Key Components of Training

I love dog training because — and I know I have said this before but it remains true — it is a creative endeavor requiring intelligence and a consideration of what constitutes ethical behavior.

Well, that is not exactly true because not everyone trains in creative, intelligent, and ethical ways — but it is true for me, and that is why I really quite love training dogs.

Sparkle is training for Utility (an advanced obedience class). Things are going really well — she has almost all the pieces, and we have even started to put some of them together.

But go outs have been perplexing. This exercise requires she run out to a designated spot and turn/sit to face me on cue.

I use a target to train it — like a treat or a toy — and this has worked well with my other dogs, but it was not working for Sparkle. The trouble is that she is FAST — so she would race out, grab the whatever, and barrel herself back; the sit cue didn’t really register.

Of course, I trained sit at distance separate from the “race out” part and it is fine. I do the go outs with a sit from short distance (1 - 2 feet) and it is fine. It is when we add in distance — which tends to up that sparkling drive and energy — that things don’t go as planned.

Here is where things get interesting (to me).

Whether she should or should not register the sit cue and do it (because I said so!) is irrelevant to me.

This matters. A lot.

When people think, “she knows this and should do it” they tend towards adding a negative and/or corrective consequence.

My ethical framework doesn’t permit that kind of thinking/behavior when training for performance events.

Instead, I am perplexed and puzzle things out (hence, training as requiring intelligence, creativity, and ethical behavior).

It occurred to me that my training for the directed retrieve was also a race to a treat (in a bowl), and then a fast race back — why would Sparkle think the go out was different?

Huh.

This is another reason not to get all mean and snarky with a dog who is not meeting our expectations — because likely they are! Just maybe not the expectations we expected, if that makes sense.

I decided I needed to change up the picture a bit.

In addition to shaping, I used a lure to move her in the space from a short distance.

In addition to shaping, I used a lure to move her in the space from a short distance.

I used panel jump “bars” to create a bit of a physical barrier, and shaped the behavior (with a clicker and treats) of getting in the space — and then turning to face me and then to sit.

This is not a perfect sit because she should be straight but when shaping, you take baby steps towards perfection — not expect it instantly. Were you perfect the first time you did something?

This is not a perfect sit because she should be straight but when shaping, you take baby steps towards perfection — not expect it instantly. Were you perfect the first time you did something?

I will now start adding distance to it — in very small increments. She will master the behavior AND retain her pizzazz because both matter to me.

After all, her name IS Sparkle.

Sparkle August 2019 (1).jpg