About this blog

My name is Donna Brinkworth. Three years ago I moved to Alberta from Northwestern Ontario. I recently completed the requirements to be a CKC tracking judge for TD and TDX and will now work on becoming an urban tracking judge, as it is one of my passions. I've also become involved in the sport of Schutzhund as a member of the Calgary Schutzhund Club, and my boy Caden is showing a lot of promise in this exciting sport. All I need is some land and sheep for the Border Collies to be completely happy in Alberta, and we are working on that! This blog honours tracking, herding and life with the dogs who are my teachers and who bring so much joy into my life. It started out as a training blog for my tracking students. You can check those archives, back in 2005. Over time I have used this blog to journal my own training, share information, and most recently discuss my personal journey since moving here.

All content and photos are copyright Donna Brinkworth (Smith), 2005 - 2011 unless otherwise noted. Please use the private comment function after each post to contact me with questions or comments.

Thank you, and enjoy YOUR journey! To find Your Tracking Coach, my other blog, click the photo in the left menu bar.

31 August, 2009

Canadian Stockdog finals, Caden's tracking debut, and progress

I attended the Double Lift Finals in Okotoks AB yesterday. As a member of the Alberta Stockdog Association, I was volunteered to put on a tracking demo for the public. About 8 or 10 people came for it, and it went very well! Ted did a demo of a scent pad and serpentine. He is such an honest dog, he just went to work, despite the fact that there were sheep nearby!


Next, I was going to do a 'chimney - shaped track' with Jet. I had laid it, and had stakes before each corner so people could watch at the turns. But Jet's mind was on sheep. She would track a few steps, then lift her head and stare towards the Open field. I am sure she could hear the whistles. The crowd understood that she was conflicted, so I put her away and brought out Caden.

Below is a picture of Peter Gonnet, about to send Jill on her big outrun. Penny Numbers, ASDA Secretary and intrepid reporter is taking shots with her nice big lens. I am positive Jet heard the whistles and could not concentrate on tracking. I can forgive her for that! She is a stockdog FIRST.
Caden did an awesome job of the demo, and people commented how his tail does not stop. I was very proud of him. I have no photos from the demo, but tonight Cassandra Beach came out to tracking. She is a dog trainer with a Certified Master Trainer designation, earned at Salmon Arm BC. I aso met her lovely dog Maverick who did a great job on his track. She took pictures of Caden. It is so nice to have one of him from the side, since I always get the top view. Cassandra and Maverick are pictured below (I took it with her camera!) Caden did a nice job tonight, but I need to restrain him more - as he is not finding a lot of his food and is not advanced enough to be skipping it this way. It takes a lot of work to hold him at a steady pace, but I am just thrilled with his progress and thankful for the watchful eye of Dan the Man, Dan Waters, our official tracking guru.
Above is a photo of Dan with Bronte. She is such a nice dog.
This was taken with my Blackberry because my camera battery died yesterday! It is a group shot of the CBCA winners. Canadian Champion is Dennis Gellings of Dawson Creek BC with his dog Jan. Runner up is Peter Gonnet of Saskatchewan with Jill. Scott Glen won Canadian Nursery Champion. The complete results are found on the links in the post below. It was thrilling to see the great runs, on a difficult course with tough sheep.


PS Don't forget to check the Kleinen Wiese puppy blog - the pups (Caden's nieces and nephews) are ready to go!! Great working dogs for active people, but also, lovely companions in the home. Read about the pups that are left (4 left, from 9, but I think two more might be spoken for...) - http://www.kleinenwiese.com/Blog/

27 August, 2009

Canadian Border Collie Finals have started, in Okotoks Alberta

For those of you who landed on this blog looking for information about othe finals, please let me help you with some good links:

Alberta Stockdog Association - running order, map to the site, other information

Phantom Ridge Blog of Loanne Twa - Louanne is on the organizing committee and will be posting regularly

Alta-Pete Stockdogs Trial Blog - Jenny Glen posts regularly with trial descriptions and updates about Scott Glen's and Jenny Glen's dogs, and entertaining stories about the sheep as well as updates on other competitors, with great photos. I helped myself to a photo from today's post by Jenny...this is Scott Glen's Maid on her Open run today. Maid is Jet's mum and a very nice dog. Tune into Jenny's blog for more great photos over the course of the finals.

