Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Agility Nationals WA 2010


Oooops.... (photo by Robyn Evans)

I think all of the WA agility community has released a collective sigh of relief. The 2010 National Agility trial is complete. Peace has been restored.

The ANWA organising committee did a spectacular job. I know they copped a really hard time over how the different heights were going to work but to their credit it all worked amazingly over the four days. Having separate heights for a National was long overdue. Now we just have to hope that future states take on the challenge and continue to make it even bigger and better. The Dogs West grounds looked brilliant with all of us parking around the edge of the rings which gave it a real carnival atmosphere.

Sonic was brilliant. Never did I think that he had the maturity to compete for four days solid and give me everything he had in every run. I have been frustrated by his inconsistent focus so I tried to improve our transitions when I was preparing him for our turn in the ring. I did the usual routine where I get him out of the car get him relaxed, build up to a game of tug followed by focus games but this time instead of walking into the ring and then losing him when I get to the start line I tried really hard to keep the connection going by talking to him with his “rev up” words. It means pretty much ignoring the judge until the very last minute but so be it. He did glance around a couple of time but they were more quick flicks and then back to me rather than gazing into the distance and me having to call him to get his attention back. I will continue to work on it though to try and get him not looking back at all.


Another awesome picture by Robyn Evans

His contact behaviours were spot on every time, straight down to two on two off, no creeping or stopping in the colour. I didn’t hold him in position but released as soon as he hit position. Ever since his contacts got broken at ADAA where the judges chase the dogs down the dog walk to check the colour, then proofed them (thanks Simone!) at training, they have been absolutely rock solid. I can’t wait until I can do early releases to help improve our course times but right now I just don’t think he’s ready. It’s certainly not worth wrecking his contacts at this early stage of his career. After the first two days of perfect contacts and no reinforcement I did take him to the practice ring and give him a couple of belts over them with high value rewards just in case I wore them out!

In the end Sonic came second in Novice Gamblers, seventh in Novice Snooker (all dogs that placed higher than him were competing at the last Nationals almost two years ago, some in Novice Snooker…), second in Novice Strategic Pairs (no thanks to me and some seriously dodgy handling) AND the big one, made the Masters Jumping final!!! Considering the calibre of the dogs in Masters Jumping I thought that it was a pretty special achievement for a baby dog. Masters Jumping was the very last final on the last day. I was a little nervous but didn’t feel any pressure as I had no expectations of grandeur, rather I just wanted to see how he’d cope. The ring was totally surrounded by onlookers and the atmosphere was very different to a normal trial. I did my set up routine and got really great focus from him. Sonic got up from his sit position when I led out but didn’t actually break so I didn’t go back to him to reset. It was naughty but he was so keen. We made it to obstacle 18 which was a broad jump without error, but unfortunately I think his legs were going quicker than his brain was so he hit it good and proper. Then he knocked the second last jump. Other than that it was a great run with his speed building as we went. I actually didn’t handle jump 4 to 6 the best. I used a rear cross when a front would have tightened him up a lot more. It probably cost me at least a second, maybe more. In the end the winning time was 27.64sec and an awesome run from Julies and Mac’s Disco Diva, with Sonic coming in at 30.23. Taking into considering my sloppy handling and his stumble it was a super achievement. Once Sonic matures and I am able to get him powering out of his turns and tightening up more I have no doubt that he will be a force to be reaconed with.



2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hey..you're email addy keeps boucing so hopefully this works!
Have borrowed Denise's laptop to email you but it wont let me open telstra for some reason so will have to be from hotmail...
Just got back from watching a UK agility trial but it was small dogs only so we didnt see the dogs we will be running..some fabulous small dogs though!! Some GREAT working cockers in particular, also some smashing shelties..WAY better standard then the small dogs we have in Perth.
VERY windy and cold though doesnt feel like spring at all, had 4 layers on and still freezing!
Am probably running Shaka, that big powerful tri colour, one of the 2 I liked, as long as I get on with him/he likes me! Will be running him in a UK comp tommorow and then he is coming back to live with us for the rest of the week- staying in the room- Mum is NOT amused! Didnt get Meg cause she is strictly Greg Derret handled and I dont do Greg Derret.
One of the little dogs- a sheltie called Fudge is GORGEOUS and was reserve for the UK team- I wanted to steal her! And I am thinking of trying to convince cord's parents to get one..haha apparently there is litter in perth on the ground at the moment! Jo wants one so might go and have a look at one for her.

Kriszty

Anonymous said...

That's OK - Shaka looked really nice too. Bet you can't wait to see if you get on with him.
Most of the shelties in Aust have very average temperaments for agility though! Just kidnap one from the UK - I'm sure you could fit one in your luggage to bring back home.... lol
Sounds like you are having a great time. Thanks for the update and let me know how it goes with Shaka.
Talk soon. Karen