Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Ewers Last Chance

We attended a sheepdog trial at Jennifer's July 30 and 31. Creatively billed as "Ewers Last Chance" it was a casual trial run with the precision of German engineering. If that oxymoron makes sense to you then you know Jennifer - anything she puts together - even a "casual" trial is going to be well thought out and well run.

Piper and I drew up first in the run order on Saturday. I think Jennifer was greatly amused. I saw it as an opportunity to get the dreaded "run first" experience under our belt.

And - just as I predicted - Piper was standing in first place after our run. In golf terms "the leader in the clubhouse" with the score to beat. It lasted for a brief glorious eight minutes or so - until the second dog (Jeff Blackstone and Dusk) ran. I could not get a picture of the leaderboard with Piper in first because they did not post scores after only 1 dog.

All seriousness - Piper ran well for me on Saturday. The course was pen and then shed. We were unable to get the pen and thus also lost the shed points. Inability to get the pen was fairly common on the first several runs so I am not terribly concerned about it. Piper's run until that point would actually have been competitive so I was very happy with her. Still work needed on the drive but it was much better than it has been.

Sunday was a different story. Sunday was an interesting lightning bolt shaped fetch with a double dogleg through two sets of panels. We made the first and barely missed the second. The outwork was actually pretty good. The drive started well but went into full disaster mode at the first panel. Unlike Saturday we got the pen with minimal problems and moved on to the single. Piper came through on the first opportunity but never turned and took control of the single. Then the sheep left the ring. A quick glance at my watch said we had less than 30 seconds but I decided we would keep working it and just try as quickly as we could. It paid off as we got the split and Piper came through. The sound of my watch going off and Judge Angela Akers (who did a great job BTW) calling "good" were almost simultaneous. In fact I was expecting to hear "time" instead. We only had 1 point left on the split but the much more valuable lesson was to keep working the sheep until the very end.

Rylee had a rough weekend. Her outruns and lift were both very nice but she was overly cautious and Saturday completely would not bring the sheep past me to complete the fetch. Sunday she reluctantly brought them around my feet and started the drive before I retired her with a torn paw pad. She would not have completed the drive due to time. This is an issue we need to work on and we are coming up with a plan. More in a later post.

On Saturday after Rylee's run Piper and I went up to work in the pens after relaying the sheep back up to the top. Piper did yeoman's work at the top and I was very pleased with her. Unfortunately I started feeling ill and had to spend a fair amount of time sitting in the shade. This was no problem as I was able to direct Piper on her relays from my chair and she did a great job at this.

My illness continued through the night and I unfortunately missed the fabulous pot luck dinner and party on Saturday night. Since this was the 4th trial this year where I have become ill I finally decided to go see a Doctor the following week. It was definitely a wise decision and I believe we have identified the cause and how to deal with it.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Grandma Piper

I don't really have too much to say training wise at the moment. Some definite work needs to be done to progress forward but nothing terribly exciting for a blog.

Piper is due to come into season sometime in the next month. So - out of pure curiosity - I decided to check with Laura Hicks regarding the litter Piper had before Laura sold her to me. Laura got back to me with the news that Piper was bred to Laura's Jag dog and had a litter of two females and one male. They are all on working ranched and are just over three years old now.

One of the bitches - Fly - was sold to Caleb Parker in Massachusetts. This is how Caleb describes Fly: " Fly is an even tempered dog that loves to work and loves people. She turned 3 this March. Fly is a working dog and spends about 5 or more hours a day working and enjoys every minute of it."






Here is a picture of Fly




Fly was recently bred to Maria Amodei's dog Levi and had a litter of two males and three females in May. I have been in touch with Sharon Perkins in Maine who has one of the male puppies as well as Maria Amodei (also one of the males) and they are both very excited about the cross.

Here is a puppy picture
Piper is not yet 6 so she must have skipped her prom to have her puppies. She says she is a little young to be called granny but I told her now that she is a grandmother she needs to act more maturely. LOL.



Thursday, June 2, 2011

Dry Lake - Open Education

I ran Piper in Open at the Dry Lake Sheepdog Trial. It was quite an education for both of us.

The field is a 3500 acre pasture that appears essentially flat at first appearance. It is definitely not flat. The outrun was set at about 600 yards. After about 300 yards there were dips in the field deep enough so that the outrunning dogs lost sight of their sheep. Either they needed to be on an already good path at that point or trust their handlers. Many dogs got lost getting out to their sheep. They crossed over. They ran past. They circumnavigated. They stopped and looked back confused. I should have been forewarned. Should have !

