My friend Mary set up a mock trial at her house for us to practice. If you've read other blogs, you'll remember that Mary and her dog Crosby are longstanding nose work friends who are part of a practice group we've established. Crosby earned his NW1 title in Sandy, Oregon in November. See "Pongo's Second Nose Work 1 Trial" posted on November 9, 2014. I noticed a pattern in Pongo's behavior at this trial. Pongo starts off highly distracted and seems to need more warm-up time than just the trial boxes that are set up outside in the parking lot at trials. Both times Pongo has competed, he has failed the first element (different elements each time) and passed the final three. There are always four elements in a NW1 Trial: boxes, interior search, exterior search and vehicle search. Your dog must pass all four to earn a title.
Knowing Pongo's tendency to a slow start, Mary planned five blind searches for us. Each one was timed according to NW1 element standards. The first one was an indoor search to get him warmed up. Pongo circled the room, and was clearly working intermittently, but gave up easily and began looking to me. Mary gave us the 30 second warning, then Pongo found the hide just before the time ran out at three minutes. It was hung in a bag underneath a corner table. Pongo was showered with lots of praise and cut up pieces of chicken Dog Joy Treats made by Freshpet. Positive reward is important in training dogs for nose work to maintain their motivation.
Interior search with distractions. |
Crosby alerts to a find hidden in the wheel. |
After the vehicle hide, the boys did a box search in Mary's garage. There were lots of distractors with filled garbage cans, a parked vehicle, and shelves of your run-of-the-mill items stored in garages. Boxes is where Pongo typically excels. He got his best time on this element, finishing in less than fifteen seconds. Pongo gave me a clear alert by pawing the box with the odor. I love it when he does this on boxes and wish he'd do it on all hides! But Pongo's alert is different depending on the situation, putting more pressure on me to make sure I read him correctly. This is a team sport after all!
Next, the dogs did an interior search in the living room. This search area was full of lots of distractors. It had some of Crosby's toys, a dog bed, a throw blanket tossed on the couch, etc. This one proved to be very difficult for Pongo and was the only one he didn't find. Mary hid the odor between the cushions and Pongo walked past multiple times without showing any signs of alerting to the odor. But this is why we practice!
Wish us luck!
Happy trialing, Pongo!
Stay tuned for results this weekend.
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