Westchester Retriever Club, Inc.

Presents
RETRIEVER TRAINING WORKSHOP

THE AMATEUR’S PERSPECTIVE
BY
JOHN CAVANAUGH

 

On behalf of the Officers and Board Members we would like to WELCOME you all to our 2001 retriever training seminar. We hope you find the presentation informative and enjoyable.

John has prepared this agenda based on the information received in your questionnaires. Our topic progression may not, in all cases, represent a complete orderly training program. We left out what most of you conveyed that you can already do well.

Thanks for Attending.......

 WRC extends it gratitude for the use of the property "Morningstar Farm".

In addition we would like to thank the following sponsors:

Dobbs Training Center
Dogs Afield
Iams Company
Ralston Purina Company

  • This symbol and/or the use of underlines indicates material new for this seminar

 


Agenda

Time

Area

Day 1

8:00 - 8:30

Check-in

8:30 - 9:00

Orientation & Intro Remarks

9:00 - 10:00

Learning To Handle / Force Fetch and Extensions

10:00 - 11:00

Double "T"

11:00 - 12:00

Swim-by

12:00 - 1:00

Lunch & Canine Nutrition Talk

1:00 - 2:00

Transition Blinds

2:00 - 2:30

Basic Marking / Cheating Singles

2:30 - 3:00

Steadiness/Control

3:00 - 4:30

Model Marking Set up

4:30 -

Remarks on Attitude/Feedback/Q&A

Day 2

8:00 - 10:00

Remedial Handling Skills - Whistle Sit / Sit Steady

10:00 - 11:00

Casting / Control at a Distance

12:00 - 1:00

Lunch

1:00 - 1:30

Advanced Marking / Long Marks

1:30 - 3:00

Model Multiple Water Marks – Set ups

3:00 - 4:00

Advanced Blinds

4:00 - 4:30

Lifelong Maintenance/Communication Drills

4:30 -

Closing Remarks: Amateur’s Training Schedule / Time Management/Feedback/Q&A


Table of Contents

NATURAL AND TRAINED ABILITIES
STYLE!
PRINCIPLES OF TRAINING
TRAINING SEQUENCES
LEARNING TO HANDLE
(WHISTLE AND CASTING SKILLS / CONTROL)
DOUBLE "T"
SWIM - BY
TRANSITIONS FROM DOUBLE "T" TO COLD BLINDS
CHEATING (SINGLES)
STEADY
MARKING PRINCIPLES
MARKING/ GAME FINDING ABILITIES
MODEL MARKING SET UP
MULTIPLE MARKS
HELPER SKILLS
v REMEDIAL HANDLING/WHISTLE SITS
v CONTROL AT LONG DISTANCE/CASTING
ADVANCED MARKING
FUNDAMENTALLY DIFFICULT TESTS
CLASSIC CONCEPTS / CONFIGURATIONS
CORE COMPLEXITIES
BIRD PLACEMENT IN TRAINING
REPEATING
v LONG MARKS
v HEAD SWINGING
BLIND RETRIEVE PRINCIPLES
ADVANCED BLINDS
MODEL BLIND SET UP
LIFELONG MAINTENANCE / COMMUNICATION DRILLS
FITTING TRAINING INTO AN AMATEUR’S BUSY SCHEDULE
LOCAL PROFESSIONAL TRAINERS
VIDEOS
TRAINING EQUIPMENT
BOOKS
PERIODICALS / SPONSORING ORGANIZATIONS
LOCAL RETRIEVER CLUBS
HUNTING TEST PREPARATION (vs. FIELD TRIALS)
JUNIOR TO SENIOR TRANSITION
SENIOR TO MASTER TRANSITION
TRANSITION TO FIELD TRIALS
v ATTITUDE - SOFT DOGS
v ATTITUDE – OVERLY EXCITED DOGS 

 


NATURAL AND TRAINED ABILITIES

 RETRIEVERS SHOULD BE JUDGED ON THEIR NATURAL
AND TRAINED ABILITIES

Natural Abilities are of great importance and include 

  • Memory
  • Intelligence
  • Attention
  • Nose
  • Courage
  • Perseverance
  • Style

Trained Abilities include

  • Steadiness
  • Control
  • Response to direction
  • Delivery

 The Ideal Retriever

  •  Marks the fall of a bird;
  • Uses the wind;
  • Follows a strong cripple; and
  • Takes direction from the handler.

 Retrievers should perform equally well on the land and in the water.

A retriever's performance should be a "FINISHED" job and pleasing to the eye.

 


 STYLE!