I sent Piper to the left. She was on a beautiful route for about 350 yards. Unfortunately the sheep were at 600 yards. At about 400 yards she started to turn in and cut across. I tried to blow my redirect whistle but for some reason I could not get it to blow. I shouted LIE DOWN !!! She ignored it and continued across. I shouted "come bye" and she sped up on what was already a come bye route. (I needed to give her a "get out" but did not think to do it.) She continued on, gaining speed as she crossed over a good 150 yards in front of the sheep, never seeing them. She eventually made it to the group of pine trees a full 100 yards to the right of the set out. Finally she took a recall whistle and I waved thank you to our judge Patrick Shannahan and walked out to meet Piper on her return trip.

Afterwards a couple handlers tried to tell me I was wrong to walk. One said I should have stayed until the judge told me to leave. One suggested that by not taking the opportunity to walk her out to find sheep (it was an available option day one) that I was just punishing myself. My thoughts were that I was sure not going to reward her for not listening to my attempts to redirect her and also that Open is not the time to be training my dog. Talking it over with Jennifer later I think it was the right decision. I could not get her out to the sheep on the original trajectory and best not to teach her she can take a figure eight route, ignore me, and still get her sheep.

So we made a plan. Second run she was going to listen and get redirected. Otherwise it was going to be a very long drive never to find sheep.

Sunday I sent Piper left again. This time after about 30 yards I lied her down. Then told her to get out. She immediately went way wide. Then at about 400 yards she took one step in and I gave her an immediate lie down. This time she took it. Then she took the get out command and travelled the rest of the way on a good routing arriving well behind her sheep. Her fetch was off line at the top as the sheep wanted to pull toward the set out (which they did to a lot of dogs) but she got them on line near the fetch panels and finished the fetch well.

The drive was a bit wild and quick but we did make both panels. In all it was certainly not good but better than she has been doing on the drive.

The sheep - which had been getting difficult to shed late in day 2 of open - actually parted for me like the Red Sea and Piper came in on them and turned on a group of two as asked. It may have been a bit sloppy but it was a clean shed. We did have some difficulty at the pen sending the sheep around twice before getting them to stop in the mouth of the pen. Then Piper walked them in for a completed course.

Final score 63. Just out of the top half. Work to do but improved.

I learned that I need to be aggressive in handling Piper and get in her head early if necessary.

Dry Lake - Nursery Report


Rylee ran in the Nursery at Dry Lake. There were two Nursery Runs - the first class had 15 entrants and the second had ten. Three dogs earned qualifying legs in the first go and two in the second go. We were not among them.


The Nursery course was a significantly shortened circuit from the Ope Course - the outrun was ONLY about 300 yards. More importantly though the topography for the first 300 yards let the young dogs see their sheep the whole route on the outrun so they did not have as much trouble as the Open dogs.


Rylee's first run she had gorgeous outwork. A nice wide and deep outrun to the right. Followed by a slow and steady lift. On the fetch the sheep tried to lean on her a bit but she steered them nicely. 0-1-2 off for a total of three points lost on the gather. When the drive got a little bit out of control though I decided to retire her rather than put too much pressure on.


The second run started much the same but the sheep leaned harder toward the exhaust on the fetch and Rylee was a bit behind on the steering so we were off line on the fetch. We got the drive underway and it was a bit wild at the turns but I decided to hang on and see if she would cover. By this point in the trial the sheep were getting a bit difficult and I wanted to see what she could do as long as it was not getting truly out of control.


I was a bit late giving her the flank to cover the exhaust draw on the cross drive. But despite the sheep wanting to make it to exhaust Rylee covered them. I actually could not see Rylee because she was behind a slight dip but I saw the sheep stop and turn their heads. So I presumed she had them and when they turned around and started walking my way I went to the pen. Rylee did a nice job putting them in the pen and we finished in 3d place.


She is coming along a little bit each time we go out.


Dry :Lake - The Travelogue

Just got back from Dry Creek and there is so much to report that I will split it into multiple posts.

The first post is devoted to the journey. It was a long one. But fun !









I carpooled to the trial with Ron and Jennifer Ewers. I had decided to tent camp due to the trial field being twenty miles from the nearest hotel. Jennifer suggested I ride with them and I took her up on the generous offer. It was a fun ride both ways but LONG.

On the way up we stopped at a wonderful RV Resort called Boulder Creek in Lone Pine, California in the High Desert foothills of the Sierra. It was a nice campground and earned a 5 star rating from the Ron and Jennifer RV dog travel rating system. Here is a pic taken at the camp.