Photo of Scott Glen's Maid courtesy of the Alta-Pete Trial Blog, Jenny Glen


I wish I was entered, but I will be doing two tracking demos on Sunday afternoon for the general public with Jet and River, to show beginners and advanced tracking, and talk about the versatility of the Border Collie. PLUS, I plan to watch! This trial is only two hours away from my new home!!

26 August, 2009

The Tracking Shift to Nose Down!

Caden searching a scent pad. There is no track here, just a scent pad with lots of treats, to encourage nose-down behaviour.
What a week! I've been out about three times this week. Twice with my SCH tracking 'guru' Dan (who scored 95 at the Nationals in Tracking and was in the top 5 in Canada - I mention this to let you know I am getting GOOD coaching!) and once on my own. On Sunday I went to regular SCH practice, and Caden made me very proud. He did some nice heeling and attention work, and did a long distance recall running for me like a bullet and sitting in front. What a thrill to see him running at me so quickly, eyes on mine and ears up. I am so thankful to the members of the GSD Club of Calgary (well, I am a member now too) for helping me train my boy.

River searching her scent pad
You will notice in the pictures that I am really emphasizing searching at the scent pads, and laying serpentines with lots of food to control the progress and pace, and reward them for being nose down. Even River is doing this, but she gets BETTER treats than everyone else, being older and making the biggest adjustment in her behaviour.

Last Saturday I laid a track for River at 11:30 AM. I went back with all four dogs at 2:30, ran River's track, then laid and ran serpentines and scent pads for the rest. I didn't get home until nearly 6 PM. Quite honestly, I don't know how I used to teach a class of 8 dogs in one morning when it now takes me half a day to train my own four.


Partly it is because I am doing so many new things, and new things means developing new habits and routines. Many years ago in the mid-90s, I remember somethings similar happening. This was in the days before email and chat groups (weird eh?) I was training my Rough Collie Kate to track, after having trained two GSDs, Hawk and Robin. Kate was so different! She hated repetition and despised lengthy, boring training sessions. I had been following Glen Johnson to a tee, but on my own, decided I would no longer double lay tracks. I changed a few other little things.

Jet following my footsteps. I had Jet out the last two nights with my SCH friend, who was complimentary about her tracking ability (high praise indeed!)...
I remember starting to teach tracking the next year (1995) and having students look at me in disbelief when I said there would be no double-laying. But our dogs actually did better and learned faster. Now I know it is because once you stop double - laying (going one way, then returning backwards on the same track) the dogs had to RE-LEARN how to track scent going one way only. Double laying didn't make it easier, it simply presented a different and odd scent picture to the dogs. Dogs naturally track in the direction of the track because of how scent a


Around this same time, people all over North America had the same ideas. Books came out, and studies, and everyone made a SHIFT. I love this idea. Malcolm Gladwell writes about the shift in his book The Tipping Point. In that book he says that ideas are contagious, and that an idea will catch on and spread until the majority of people suddenly subscribe to it, without major promotion to persuade them of its merit. An example he uses really early on is the end of the slave trade. It began in a small way with some enlightened people, but gathered momentum at the same time in diverse parts of the world. A shift in consciousness.

And here is River, actually following my footsteps. At 9 years old, she has the most training where she has been allowed to search and cast widely off track, but I know she will conserve energy being more ontrack, which is good at her age and in the drier Alberta conditions...
Tracking may NOT be a big component in our social culture, but amongst those of us to track, we share the same passion and goals. I detect a shift going on these days back to more nose-down tracking. I think the reason is the popularity of urban tracking, and the realization that dogs can track more precisely on non-veg than we previously thought.


We keep learning more and more about the science of scent and tracking - understanding of course that there is only so much we can understand, so much being a miraculous ability our dogs possess. And many of us continue to experiment and observe, letting our dogs be the teachers.

