My 16 year old step-daughter, Ashley, always spends Easter with her mom. She has two younger half-siblings and she's a big help in setting up the annual egg hunt at her grandpa's. This week I found myself feeling a little disappointed about Easter without her. I hadn't decorated and other than having an Easter dinner with my husband and mother-in-law, we didn't have anything else planned. And yet I had pulled the plastic Easter eggs and a couple baskets out of the garage.
I lamented to my friend Ellie, who is our school librarian, at work on Thursday. She suggested the perfect solution: a nosework egg hunt! "What a great idea, I'll host!" I said. The plans for an Easter-themed evening of nosework quickly came together. We chose Friday night to avoid conflicts with Easter activities and because it was supposed to be the best weather day according to the forecast.
Friday evening came on cool and blue. I brought my nosework kit out onto the back deck and began setting up two different scents: birch and anise.
The seventh find I planned as a threshhold find. Threshhold finds are located near the starting point, marked by two cones in nosework trials. Dogs are often so excited that when they are given the command to "search" they forget to detail the area near the starting point. In class, we were told to always practice working the threshhold. I placed two Q-tips inside a plastic golf-tee shaped container that I pushed into the ground. The eighth find was a high hide with a Q-tip clipped to the fence.
Here you can see my Easter egg basket. I needed one larger egg for a round metal tin I loaded with anise Q-tips. It is larger than the rectangular tins with the sliding-lids.
My husband and I have a large rectangular yard that's long and skinny. There were many easy places to hide the eggs with piles of wood, lawn furniture and statues, rosebushes, enormous rhubarb plants, stumps and garden boxes.
A blue egg loaded with birch odor. |
Lincoln alerts to the high hide. |
When I brought Pongo back out, he was much more focused. He found all but two of the hides. It was a wonderful evening! I felt guilty that so much time had passed since we last practiced, but Pongo enjoyed every moment of it. There is always forgiveness in a dog's heart.
Pongo finds an egg near the water fountain. |
By the time Crosby and Mary arrived, it was beginning to get dark. Crosby was eager to get out of his vehicle after a long ride. After a potty break, he got right to work. All of the hides were paired with treats since it was the first time the dogs had worked in my yard and because all the dogs had had a break in training. Crosby delighted us with his antics, going all the way under a stone bench to the other side to follow the odor of an egg hidden in front of it. He was so excited he picked the egg up in his mouth!
Here, Crosby finds an egg in the seat of a pergola my husband built for one of our wedding anniversaries. |
At nine o'clock with the light gone, we finally stopped our holiday hunt. The dogs were in their blissful happy place, ready to go home for a dream-filled night. I could only hope our dogs' dreams were full of following one odor to the next!
Happy Hunting, Canines!