecting dog needs encouragement to leap
up on the front door! Nevertheless, we work it. I get her to
touch my hand several times, then move my hand toward the door.
Her first few touches are tentative - she tries a nose-touch,
no go. She sits, and reaches for it with one paw, not quite
touching it. No go. I get her chasing my hand and try gesturing
close to the door again. Finally she whomps it a good one with
both front paws, and gets a click. OH! WHOMP THE DOOR! We'll
have to do this in another area next time, so she doesn't think
I'm talking just about doors.
On
a training list, they're talking about shaping spins (actually
they're talking about teaching left and right on cue for agility,
but they're starting with spins), so I'm going to do that. Stitch
has an eager clockwise spin that she does while I'm carrying
dog dishes into the kitchen, so we'll start with counterclockwise.
I
click for a head-turn to the left, for a head-turn partway back,
for two head-turns. I can see lots of problems. While trying
to lure a bit, I'm trying to toss the treat between her legs
so she continues turning to the left, but it's not working,
it's bouncing off her and she's continually having to turn back
to the right to get the treat, which is helping her forget what
she was doing. And it's been a while since we shaped. Scuba
was so into moving that it was hard to convince her when I was
trying for a duration behaviour such as eye contact or sit stays.
Stitch is a much more active dog than Scuba was, and I've been
rewarding calm and quiet and spending a great deal of her training
time on duration behaviours because those are the ones she has
the most trouble with. Repercussions, however, are that she'll
try something a bit and then she reverts to duration behaviours
- staring at me, sitting, lying down, standing up, crossing
her front paws. And finally, it's going very slowly. She can't
seem to contain a thought for more than a second. She spins
once, then tries a play bow, turns her head three times to the
left, then backs up...
Duh.
Blame the dog, eh? Let's start with a plan here. Five treats
for nothing more than SOME motion to the left. Good. Five treats
for slightly more than that. Good. Five treats for nose to shoulder.
nyeh - five more for nose to shoulder. OK, good. Five treats
for nose back to rib cage. Oh, look, when she's going to put
her nose back that far, she moves her back feet! OK, Five treats
for moving her back feet... and she spins. And she spins. And
she spins. And she spins.
OK,
I don't suppose anyone saw THAT coming, hmmm? Plan twice, train
once? Ringing a bell?
|
Counter-clockwise
spin
Directional
retrieves
New
trick: chase your tail
|
We
finish the month with a very fun session. We begin with shaping
the counterclockwise spin. Now that I'm In The Game, it takes
16 seconds to get the first complete spin, and another 10 to
be able to start putting it on cue. I'm a little uncomfortable
using a "left turn" cue for a spin. I've used an actual
left turn all my life in the show ring, with the cue "Turn".
I use this same cue for left turns when I'm driving the llamas,
and when having Scuba work ahead of me with her cart. A spin
isn't going to cut it in those situations. Nevertheless, I start
telling her the cue is "Turn".
Next
we do some retrieving. I have two dumbells, and I'm sitting
in the middle of one wall of the room. I toss one dumbell to
my right, and toss the second one to my left while she's getting
the first one, and so on. This gives me a chance to toss it
in different locations and build up her ability to look for
it and keep looking if she doesn't find it right away. She's
brilliant at this, she knows what she's looking for and has
very good duration on the search. I quickly realize that I need
to put a little more effort into directional retrieves with
her - when she can't find the left dumbell after a bit of searching,
she doesn't give up, but turns and heads back to the right looking
for the other one. So we work on directions. I have her Finish
with both of us facing the dumbell, ask her to Look, and send
her for it as a reward for seeing it. This works great.
We
play a bit with her chasing my hand as try to grab her tail.
It occurs to me that chasing her tail would be a good trick.
I try holding her tail and asking her to touch it, but she's
still thinking about grabbing my hand. I ask her to lie down,
and that works better. I have to start having her target my
hand without the tail, then move my hand further and further
toward her tail, finally picking it up and then slowly moving
away from it as she continues to touch it. Once I figured out
asking her to lie down, this turned into a 10-minute trick.
She really got into jabbing at her tail. Pretty soon she stood
up to reach it better, and gave me a spin - OK, I feel MUCH
better about this! The cue for the counterclockwise spin is
now "Yo, Dude, Where's Your Tail?" In that 10 minutes,
she was responding to the cue (of course it won't work outside
a training session yet, but it's a good start!), and giving
me three spins for one cue. I can see "spin until you hear
the click" happening easily from here.
Fun
session. I missed training.
|
| Life
intervenes again and the pup gets another break
|
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Months Old |
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site and the writing on it is copyright Sue Ailsby. Feel free to use
it personally or for class handouts. To hand it out, you must
include a credit to Sue Ailsby and include my email address. And I'd
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