When Ted was finished, I let him have a little run, and he actually FOUND a ball! He was so happy, here he is with it...we left it on the soccer field in case the dog and owner who lost it came back to look...
From my own experience and observation, we are all on a big learning curve when it comes to understanding how dogs track on non-veg surfaces. I sense more and more people are finding that what you train for, is what you get. In the field, we keep our dogs on the primary track. If we allow them to fringe the track, we get fringe trackers. Guess what - Glen Johnston wrote that! He was talking about the field, but I believe the same applies to non-veg.

Jet already lies down to indicate. I am going to learn how to change her indication so she does a SCH indication, lying straight on track, facing the track direction...OK, in this picture, she is at the scent pad. When her track was done, I let her run around a bit, and she ran BACK to the scent pad to get treats she missed!
I was first attracted to SCH because of the emphasis on precise, nose-down tracking at a nice pace, not too fast. So many people I know are either looking into SCH, or HITT, or finding other ways to keep their urban dogs on the primary track on hard surfaces. At the seminar I organized last year with Steve Ripley, he said that we should never follow our dogs when they are fringing paralleling the track - that we need to know exactly where we walked on non-veg surfaces, and must point it out to the dog and not move ahead until they are dead on. He uses chalk in the beginning to mark his track, to be sure he can point right to it.

Boy, is Ted doing a good job tracking these days! He has the least amount of training so he is catching onto footstep tracking really well. Last night my knowledgeable guru said he has a nice deep nose. I am so proud of Ted...you can see my footsteps in this photo if you really look, ahead of Ted.
A long-time tracking friend of mine (who is a CKC tracking judge) said to me that when she first started to track in the 70s, she followed a SCH method of training. Over the years, she allowed more casting off track and let her dog do more wandering off track, as we all were struggling with how much we should allow a dog to investigate scent drift. Now she too is deciding to go back to her roots, and teach nose-down tracking...of course, she is aiming for UTDX!

Caden and I always practice obedience in new places. Here he does a sit stay.
The past year or so has been quite a ride, with a lot of upheaval in my tracking life! But I know that I will grow as a handler, and I guess the proof will be in the pudding as my dogs adjust to the new methods.

And when we are done, we have a good play...River and Ted...

Stay tuned for more nose-down tracking thoughts and photos! Happy training!

22 August, 2009

Portraits of the Spiritdance Gang

After tracking today, I got some individual and group shots. I am so pleased with these pictures that before I try to talk about tracking, I thought I would share them!Left to Right - Caden, River, Ted and Jet. Ted looks a bit worried and Jet has moved over, because this was what kept happening until I got this good shot...somebody likes to choose his own pose! Actually, every time the focus beeped he thought he was good to go, and would leap up, stupid camera noise!Below: River - she is 9.5 years old and really looking beautiful. I brushed and trimmed her today (she was 'furminated') so she feels pretty. River is really more like my friend than a dog. We are both Pisces, which means we are sensitive dreamers, a bit out of touch with reality, but loving, perceptive, loyal and very creative. Yup, that describes River, who is a little quirky. Me, quirky? Maybe...And here is Caden. He just turned 18 months. He went through that light phase some sables go through, a few months ago, but how he is beer-bottle red like his grandfather Siggo von Haus Antwerpa. Caden is full of confidence and joy, and really growing up into a nice dog. As an Aquarius, Caden is independent, assertive, opinionated, friendly and original: And here are Jet and Ted. These two are such a wonderful pair. I can't say enough about how much I admire them and enjoy having them around. I feel guilty that I no longer have my own sheep, so I work doubly hard at making their life fulfilling because it is true - Border Collies need a job and love to work. No matter what we do, these two throw their hearts into it. It is a matter of time until we have sheep and in the meantime we enjoy working at friend's places, and they love herding most of all, of course!Jet is a Scorpio - passionate, perceptive, resourceful, possessive, psychological, prowling, determined, probing, fixed, focused. OK, this started out in fun, but I can't believe how much this describes her! Ted is a Gemini - talkative, mental, adaptable, flexible, changeable, responsive, sociable. Well, if you met Ted, you would find him very sociable. And he is very responsive and eager to please.

That's the gang!

One more outtake - check out Ted...he is so funny with his chin down, sigh...