 Style is apparent in every movement of a dog and throughout his entire performance,

  • including:
  • Gaiety of manner, approaching the line
  • Alertness on line
  • Eagerness and speed on retrieves
  • Water entry
  • Pick-up of birds
  • Return with birds

 Style makes for a pleasing performance, evidenced by:

  • Alert and obedient attitude
  • Fast determined departure, both on land and into water
  • Aggressive search for the fall
  • Prompt pick-up
  • Reasonably fast return

v Appearance of grace, even under pressure.

v Exuding determination and high likelihood of success.

v "style is something in the movements of a dog when working, which gives to the onlooker the impression that the dog is determined and likely to succeed in his task."  charles alington, 1929

  


PRINCIPLES OF TRAINING

 Natural skills: Physically fit, running, swimming, hunting.

 Expected and Intended Outcomes

You must be very confident about what the dog will do
You must be prepared to react (plan / tools)
 

Success Ratio: 

  • 70% without help or correction
  • 15% Testing
  • 15% Certainty of correction

 Note Keeping 

  • Inventory exposure to /status of fundamental skills
  • Identify emerging problems
  • Keeping balance: success/correction, land/water, marks/blinds, long/short, etc.
  • Planning future training

 Attitude / Confidence / Style Defined 

  • Appearance of grace, even under pressure
    Exuding Determination and high likelihood of success
     

Your Work Ethic: day after day, weather, planning, etc.

Consistent standards: obedience, steadiness, get in water, casting, head swinging, etc. 

  • Establish good habits / avoid "bad baggage" 

Selfish focus, as appropriate (your time is your time)

Birds: Pheasants and Ducks

Physical Conditioning: dedicated exercise time, without the mental stress of training

House time, hunting, joining-up

Goals: Be CLEAR; start with the end in mind, write it down, visualize it........

If correction is needed on any aspect of a set-up, simplify the rest of the set-up. Avoid "piling-on" corrections for disparate faults.

3 peat of the same concept is fundamental to training (vs. testing).

 


TRAINING SEQUENCES

Time of year: Water, Wind, Cover, Temperature, Next Event Date

Repetition of Concept Singles Multiples Retired / Complexity Singles (again)

Success / Attitude (Daily Schedule)

Keeping Pictures Clear and Pure

Avoid Conflicts among marking concepts / but strive for overall balance

Blinds: isolate the component(s) of complexity and run multiple blinds on one component theme at a time

Pre / Post Event: Avoid obvious situational contrasts

Singles for concentration / x - head swinging

  • Reverse back - sliding
  • Trial / Training Contrast Recognition (identifiable by dog)

Expected / Intended Outcomes and Success Ratios

Specific Trial Location Planning

  • Cover / Terrain
  • Type of Water
  • Birds
  • Size of Event

 

LEARNING TO HANDLE

 (WHISTLE AND CASTING SKILLS / CONTROL)

 Handling is a remote communication system

  • Obvious use: Blind Retrieves
  • Also, to re-connect with line and area of fall on marks

Fundamentals: Line / Go / Stop / Cast / Return

Teach Fundamentals independently; assemble them on the Double T

Prerequisites: obedience, force fetch, collar conditioning

Go / Line: Force fetch extensions: Pyramid, ladder, walking fetch, fetch / no fetch, directional fetch, stick remote pressure, collar fetch, and force to pile

Remote Stop (overlay whistle): Obedience with collar reinforcement, steady drills in yard, remote sits on recall with rope, sits on route to mark with rope, sit to pile with rope and collar

Remote Casting / Three Hand Piles with Rope: left and right backs, return (overlay whistle) and casting drills. Hand throw 2 marks, send, stop, cast to other.

Mini-T: assemble go, stop, casting and return (less than 50 yards, more rope than "e" collar)

Emerging from the yard/basics

  • Go to Double-T or Swim-by (depends on weather)

 


DOUBLE "T"

 

  • Double "T" Layout
  • Discuss objectives
  • Confront classic faults (i.e. bugging, no-go, popping, hunty attitude, flaring, slow sits)

 

 

Non-Conventional:
- two center lines
- tree as target
-don't stop and then cast where dog was going
-reverse order and run sideways

 

  • Teach one center line (progressively move back)
  • Teach other center line and alternate (Lining and Force)
  • Teach long overs (Remote Casting)
  • Send, whistle stop and cast to long overs
  • Put in short overs, without teaching piles (dog learns to generalize a behavior)
    Run by's (bumper in mouth) on return. Casting around without popping
    (discipline casting)

Reinforce "back", sit, here when sloppy / distracted

Emerging from Double "T"

  • Go to Swim-by (weather permitting)
  • Go to Transitions to Cold Blinds

 


SWIM - BY

 Ideal and compromise (cove, with anchored bumpers) water designs

 Objectives 

  • Apply collar reinforcement to "go", "stop", "cast" and "here" in water
  • Acclimate to sit/ tread water
  • Initiate get-in / stay-in water behavior
  • Build a skill for life long water discipline reminders

 Steps (with rope on) 

