Sunday, August 14, 2011

The Sheep Get A Plan

Ever wonder what would happen if someone slipped the sheep an effective battle plan. Well we found out yesterday.

After doing drills in the lower field - look below for more - we moved to the upper field to do some outrun, lift, fetch and drive back work. Jennifer had Leon bring out four Rambouillets - the same ones that behaved so well at the Ewers Last Chance Trial. Well apparently they spent the last two weeks studying Sun Tzu's classic "The Art of War" or taking night school classes in effective battle tactics because these four sheep had a plan - and it worked.

The basic plan was to wait till the dog got past 9 o'clock and then break hard to the handlers left and the safety of the poolhouse. If they all made it then great. Subway sandwiches were definitely in play yesterday for pretty much all of the dogs.

If the sheep did not make the safety of the poolhouse as a group they activated Plan B. Plan B proved to be an ingenious sheep plan almost guaranteed to frustrate Border Collies. In Plan B the sheep sent an advance scout - who came to be known as Blue But - because of the blue chalk marking on her but - ahead to lure the Border Collie off the main group. Blue But would go forward and down the hill pulling off line forcing the Border Collies to cover while the rest of the group stayed behind in the safe Border Collie Free Zone of the hill. Once Blue But had pulled the Border Collies far enough away the rest of the group would make a break for it requiring the Border Collie to leave Blue But to stop the rest of the group from escaping. This, of course, meant Blue But could finish her escape. As sheep tactics go - it was brilliant - far more effective than the usual "let's flock together and stay in a tight little group where one dog can keep us together" strategy.

Although this strategy helped the sheep make it a true contest the Border Collies ultimately were up to the task and nobody had to buy Subway sandwiches.

Her first go Rylee figured the strategy out nicely and stopped way short of high noon to block the planned escape. Unfortunately as she was walking in the set out dog helped the sheep escape and it was off to the poolhouse. Given time to sort it out, however, Rylee soon had a very reluctant group of four sheep trotting back from the poolhouse to the practice field with Rylee providing incentive from behind. Given her recent lack of enthusiasm it was very nice work and I was very happy with her.

Piper started her top field work with a very difficult task. A couple dogs before Ron and Jessie had put Blue But in the isolation pen because she was getting difficult to handle and some of the less seasoned dogs were running. Before doing an outrun we tasked Piper with taking Blue But out of the pen and back up to join the sorority at the top. So - take an unruly single out - and push it 150 yards or so up a hill where it did not want to go. The task started ok and then Blue But made an escape in the general area of the poolhouse. I am not sure exactly what happened over there out of sight but apparently Piper gave Blue But an instruction in the ways of the world and dog sovereignty over sheep because pretty soon Blue But was coming back one step at a time with Piper calmly pushing Blue But where Piper wanted. It was very nice work on a tough single.

Piper's outrun was nice and her lift pretty good and then the sheep tried Plan A - all run like hell together. It did not work as Piper covered nicely. So the sheep tried Plan B - send the advance team to draw Piper off so the rest can escape. That did not work either as Piper was on it. I was very pleased with her work.

Now back to the beginning. We started with drills in the lower field. This was very good as we need more of this. Rylee went first so we could ramp up her enthusiasm. ANd it worked. Rylee was circling with the sheep against the fence and taking directions nicely all the while keeping up her speed and not disengaging.

Then Piper for driving drills in the lower field. Instructions - no voice - absolutely no yelling - and if she needs a correction take a step toward her. Two purposes - get Piper serious - and avoid upsetting Rylee. I believe it was the best flanking and driving drill we have ever had together. I know it was the longest we have gone without hearing Jennifer offer correction. And when we finished and I got back to the rest of the group Piper got a well deserved good job from Jennifer. This is a method that works and I need to stick to it to build trust with Piper.

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