Jet looks away, thinking about how she is surrounded by idiots...while River just keeps looking regal and pretty...

19 August, 2009

4 Dogs - 4 Serpentines - One Surprise Star!

Training four dogs at the same time is very time consuming! I actually procrastinated until about 7:30 before I FORCED myself to go out. Tonight is night one of re-training everyone on their starts and scent pads, working on more nose-down tracking (see the post from last week about the tracking seminar for details). Since it is a new routine I was not sure how the evening would pan out. Such is tracking - one never knows what is in store!



So WHO was the tracking star tonight?







(scroll down)












Do you recognize this upside-down grinning fool?

It was TED! AGAIN! I wondered when I might use this picture. Ted was on the couch being silly - he lifts his lips and grins with his teeth showing. Since I didn't take pictures tonight, you get treated with these silly shots.

The last time I tried something new was earlier in the summer when I sprayed a hard-surface track HITT-style. Ted was the star that day too (photo below).

I have often said Ted is not the best tracking dog I have had. He loves to find articles, and takes short cuts to get to them. I have a few theories about Ted's recent brilliance...which do you think sounds right?

1. I am learning new things here that make me a better trainer

2. These new methods are giving Ted more clarity

3. Ted has the least amount of training, so the new methods work right away with him

I think all of these have merit. One thing I love about tracking is how you can always improve and learn new things - and each new dog is a new training challenge.

I made a scent pad and a single arch for Ted, not wanting to stretch him. I could hear him sniffing deep into the scent pad, and on a loose lead, he calmly worked his way along the arch to the end. He went off once at the bend of the arch, and I simply let him come back on his own.

Before Ted, I did Caden first, on the same shape track - scent pad and one arch. Caden started out well, but he tried repeatedly to rush ahead. I switched to small pieces of kibble with him tonight. Since he didn't have the focus I would like to see - he had a half-ration of dinner tonight. Maybe if he is a bit hungrier tomorrow, he will eat more kibble on track! He has a ton of drive, but I need to shape it into the right behaviour. I know I left him wanting more, since his track was so short - plus he watched everyone else work after him. He will be raring to go and hopefully try harder tomorrow - or I will pull him off the track after showing him what a good treat he missed! River and Ted playing at 'Three Mile Bend' dog park on the Red Deer River

River did suprisingly well considering her ingrained habits. She likes to take off at the start. I brought her to the scent pad and she pulled really hard to go. I had her on a leash and simply held her back. She pulled so hard she actually laid herself down. Once down, she realized there was food on the scent pad and she ate it while lying down. She then did her single arch quite nicely. I used dried liver for her, as she needs a bit more coaxing to get her nose down, having been allowed to work with her nose up and cast for the past five years. I plan to take my time to change her behaviour as much as I can, keeping it positive for her.
Jet and Caden show off with toys. This is what it looks like when I try to watch TV. Since I have no tracking photos from tonight, you have to look at these silly pictures!
Little Jet was the BRAT of the evening. Which figures, as she is giving a tracking demo at the Border Collie Nationals in a week and a half. She started off nicely. At the bend in the arch, she stepped off and tried to stare at me in protest. She did not like this footstep thing. She wanted to GO. I did as I was told at the seminar and WAITED HER OUT. She tried to jump on me, stare at me, and then she stared away for a long 3-4 minutes. When nothing worked, she got bored, put her nose down and found a piece of food. I said "good girl" and took a step forward. She buckled down and did the rest of the track really well. I like this method.
Portrait of Jet (she likes this one and insisted I use it)

So I learned...

- I will invest more time in Teddy

- Caden needs to be hungry, and to learn to work through distractions. Serpentines will teach him not to pull ahead - and his arch was not big enough. It didn't help him that River was barking. However, a hungrier boy and maybe some more compelling treats to start will be the next step.

- River will lie down at the start! I have always thought she didn't like it, but after doing it on her own, it was a positive

- Jet is an excellent tracker (I have always thought so) but as with everything, she likes to do it her way. Once she learns this new method and takes control back, she will be great. I have a lot of faith in her!

Here on the couch she demonstrates her famous article indication, with her little chin on the toy...