  • Teach, then collar reinforce to pile across water
  • Teach sit / water tread with rope: progressively longer waits (bumper in hand, throw left/right > cast, then recall to opposite end of channel)
  • Establish piles as targets at ends of channel
  • Teach / coax initially to stay in channel; walking with cast, rope to regain attention
  • Meet at end/ pile, take bumper, sit on shore, throw toward other end of channel, coax to cast in/over....
  • Progress to casting over with bumper in mouth
  • Once dog has basic idea to go to pile across, sit/tread, cast (including bumper in mouth): apply nick for failure to maintain cast (i.e. dog looks at you for info after the cast: say "over" -nick- "over")
  • Keep arm down, extend arm only when the dog "pops" (looks back to you)

 Future - uses 

  • Adjust water attitude when sloppy
  • Correct return line
  • Fight heavy cross-wind
  • Out to sea and "dog-leg" blinds 
  • On return re-entries, stop and over cast out to sea (simulates cast off point, etc. )

 Emerging from Swim by 

  • Go to cheating singles (you are now able to handle into and while in the water)

  


TRANSITIONS FROM DOUBLE "T" TO COLD BLINDS

Dog knows the rudiments of Go / Stop / Cast / Return with collar reinforcements.

In "Transitions" we take these skills to new physical locations and add distractions, to generalize the behaviors. Still a lot of "show and tell".

Pattern Blinds: 

  • Three 100-200 yard lines to recognizable yet new destinations. Start close, show pile, move back.

Pattern Blind with Diversions:

  • New location / single pile
  • Identify the pile from line
  • Run / Handle to pile
  • Add Bird Boy to side, run to pile
  • Throw / Pick up mark, run to pile
  • Throw mark, leave it, run to pile, pick up mark.

Take the above Pattern Blind Drills to 3-5 new locations, until smooth. Generalized behavior emerges.

Go to early cold blinds

 


CHEATING (SINGLES)

 Puppies:

  • Recalls over obstacles (with rope): logs, boats, etc
  • Shift line to angle jumps 
  • Highly important to be a competent swimmer first (boat marks)

Pre-force/Manual Teaching (with rope) 

  • Need high retrieve drive to rebound from "no-here", when cheating
  • Sensitivity to high success ratio
  • Example: 3 correct, move back - fail? Move up for success again

 White bumpers thrown progressively down channel

 Handler moves line back 

  • Failure - "NO - HERE"
  • Simply / move-up / re-throw to re-establish successful contrast (shows comparison)

 Cheating Singles, rarely as memory bird

 Complexity: 

  • Re-entry
  • Angle entry
  • Angle exit

 Repeating: Yes, if line correction was effective on first try

 Post swim-by dogs

 Recall vs. Handle - want to expose to both. Applying handling skills with clear visual objective, as well as not condone poor initial lines
(How to best reconnect with intended destination?)

General rule on Recall vs. Handle 

  • Recall for poor initial line
  • Handle for line deterioration (fading to shore)

 Emerging from Cheating Singles

  • Go to channel blinds (show and tell first)

 


 STEADY

Steady: Means NO movement

Establish good marking habits

  • Don't let young dogs / pups break for birds before the bird settles on the ground / water. (start with very short distances, so they will go)
  • Don't let them struggle wildly while birds are thrown
  • Do whatever you need to do to calmly restrain them until bird settles
  • If they break or struggle, Re-throw until they focus
  • Handler thrown diversions done with handler stepping out front to control
  • Age to insist on formal steadiness: depends on dog’s attitude

Poor Steadiness usually results from:

  • Sloppy standards
  • Thinking they'll get every bird seen thrown

Steadiness Tools:

  • Line-mat, defines where to sit / stay
  • Slip cord, until formally steady
  • Stick or E Collar, which ever makes your dog less "jumpy"

Steadiness Drills

  • Start in yard with remote sits, while you walk around / randomly tossing bumpers (no retrieving)
  • Practice mechanics of putting hand in, calling numbers before sending to a
  • single white bumper
  • Attention drills
  • Multiple dogs on line honor many short exciting marks, until well behaved
  • Honor other dog before (cold honor) and after your turn 
  • Remote sits, while other dogs do complete marking set ups

Steadiness Corrections

  • "Sit" - nick - "sit" or "sit" - stick - "sit" (not "here": as the infraction was the motion, your correction should reinforce "sit") 
  • After controlled break/steadiness: "Sit", then handler steps up (big corrections if more improvement)
  • After controlled break / creep / head swing, almost always re-throw until your standard is satisfied 
  • Fundamental: No bird unless no movement (restraint, not just correction)

Degrees of difficulty to work into steadiness drills

  • Gun shots / bird calls
  • Other dog jealousy (Honoring)
  • Short marks
  • Splash in water
  • Flyers
  • Walk-ups

 


MARKING PRINCIPLES

Accurate marking is of primary importance!