The second night we made it to Reno where we were guests at Marla Corey's house. Marla certainly made us feel welcome pulling out all the stops for a wonderful brisket dinner. Best of all she has a great backyard that the RV barely managed to fit in and the dogs all had a great time playing in the yard. Thanks mucho Marla.

But no trip to Reno would be complete for this crew without a trip to outfitters Mecca. Marla generously drove us over and Ron got some new rain pants at this place.



Day 3 we made it the rest of the scenic route up to Dry Lake. We arrived just in time to help Geri Byrne lay out the shedding ring and get a look at the outrun ahead. The field was a several thousand acre grass pasture with trees at one end for camping. Except for the weather it was ideal and the dogs had a fabulous time running themselves crazy.





The tent managed to stay dry and reasonably warm despite the best efforts of mother nature.














On the way home our trip was interrupted by high winds closing US 395 just north of Mono Lake. After searching around we finally found a nearby RV park that would take 10 dogs. It was on an alpine lake setting and was lovely. Once again the dogs enjoyed themselves greatly.



















































































Sunday, May 22, 2011

Piper is a fan of Magellan

Ferdinand Magellan is famous for being the first explorer to circumnavigate the world (actually he was killed on the voyage and did not make it all the way). The voyage was from 1519 - 1522.

Apparently Piper was reading up on her Spanish explorers and is a fan. Or maybe she just read on Facebook that Geri Byrne is famous for setting long outruns and was threatening an 800 yard outrun for Dry Lake. Either way Piper was ready for a long outrun yesterday at Jennifer's. Only problem - the sheep were not that far away.

First run of the day I sent Piper away. The sheep were actually a little forward of where they are usually set - but not by much and we were sending from further back. Piper went out and looked good and then she just disappeared. I waited, blew a come in whistle, waited some more, blew another come in, waited, blew a recall, waited, blew another recall and finally Piper was sited completing a circumnavigation of the entire field without ever finding sheep.

It took Magellan 3 years to circumnavigate the globe. It took Piper a lot less time. If she runs that wide next week at Dry Lake we may be looking for her in Oregon.

It was the start of a rough day for Piper. To be fair she did some things well and it was a level of work that I would have been happy with a year ago, but it was below her capabilities and not what I was hoping for a final tuneup for Dry Lake. Oh well, bad rehearsal, good show. And we may get a slight tuneup in as we travel North - either right before leaving or when we arrive.

Rylee was a different story. SHe had a better day yesterday and was starting to show some pace at least on her fetch. She did have a little trouble on one or two outruns but she took the redirects (an encouraging thing) and generally came up well. She is still extremely cautious but she was showing a little more pace yesterday. This was particularly true in the afternoon when we were working on drive aways and straight fetches in the lower field. She still needs encouragement to come near my feet to get the drive started but she is doing better on that and once she gets past my feet we were able to jazz her up a bit. Just need patience.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Fast Sheep, Failure to Shed and Torn Pads

We had a training session yesterday and Jennifer brought out some runners to help us get ready for the Crazy Coops at Dry Lake. Just the type of sheep that give Piper trouble - but just what she needed to work on.

Well, Piper's fetches were generally fairly well paced without wild run aways. And the first leg of her drives was not too bad but when we turned to make a cross drive in the direction the sheep wanted to run it was outrun size overflank to the heads. I could not see Piper because of the trees and I thought the sheep were headed in the right direction. By the time I could see Piper it was too late. In her defense the sheep were doing this to most of the dogs so it was a tough exercise -- but it is one we need to get down if we have any hope of doing well. Yesterday we did not pass the test. With these type of sheep the difference between a just right flank and overflank is a fine line. We are not walking the line tight enough yet but I think her pace is getting better even if it is through a lot of tapping on the brakes.

Later we attempted to do some shedding on some flighty Cheviots. We worked at it for quite a while and never could get them settled enough. Piper was dragging her tongue and eventually tore a paw pad. I noticed her start favoring one front paw and thought she had stepped on a sticker. When I checked she had a torn paw pad. At least we have a while for it to heal before the trial.

Rylee OTOH worked the same sheep as Piper and managed to keep them relatively slow. When she switched to the heavier sheep she managed to keep them barely ahead of glacial pace. My favorite moment from Rylee yesterday came from a rare outrun mistake. She started to cut in narrow on the away side and she took a lie down and then a redirect. I actually should have given her a "get out" instead of another "away" but the important thing was she stopped and took a redirect from me on the outrun. I was happy to see this as I have not had to redirect her on an outrun like this before. She is still very cautious and I need to keep her jazzed up but there are moments when she hits a nice flow. The sheep seem to like her and I think it is a matter of her confidence continuing to grow. She will never be a hard charger though which is OK as long as she keeps coming forward.