And yes, that yellow Giggle ball is ALWAYS in Caden's mouth

18 August, 2009

Learning to herd sheep 'Tending Style' with Caden

When I was on vacation in BC last month, I visited with CKC herding judge Shelley Fritzke for a day. Shelley was the person who gave me the lead on Caden's breeder Sandy Wilson in Pennsylvania, as I wanted a GSD from herding lines. Shelley's GSDs have been the top herding GSDs in Canada. You can read all about them on her website. She knew I was coming so had a very nice, definite border set up for Caden to learn when he was on the right side of the border, or furrow, when he was trotting alongside the flock of sheep. She did a demonstration for me with her beautiful dog Dangi. He is so big and powerful, it was interesting to see how much he contained his drive to do his job. As you can see above, the sheep are calm in his presence, feeling no threat. If one strayed too near the border, he would leap in with his front feet to push it back. It was as natural to watch as seeing a Border Collie do a big outrun to gather the sheep.

We had Caden on a long line and had to gently tell him "no" when he crossed over the border. Those of you who see the flying trot of the GSD can see from this style of herding how a GSD needed to maintain that gait over long stretches where flocks grazed, to act as a "living fence." Caden did some things very naturally - it was nice when Shelley was able to watch and evaluate. He watched the whole flock, and did not single out any particular sheep. He also swiveled when he reached the end of the line of sheep to change directions. However, he was very excited! As you can see, the sheep are a bit further away than they are above with Dangi.
If a ewe looked straight at him, or looked like she might come too close to the border, Caden lunged in with gusto. Of course, this would need to be tempered with training and experience. He did not like it at all if a ewe looked right at him...the typical GSD need to be in control.

In Germany, the dogs that competed for their HGH title also had to demonstrate their obedience and protection, doing Schutzhund as well. They were truly an all 'round dog. I can see in Caden's drive to work and high energy some glimpses of what the true GSD of earlier German days must have been like - a very intelligent and imposing dog. You can read a lot more about this on Ellen Nickelsberg's website about GSD Herding. She bred Caden's dam, Hera. Caden's grandsire Nicky was bred by Manfred Heyne who was one of the top herding trainers and competitors in Germany in his day. I understand he is now in his 80s. Sometimes I wish I could tell him how much I love my boy, and thank him!
PS, Caden's breeder has a new litter with one or two pups looking for special working homes!

16 August, 2009

Cat Haiku - the new additions

The new additions, Leo (left) and Haiku (right). Haiku is staying to be the official church mouser. Leo is going to Thunder Bay to live with my dad, whose old cat died last year.

Since I already take a lot of abuse from Jet, don't ask me why I decided to get a cat! Perhaps a Haiku, which is a three-line Japanese poem, can explain it better:

My church house
Sometimes has signs of mice in basement
A cat will surely help


River is nearly 10
She will stay inside the house this winter
Cat will be good friend
Photo: Leo peeking around my Japanese lamp.

So, when my friend Nancy's cat Beijing had these cute orange kittens, how could I say no? I am keeping the girl, Haiku. My dad is taking the little boy, who will be called Leo, since he looks like a little lion cub.
Photo: River has been so good with the little kittens!

I Googled 'Cat Haiku' this morning and found these hilarious ones (there are more) online. Yup, more animals in the house who think I am an idiot; it should make Jet's day...

Toy mice, dancing yarn
Meowing sounds. I'm convinced:
You're an idiot.

Your mouth is moving;
Up and down, emitting noise.
I've lost interest.


Photo: Little Haiku


So you want to play.
Will I claw at dancing string?
Your ankle's closer.

The end.

Oliver Jones in Concert at the Jazz on the Lake Festival in Sylvan Lake

Tonight we saw Oliver Jones in an intimate concert at the Jazz on the Lake Festival in Sylvan Lake. I have a few of his CDs, he is an amazing jazz pianist from Montreal whose mentor was the great Canadian pianist Oscar Peterson. I was about 30 feet from him, and sat where I could see him playing the piano. It was a small, appreciative crowd of about 300. He appeared on the stage with a bass player and a drummer, both local session musicians. What a great show!During the intermission, he signed copies of his CD. I have it, but had to buy another one to get it signed! A very gracious and classy man, and can he play the piano!