A retriever should recognize the depth of the "area of the fall", stay in it, then quickly and systematically "hunt it out"

Don't expect a dog to mark what the dog did not see.

  • Focus vs. struggle / head swing
  • Attention Drills
  • Any Doubt? - Re-Throw!!

Run to bird (vs. Gun)

Targets (base of tree, rocks, mounds, etc.)
Slots (rows of trees, etc.)
Moving guns while dog runs to bird
"Y" drill (angle back vs. flat throws)
Long winger throws
Throws arching over visible features
 

Marks that require gun dependence (shorter birds, hip pockets, etc.)

  • Cues and gun help

Independence

  • Ability to re-claim line vs. "go straight"
  • Allowing hunts, sometimes behind the gun

Water momentum vs. technical lines

  • Birds in water, with a splash, or way out
    Long, square entries / Re-entries 

Retired Guns

  • Intro: singles, "go bird" use umbrella or camo net

Hunt Area: tighten / staying in / perseverance

  • Dirt clod drill
  • Allow dogs to hunt (intervene only for safety, switching, going to old fall, totally lost) 
  • Help only to return to fall area, encourage to resume area hunt
  • No E-collar in/around the fall area, must be a relaxed environment

 


MARKING/ GAME FINDING ABILITIES

Experience / Success

Goal in mind / discipline to maintain the idea

Use of eyes, orientation skill

Use of nose, hunting skill

Clear destination: visibility (bird / gun), attention, steady, quiet (otherwise re-throw)

Emphasis: attention: (no noise, re-throws, until quiet)

Clean of other influences (factors)

Balance of experiences

Progression on marks:

  • Stand-up/out Singles (visible gunner)
  • Stand-up/out Multiples
  • Retired singles (don’t send until thrower is concealed)
  • Retired multiples

Add factors: wind, cover, terrain, fatigue, water, diversions, distances (long / short / mid –distance)

Selection issues

Recovery Skills

  • Re-orientation after hunt
  • Re-claiming line after negotiating obstacles / factor

Gun dependence / orientation

Go at bird confidence (long throws away from gun)

Line hold / re-claim

Depth perception

Retired guns are the "purest" marks: line and depth

 


MODEL MARKING SET UP

Awareness of wind and all other factors / hazards (weather radio/compass)

Trial vs. training season

  • One-two weeks before event, keep in balance (long vs. short, etc.)
  • Normal training should accentuate concepts until solid (perhaps out of balance)

Expected / Intended outcomes

Plan, tools available and communicated to helpers (radio, extra bird, etc.)

Discuss options on how to run a set up (i.e. single / multiple / pickup order, etc.)

Your agenda - head swinging, line manners, multiple mechanics, specific concept?

Side to watch / send from options

Variety:

  • Attention drill
  • Retired guns, teaching (umbrella techniques, holding blinds, natural hiding)
  • Short diversions - anti-head swinging (delay, bulldog, deny, wipe-out)
  • Friendly orders, or driving past
  • Long single first, promotes long bird watching
  • Walk ups
  • Singles: confidence, anti head swinging
  • Walk aways/"organized confusion"

Help / Correction Options

Behind Gun?

 


MULTIPLE MARKS

Anticipation / habit of going again and again, established at an early age

Mechanics of Multiples (practice for handler and dog)

  • Setting - up, watching, move from bird to bird, Return / Delivery, Lining-up, Footwork, Hands, Voice, Bird Handling (you and the dog) 
  • Importance of square stance

Easing Into Multiples: Bird in mouth, diversions off line.

Momentum multiples vs. technical / stressful setups

  • Just Go Get 3 or 4 birds vs.
  • Key Concept Doubles vs.
  • Line Critical Singles

Early Teaching of Multiple Marks

Pre-requisites
  • Steady enough to focus on marks (slip cord)
  • Reasonable return / delivery
  • You must have control over situation
    • Request help as needed
    • Physical barriers (fence / tree) to prevent switch / return to old fall
    • Use Factors (wind, terrain) to help lead dog to memory bird
    • Short wide spread set ups

 


 HELPER SKILLS

 Communication

  • Radios
  • Hand Signals (stand, throw, motion, Hey-Hey, retire, etc.)
    Always acknowledge instructions / plan as understood before dog runs
     

Help Dog Connect / Reconnect with destination: Is dog looking? / attention drill / when to move / stand with dog at line.