12 August, 2009

Scentpad Portraits

Let's look at some more dogs from the seminar working on scent pads. Dogs at the seminar ranged from 11 weeks old (above) to dogs that have been tracking for years. Check out that nose-down behaviour on Wes's puppy in the picture above. Fantastic!
The scentpad and start information shared by Joanne Fleming is timely for me as it is a weak area in my traning. I asked about re-training a 9-year-old dog - is River really NINE? The answer being start from scratch and train her like a puppy. Make the scent pad have lots of value, by spending time there. Puppies might accept kibble, but a dog at River's age and with her experience might like tastier treats. I have definitely trained the scent pad with all of my dogs - but usually by pointing to it, and also by walking the dog up the way I walked up (or the tracklayer) and sometimes, lying the dog down in front. In Caden's case, I heard that lying him down may just create frustration. River does have a habit of shooting off like an arrow, so having a 'dead zone' around the scent pad so she sticks to it (Caden too) is a great idea!


I loved watching this Bouvier, as she has so much drive - it helped me to learn more about Caden by watching and listenng when it was her turn.
This woman had her Rottie lie down at the scent pad...But as you can see, laying down is one of his favourite things! He was a real sweetie.
This is Tamara Champagne, the seminar organizer, with her Dobe "Flair." Thanks Tamara!

10 August, 2009

Joanne Fleming Tracking Seminar

I spent the weekend at a great tracking seminar in Edmonton. One of the key pieces of information I learned was a new way to set-up and approach the start including a new way to train scent pads, all valuable information for any tracker, SCH or CKC.

I am always amazed at how much there is to learn, even though I have been tracking for 20 years. The most important thing is to keep open to new ideas and methods - not jumping from one to another but incorporating the things that make sense both for you, and for the dog you are working with. The clinician was Joanne Fleming, a very accomplished SCH trainer who travels the World - and who is from Collingwood Ontario. This is her website - http://www.fleming-plumb.ca/

In my situation, I am learning the SCH technique with Caden, so it is a new learning curve for me. SCH technique involves a calm, thoughtful dog, nose-down and precisely on track. A dog "contains" its drive (hunt drive, for food) so it works intensely but doesn't ever blast off, head up down a leg, fringe, or cut a corner. OK, these things CAN all happen but in training, you aim for the ideal. It is not mechanical, it is behavioural - letting the dog know through food and praise motivation when it is right, to encourage this on track.

Caden has so much drive, that it takes a lot of technique on my part through proper set-up and handling to get the right picture. This seminar really helped me, as Joanne gave me excellent advice on bringing Caden to the track in a calm state of mind, so that he could set off right away on the right foot, or perhaps that is, the right paw!

I laid a scent pad for Caden, and contrary to anything I have done before, deliberately brought him to the scent pad from a different angle than my original approach. I used food to have him focus on me on the walk-up, then had him sit before approaching the scent pad. The previous day, I did my 'walk-up on my own approach' so that he tracked his way to the scent pad - by the time he reached it he was bolting and whining, did not spend time at the scent pad and lunged down the first leg. This simply won't do in SCH - or CKC for that matter. Caden will calm down on track to settle into a technique, but as Joanne says, if you can't do the first 20 steps well, don't keep going!

On day two, Joanne showed me how to leap onto a spot on the grass to create a scent pad with a bit of a dead zone around it, then leap back off, so there is really no track departing from it. The scent pad might have 12 pieces of really high value food on it. I brought Caden up to the edge, tossed down the food and gave him a search command. On a loose line, he explored it, eating the food. If he left, I was to continue to look at the scent pad, and keep my line loose. He returned, to continue searching and eating, and when he was in the process of gobbling up a treat, I gently backed off, so that his last thought was "Hey! I didn't get all of that food!" This would leave him with a higher desire to search more at his next opportunity. In the afternoon, I did the serpentine, and his scent pad work was excellent.