Uses of the umbrella / camo net on retired guns

Reading dog's intent in route

  • Watch eyes / momentum (read, report, react)
  • In front of gun?
  • Getting in water?
  • Looking for short bird vs lead out?
  • Release from hunt to switch/ locale orientation while out of sight/ dirt-clod / stay-in-area drills 
  • Avoid eye contact with pups (look at bird, look away to avoid cheat on return)

Intervention by helper (agree with handler in advance)

  • Re-attract to hunt area
  • Bird in air, then holler / shoot
  • Body influences, arm motion, face bird, leaning, etc
  • Blow whistle - safety /hearing / out of control 
  • Keep sun on white shirt, max visibility
  • Encouraging hunt, "Good dog" …

 Learning to shoot flyers

  • Start with dead birds and shot gun (simulates flyer, too)

 Preparedness

  • Hazard Alert
  • Check Handler Visibility
  • Extra Birds – ready to throw
  • Whistle
  • Gun
  • Umbrella / camo net 
  • High visibility bumper/white tape streamers

 Equipment List:

  • Radio 
  • Birds
  • Umbrella
  • Pistol Pack (pistol, blanks, ear protection, bird call, whistle, marking tape, etc.)
  • Chair
  • White Shirt


REMEDIAL HANDLING/WHISTLE SITS

Sharpen the skill in yard first

Do they understand Whistle means sit, Quickly?
Teach with rope, then overlay E collar
  • Recalls / sit (rope around remote post)
  • Sit in route to thrown bumpers
  • Sit in route to pile

Remote sit drills
Stop to Pile drills: line type and over type
Obedience: lead + collar, then overlay E collar

Run with dog + snap sit

Bird-boy blinds, discuss
Don’t permit auto-casting
Escape type collar correction
"Cemetery" blinds: opportunities to blow lots of whistles
Split-back pile (lining or remote casting)
Sloppy sits that develop after solid basics

Don’t compromise standards!

 

CONTROL AT LONG DISTANCE/CASTING

 

Walk behind blinds
Long – distance wagon wheel casting
Remote – handler / whistle blower
Use of swim / run-by at distance
Stop and cast over/in’s on return
Emergency (against factors) blinds
Handle "all over the field" procedure (time-out from disobedience)
No auto-casting
Remote Cast blinds
Immediate whistle info for cast refusal
Walking base-ball
Use "Here" after/in place of toot-toot on attrition/recalls

Overlay toot-toot with nick, then "Here"

Allow dog to get deep of blind, practice recall whistle
Direction changes:

  • "dog – leg" blinds
  • Split back pile drill (As lining or remote casting)

 


 ADVANCED MARKING

 Retired Guns

The Difficulties are:
  • Depth Perception
  • Attraction / Repulsion of Diversions

Cheating Elements on Retired Guns

  • Almost Never as memory birds
    As singles: Good Drill work 

Doing the Impossible Test (at the trial):

  • If conventional rules aren't working, Try an alternative 
  • Occasionally try odd pick-up orders (primary selection, short bird last, etc.)

Water Marks:

  • Resist Temptations to always setting-up technical lines
  • Need a regular dose of successful (go - get - um) water marks

 


FUNDAMENTALLY DIFFICULT TESTS

 Cycle through these Each Season / Each Year

  • Short (retired) guns / "secondary selection" issues
  • Long (retired) guns
  • Long Swims / Stay in
  • Across points and Re-entries (including scented areas on blinds)
  • "Poison" Birds
  • Long Blinds / Control 
  • Demanding Water Entries

  


CLASSIC CONCEPTS / CONFIGURATIONS
(READ JIM SPENCER'S BOOK "RETRIEVER TRAINING TESTS")
  • Hip Pocket
  • Behind Chair
  • Converging
  • In-Lines
  • Over and Under
  • Momma – Poppa 
  • Indent

 


CORE COMPLEXITIES

As your dog masters the fundamental tests, begin adding these complexities to the set-ups:

  • Distance (Drive / Fatigue and Depth Perception)
  • Diversions, tight or remote
  • "Tightness" (or lack of): Lines and Falls
  • Sloping Terrain
  • Cross-Wind
  • Rough Cover / Long Birds (tough going / drag back scent)
  • Shorter Cover / Check Down Birds (easy to over run on "fast" surface)
  • Retired Guns (Depth Perception)
  • Live Bird Attraction

 


BIRD PLACEMENT IN TRAINING

GENERAL

Water:
Consider:

In the Water, with a splash, or Well up and out
Hard to get to, Easy to find
Easy to get to, Hard to find

Avoid conflicting messages from bird to bird
Momentum: Long / Square water entries: Friendly water work

MARKS 

  • Retired guns: Avoid cheating memory birds situations (without the gun exposed, you can't clearly read dog's intent to cheat vs. having mis-marked line to bird)
    River Marks with weighted bumpers (simulates cross-wind) 

BLINDS 

  • Avoid tapering away shoreline as destination (always results in giving in to shore)
    Know exact location; avoid "HUNT IT UP" ending
    Leave room deep of blind, allow dog to get deep, to practice come-in whistles

 


REPEATING

Natural behavior for a dog = back-trailing, scent orientation (it's hard for people to appreciate this - we have poor noses)

A lot of field testing is based on tight, but distinct, line recognition that is sight oriented.

Much of our training requires that sight orientation skills over-ride scenting instincts.

Repeating lines to the same destination reinforces the "wrong" navigation skills.

Better to repeat the concept (not the spot) under "cold" scenting circumstances.

Yet, in a measure much less frequent than people seem to think, repeating the same retrieve may be beneficial.

 Don't repeat marks unless:

  • Clear potential for visual orientation (correct line / destination choice is easily distinguished)
  • On initial (failed) attempt, there was successful intervention and re-orientation was achieved (clean handle, for example)

 


  •  LONG MARKS

Success ratio / Expected and Intended outcomes
Distance as the only factor
Singles
Flyers
Easy to find
Un-retired first
Physical Features (down hill vs. up hill)
Attention to Hot/Cold Temperatures
Visibility / Background / Bird (Streamer tape)
In-route throws
Helper ready and reading dog’s momentum
Boat Marks, non-cheaty
Short cover first
Help vs. Handle, discuss

More advanced

High cover / Terrain
Old / drag-back scent
Retired Guns
Foreground diversions
Multiple Marks

 v 3peat marking drills


 

HEAD SWINGING

 

Singles off multiple gun stations

  • First and last set up of day
  • Day before trial
  • All (shorter) guns standing, don’t always tell gunners you are going to do singles 
  • Long single first

 When doing tough multiples

  • Accentuate importance to watch birds to the ground
    • Double shots (at arc)/ bird calls / Hey-Hey
    • Stick / Correct and Re-throw for headswing, noise, creeping
    • Try uncovering next gun only when his turn to throw
    • If blatant headswing, drop back to singles

Set ups for correction

  • False flyer stations
  • Shoot, count to 3, then throw

Insist on fundamentals

  • Don’t honor others multiples
  • Cover up long guns if not throwing them first
  • Don’t allow swing until you move
    • Careful attention to your footwork and other cues

Precision marking drills

"Y" drill
Through tree lines
Cheating singles
Long throws away from gun
Wingers/dummy launcher/Flyers
Walk away singles

 


BLIND RETRIEVE PRINCIPLES

Retrievers should respond quickly and eagerly to whistles and directions, meaning:

  • Take the original line given
  • Continue on that line
  • Stop when commanded
  • Take a new direction as given
  • Continue on that line until bird is found

Blind retrieves should take advantage of natural distractions such as:

  • Islands
  • Points of land
  • Sand bars
  • Ditches
  • Hedges
  • Bushes
  • Adjacent heavy cover
  • Rolling terrain

EARLY BLINDS 

  • Don't fiddle about precise lines - "kick-em -off"
    Walk behind dog, as he runs, keeping the dog near to you. When you blow sit whistle, he will find you close by (like the distance from you when learning basics) 
  • Rope is a good idea
  • Multiple planted blinds with emergency options
  • Mix side sends and remote casts
  • Chairs, trees in foreground to distinguish lines
  • Natural targets, like on Double T (trees, etc.)
  • Avoid strong factors (Wind, Terrain, Cover) 
  • Avoid tight lines and cheating obstacles
  • 3peat to teach themes and concepts

 WATER 

  • Channels - Long axis of swim- by pond is a good place to start
  • Floating, anchored bumpers in swimming water
  • Cheating singles type pictures, but less cheaty.

Lining Skills, Progression 

  • Visible bumper/pile
  • Known marker (trees, rocks, etc.)
  • Choice of markers
  • Relativity to markers (i.e. line between, chairs, tree, etc.)
  • General acceptance of wherever you point/line them they will go!!!!

 


ADVANCED BLINDS

Effective Casting (Trial vs. Training)

  • Anticipation / Planned approaches to and exits from Hazards
    Maintain standards in training (literal casts)
    Maintain survival at the trial (momentum casts) and if the first cast didn't work get more suggestive / emphatic (but keep your cool)
     

Rarely run a single complex water blind in training (too pass / fail, non-instructive)

Components / Tune-Up (Series) Approach

Cold Drills, Ending in Successful Understanding

Examples for drills:
  • Entries
  • Re-Entries
  • Cast into Water
  • Stay-Ins
  • Up & Outs
  • Poison Birds
  • Chair Drills
  • Past / Over / Off Points
  • Obstacles

Complexity of Blinds

  • Diversions, poison birds
  • Tight Lines/ Multiples Blinds
  • Factors: Wind, Terrain, Cover, Distance, etc.
  • Water entries

 Typical Problems on Blinds

  • Lack of solid basics
  • Control at Distance
  • Hunty Attitude
  • Bugging

 


MODEL BLIND SET UP

Awareness of wind and all other factors / hazards (weather radio/compass)

Expected / Intended outcomes

Strategies / Remedies Planned

Come to Line

  • Line - up: side to send from, Push / Pull, use of Hands / Feet
  • Importance of square stance

 Initial Line

  • Plan Approach to/exit from Hazards

Handle Away from Hazards and Into Visibility

Awareness of side dog turns to on whistle, relative to hazards

Momentum Preservation

  • Allow to fight factors, even if off line. Re-orientation cast should be easy
  • "Reading the Momentum Gauge": Whistles and Corrections and Attrition run it down
  • Don't let young dogs get into "Deep Holes": down wind, down hill, along shoreline
    Prevent trouble: Quick intervention, don't hope for dog to discover his error and re-gain his line 

End Hazards

  • Come-in Whistle, Downwind Drift tendency

 

Attitude: blinds are mostly trained behavior and can suffer from inappropriately high corrections ratio. Caution!