In the above photo, I brought him to the scent pad with a piece of food, tossed it down to direct his nose down and gave his command to search. This has nothing to do with the flag and Joanne will place the flag randomly before or after the scent pad - it has to do with where I am standing (edge of the scent pad) and my command to search right there for scent. As you can see, I am also facing east, while my track actually goes south...in the photo below, you can see Caden set off in the correct direction.


I had Caden on a leash because Joanne had seen him BOLT the day before. She instructed me to have my line LOOSE to give him the responsibility for finding the food in every track. If he went off, to hold my ground and let him come back to the track. It was not necessary, because with this calm, solid start, he went directly into his nose-down technique, me following at a WALK, keeping up to keep the line loose. Joanne noted the day before that when my line was tight he seemed to wait for that tightness to make decisions - knowing I was coming, in addition to it encouraging too much forward motion. As well, dogs like Caden tend to rush down a straight line, so a serpentine is a much better option.

At one point on the second arch of the serpentine he went about two steps off, but I did nothing, the idea being to show a loss of track and come back on his own - thus giving him the responsibility for tracking while I remain NEUTRAL. Here we are - you might not recognize this dog, if you have watched his tracking videos LOL. It is not him - it is ME who changed my approach, set-up and handling. Now the tough part will be to continue with these basics - lots of scent pad work to reinforce the value of the scent pad. Followed by short serpentines to reinforce the nose-down behaviour and calm approaches - not the way I walked up!

This approach would work for ANY tracking dog, not just for SCH, and I plan to use it with Jet and Ted, and try to reinforce some scent pad work with River, who is used to a walk-up. In urban you especially need your dog to take valuable information at the scent pad, to retain memory of of the scent on a challenging track.

7 August, 2009

Lipizzaner Stallions!

If you arrived on this post looking for information about the Canadian Stockdog Finals, please go to my post dated August 27 by clicking here. I don't know why Google is sending people to this page but was informed it is happening...

If you want to read about Lipizzaner stallions, carry on!

Tonight we saw the famous Lipizzaner Stallions at the Westerner. I've always loved them, but had no idea what an interesting history they have. You can read about them on their website http://www.lipizzaner.com/home.asp I won't try to repeat it here but it is worth reading. These photos shows the horses and riders demonstrating their famous 'dance' moves.

I was very intrigued to learn that many of the moves originated from the days when horses were ridden into battle, and designed as both offensive and defensive moves to keep the rider alive, horse and rider working as a team. The breed was nearly lost during WWII, then saved by US General George Patton with help from many allies including Canada and Russia.
A few of the horses in the show tonight were 'rescues' that were rehabilitated and brought into the show. To see them in the ring, so beautiful and proud, brought a lump to my throat. The audience also applauded for the performance of the rescue horses.
My favourite though was the Andalusian stallion, a Spanish horse breed that is the foundation of the Lipizanner breed of Austria. The Andalusian goes well back in known history, and was ridden by such notables as Julius Caesar and Richard the Lionhearted, as well as legions of Roman soldiers.
I am sure this horse knew he was beautiful. The MC noted several times that the horses loved applause. His mane was braided for the first half of the show. During the intermission, they unbraided it and let it fly wildly as he galloped and cavorted. The horses are trained for 45 minutes a day, for NINE years before considered ready to join these shows. They are in their prime in their 20s and live to 35 years old. The behaviour is so inbred in these horses that many foals and fillies start to perform the high steps and leaps when playing, completely on their own. When they are born, they are dark and become white with age. The show is 'all stallions' as the presence of a mare would cause these boys to act up. Amazing to see such powerful animals work so nicely.
To demonstrate their line breeding, they are heavily tattooed to show the sire, dam, place of birth and bloodline (as you can see in one of my photos). On this horse you can see an arrow on his shoulder which indicates his dam's line, and a crown with a P on his haunch, to say where he was born. All of the purebred Lipizanners have an L on their left cheek. What a wonderful show!

I found something on You Tube for those of you who have never seen these horses in real life. Worth the watch...and at the end you will see a selection of related movies on YouTube about the Lipizzaners. Some are short, but very good.

This sure motivated me to work on my own dog training as seeing the partnership between horse and rider was very beautiful.