Attitude: Components of blinds, Tune - up approach, Non- conflicting, Successful outcomes

Solve acute problems (tune-up approach) before attempting more advanced skills: (popping, whistle stops, etc. must be ironed-out first.)

 


LIFELONG MAINTENANCE / COMMUNICATION DRILLS

Wagon Wheel Lining (with Guide Stick and Pull Tab)

  • Slots / Row of Trees
  • Occasional Long Retrieve, for drive attitude

Push - Pull Drill, Follow Inside Leg

Heeling Drills

  • Control Leg nearest dog, "here" forward and "heel" backward
  • Handler Move/ Dog Called into Position, 360 heeling
    1/3/5 Step heeling, figure 8, etc. 

Water Drills

  • Line-In
  • Cast-In
  • Stay-In
  • Point Drill
  • Straight-in recalls

Tune-Up Drills (built on a theme: entry, cross points, etc.)

Marking Drills

  • Attention
  • Dirt Clod
  • Moving Guns (walking guns and organized confusion)
  • Slot to Bird
  • "Y" drill (flat vs. angle back throws)

Casting Drills

  • Walking Baseball (casting off diversions)
  • Wagon Wheel: straight back becomes "no-hands"
    Split back pile, for direction change reminder 

"Chinese" Set-ups

  • Marks (simple) combined with blinds, run in "CRAZY" orders

 Steadiness: walk around, tempting bumper throws while on remote sit

 


 FITTING TRAINING INTO AN AMATEUR’S BUSY SCHEDULE

Marks

  • AM face west
  • PM face east

Blinds: North / South lines (need forward / backward visibility)

April & October: blinds, singles and drills (limited time)

Drills under flood lights:

  • Schools
  • Shopping centers
  • Traffic islands in parking lots = land tune-up drills

Paid Help vs. training partners

 Planning:

  • Schedule
    • What to work on
    • When to do it
  • Equipment
  • Communication with helpers/partners

Obedience:

  • Always time for a 15 minute session
  • Attend formal classes during winter to stay sharp

 


LOCAL PROFESSIONAL TRAINERS

 

Ed Forry
Rick Milheim
Pat Nolan
J.J. Sweezey and Kay Sweezey

302-378-1002
610-442-5005
301-824-2402
410-778-2220


 VIDEOS

 

Mike Lardy

Total Retriever Training
Total Retriever Marking
Collar Conditioning

Jim Kappes, Bruce Curtis, and Wayne Curtis

Try contacting Jacque Anderson

Rex Carr and Dave Rorem

Jackie Mertens

Sound Beginnings / Retriever Puppies

 

 

800-848-5963

 

763-498-7562

800-848-5963

 

800-848-5963


TRAINING EQUIPMENT

Dogs A Field

Dobbs Training Center

Lion Country Supply

800-863-3647

888-326-5527

800-662-5202

  


BOOKS

 

Walters, D.L and Ann
Training Retrievers to Handle
Interstate Book Manufactures, Olathe, KS

Dobbs, Jim and Phillis
Retriever Training
Tri- Tronics, Inc. Tucson, AZ

Spencer, James
Retriever Training Tests
Arco Publishing, New York, NY

Gwaltney, Dr. Jack
Training and Campaigning Retrievers
(new edition in 1999)

Hillmann, William
Training Retrievers for Field Trails
(new edition 1998)

Loveland, Cherylon and Rutherford, Clarice
Retriever Puppy Training
Alpine Publications

Quinn, Thomas
The Working Retrievers
EP Dutton, New York, NY
(new edition in 1998)

Alington, Charles / Susan Scales
Field Trials and Judging
Swan Hill Press Shrewsbury England
(original 1929, new edition 2000)



800-447-7367



888-326-5527



800-777-7257


804-973-2620


850-893-5746 (Jeff Talley)


800-777-7257



800-207-0799



airlifebooks.com

This manual may be printed from www.weebegoldens.com

 


PERIODICALS / SPONSORING ORGANIZATIONS

The Retriever Journal

Retriever (Field Trial) News

Retrievers OnLine Magazine

Working Retrievers Central

North American Hunting Retriever Association
NAHRA News

Hunting Retriever Magazine
(United Kennel Club / H.R.C)

Gun Dog Magazine

AKC Afield Magazine

800-447-7367

414-481-2760

705-793-3556

http://www.working-retrievers.com

540-286-0625


616-343-9020

800-767-4868

919-233-9767


LOCAL RETRIEVER CLUBS

 

Keystone Retriever Club
(Hunt Tests Central PA)
Rick Wise

Swamp Dog Club
(Field Trials, Hunt Test)
Eastern, PA
Fran Gough

Waterland Retriever Club
(Hunt Tests Eastern PA)
Ann Hunter

Del Bay Retriever Club
(Field Trials, Hunt Tests)
DE/MD
Lyn Yelton

Westchester Retriever Club
(Field Trials, Hunt Tests, Training Sessions)
New York
Dennis McConnell



717-252-2386




610-377-7530


215-646-3263




410-885-2671




845-987-7937


 HUNTING TEST PREPARATION (vs. FIELD TRIALS)

 Handler Must Carry Shotgun and May Point at Birds

Walk-Ups and marks thrown spontaneously (no showing of guns to dogs)

Remote Sends (Marks & Blinds) / handler in blind, dog outside

Remote Honor

Hidden Throwers

Short / Tight Marks

Winger Throws, Long and across hazards

Steadiness!

Bird-Calls / Shots at Line and behind line

In Route / Return Diversions (Bull-Dog)

Send from Boat

Hunting Attire/ Handlers and Helpers (comply with Rule but remember dog must see you)

Sit (vs. stand) next to dog

Decoy spreads: water and land

Diversion gunner (mid-field) shoots at distant thrown bird

 Unusual throws

  • In toward line
  • Short and long throws off same side on same gun (train on Y drill)
  • Simultaneously thrown marks
  • Overhead/from behind the line

 Defensive Handling Strategy

  • Avoid double handles
  • Avoid big hunts/careful about switches (tight areas)

 Unusual birds: Chuckars, pigeons, etc

 


JUNIOR TO SENIOR TRANSITION

Steady (should have been steady before attempting Junior, despite allowance for restraint, can’t use lead coming to, at, or leaving line)

  • Package of skills
    • Calm in blind
    • Heel to line
    • No creeping
    • No bird stealing
    • Walk-up marks
    • Honoring
    • Solid delivery to hand

Multiple marks (Land and Water)

Basic Blinds (Land and Water)

 


 SENIOR TO MASTER TRANSITION

 Extra Steady / Honoring

Marking

More marking series (3 series and extra birds)
Triples / Quads
  • Delayed marks
  • Diversions marks / shots
  • Marks and blinds integrated

Blinds

Diversions
Poison Birds (with mark retrieved later)
Scent

Tough Standards (Remember this is a foundation for the genetic pool)


 TRANSITION TO FIELD TRIALS

The purpose of a retriever field trial is to determine the relative merits of retrievers in the field.

Can you accept a low success rate???? Brutal "call backs", only one winner

Do you feel you could benefit from Watching more accomplished Dog and Handler Teams?

Test Distinctions?

  • Distance
  • Concepts, Exaggerated
  • Straight Lines and No Cheating

Derby: Pin-Point Marking; Much more than natural abilities

Qualifying: Difficulty varies by trial, the very good dogs don't stay there long

Amateur: Pro-Trained Dogs and some poor handlers

Open: A Bare-Fisted Game: Sharp Dogs, Sharp Handling


ATTITUDE - SOFT DOGS

Health?
Success Ratio
Friendly Orders
Flyers
Training Schedule Sensitivity

Hot/Cold Temperatures
Start/End Easy/Marks/Singles
Don’t overdo it / train the dog, not for your gratification

Don’t nag
Don’t condone escape behavior – lagging, bugging, dog/handler eye contact deadlocks, "bail-out" lines
Set up / corrections focused on single concepts
Avoid "catch 22" corrections

Building Hunting Skills:

Allowing to hunt
Seeding / scenting area / easy to find
Hunt-it-up practice (land and water)
Shooting preserve hunting, planted birds with high success rate

Balance: land vs. water, marks vs blinds, etc.

Reading and reacting to dog’s attitude

 


ATTITUDE – OVERLY EXCITED DOGS

 Obedience (on a weekly basis)

Before trial / before last series
Public places
High Standards but: Time correction for maximum impression
Group Training

Don’t run as test dog, where you can't correct!
Visit other stakes (air, heel on lead, back in kennel)
Dry Runs to Holding Blinds while other dogs work
Remote Sits / watching
Treats in holding blind (soft, chewey type)

Use lead / holding blind in training
Slow down
Don’t chatter / single word commands
Don’t nag, Correct! Note Opposition Nature/Reflex
Throw a few marks before trial / between series
High and consistent standards
No more than 2 consecutive trials / tests
Being a soldier from truck to line