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home again

this entry has 8 Comments/ in Aspergillis, Exercising, health, Scoop, travel / by Nancy Gyes
May 16, 2011

Scoop, April 2011, USDAA trial

Last night I arrived home from a weeks long adventure. Last weekend we had AKC World Team Tryouts Saturday and Sunday in Hopkins, Minnesota. The excitement was such that on Sunday my stomach was in knots all day just watching the teams compete for a spot on the TEAM! 6 Team members won their way onto the team, and 6 more will be picked this week. What stress, so many great dogs so few spots to fill. The quality of the dogs gets better every year which makes the final choices that much more difficult, but the good news is we have the depth to take great teams to France this year, and many chances for medals.

On Monday afternoon I flew to Atlanta to meet my friends Maureen Robinson & Laura Miller and was whisked away from the airport at 5 PM to the 55th floor of a law office to watch the 6 PM banding of an urban clutch of 4 falcon chicks whose families have made their nest on the top of this beautiful downtown Atlanta office building for many years. How in the world did I end up there? Maureen and Laura are great friends, Laura has a penthouse office in the building, and Maureen is a professional photographer. I just got real lucky! The Georgia Wildlife guys were there to do the banding, I took upside down videos with my new ipad2, (banding peregrines, an Ipad2 video by ME) and we all had a great time watching all the excitement. On Tuesday Maureen and I headed for her beautiful mountain farm in  North Carolina, and by Wednesday I was spending my time watching Maureen practice LONG outruns in preparation for the Blue Grass Sheep Dog Trial this week. (Maureen at Otie’s Knob, a video taken on my new Ipad2)

Wow! A month ago I was teaching in Hawaii and getting stung by man of war jelly fish on Kailua Beach, yeah that’s the beach our president takes his holidays:) I love my life. This evening was spent as many are here on the ranch. I took the dogs for a hike around the property and even though I have lived here since 1976, I never get tired of my fields and hanging with the dogs on a spring evening in the hills. This evening we had lots of nature moments. A killdeer tried to tease us with her broken wing act the entire time I was in one of the fields, yeah yeah, I see you mama kill deer, and I am not going close to the hedgerow by your nest, but keep up the performance, it is very entertaining! Then the dogs and I wandered down the front drive and scared up a big doe that sauntered off when I called the dogs back.

It looked like a full moon out there peeking behind the clouds, even though it was hardly dark and the hawks were still doing their helicopter act hanging over the edges of our cliffs looking for a bedtime snack I guess. Dead quiet out there other than the chirping birds getting ready to head off to bed. I let Scoop come for a walk with us, even though he still is bothered by something in his nose or throat or I don’t know what. He is now on antibiotics 3 times a day to see if there is some kind of infection which is causing the sneezing and hacking. If he is not perfect by Monday, (this afternoon) on Tuesday he goes back to see Dr. Helen our internist, for another scoping. Poor Scoop, poor me! Once again I am home and have time to train him and can’t. BOOGERS.

Riot and Wicked complained bitterly when I left them at the house tonight and just walked Scoop, Ace and Panic. I had already taken them for a trundle around the yard earlier today and thought they were happily resting. Not so. They busted out of the gate when the boys went in, (deaf and almost blind 14+ and 16 year old dogs are allowed these naughty priveleges) and they were rewarded for the effort by getting another short play out in the big yard. Since both of these girls have life threatening illnesses, they sort of get to call the shots, and when they want to tug and run and play they get to do so. So, my evening plans got slightly delayed but I wouldn’t have traded the opportunity for anything. It’s dark here now, the dogs are quiet, Jim is at a soccer game and I might just get off this computer and read a book.

I hope you had as lovely an evening with your pack of dogs as I had with mine.

NJG

poor Scoop

this entry has 13 Comments/ in Aspergillis, health, Scoop / by Nancy Gyes
May 5, 2011

Scoop and I spent the day at the vet on Monday while he had his nose and throat scoped to check and see if he had a foreign body caught inside. Scoop started sneezing a few days prior and this was the second visit, this one to be definitive to determine what was causing the sneezing and snurfling he was and still is doing. He had a hard time with anesthesia, vomiting going in and coming out both. I almost regretted that my internist always lets me stay with my dogs for procedures, this was all a bit much and pretty scary to watch. The cool part was watching the actual scoping of the nose on the monitor. Good news bad news, no foreign body.

So why is he sneezing, and sort of wheezing a bit when he runs hard? Allergies are suspected, or he inhaled something that bothered him and while it is gone, he is still uncomfortable. He is on benadryl for a few days and no training for him this week.  I wish that was all that is wrong with him.  He was also jumping poorly on the weekend. I was at the usdaa trial and luckily there was a masseuse and a chiropractor on hand to work on him multiple times. That was on top of the three sessions he had with Dr. Wendy throughout the week to try to find where he was uncomfortable. There was no glaring pain, just some small adjustments. So why was he knocking bars and adding steps here and there?

No answers yet, but he has a couple weeks off now to see if any small issues resolve. In the midst of all this he got his USDAA AD on the weekend. I only ran him in the standard ring, and only after the body workers to say he was not in any discomfort. But he obviously is tight somewhere, most likely up in his head neck area which is where they concentrated some of their work. He had a nice standard run both days, hitting his frames, with great weaves and nice jumping.

I still took him for regular exercise after he recovered from the procedure. The mustard is in full bloom at my house, and the dogs love to run through the deep stuff.

I am headed to Minnesota today for World Team Tryouts. I will be back next week and I hope to find that Scoop is back to his normal bubbly self, but that the snurfling is all gone!

I hope that your novice dog is sound and healthy and you are busy training instead of sitting on the bench like we are.

NJG

lesson time for all

this entry has 8 Comments/ in contacts, health, Training, When to train / by Nancy Gyes
March 9, 2011

I love lessons with the student who is coming this afternoon. She knows exactly what she wants to work on. She is prepared. She has course maps, she might have video all cued up to the run she wants analyzed. Sometimes lessons are in my office instead of the field and we watch her runs, look at the corresponding course maps, and do some failure or success analysis. What worked, what didn’t? She is a student of the system, always trying hard to understand where and when she should be moving or not, and trying to get the timing of her turns just perfect so the dog reads both her positions and motion and has time to respond correctly.

It makes training with her easy and fun. I am lucky to have many great students with lots of different breeds of dogs. I love that they are making an effort to learn what I am standing out there trying to teach them, and that they go home and do some very positive and effective training to the best of their ability.

Some days I wish I had a full time agility instructor telling me what to do. It would not take away my need to make daily decisions about where the holes are, but another perspective is really important at times. For now though I am in charge of the home schooling. Scoop is both easy and hard to train. I am pretty sure though that the difficult stuff just relates to the quality and quantity at times of my training. I like to train some stuff more than others, so guess what, we are good at the stuff I like to train, and we are so so at other stuff I don’t spend as much time on. I love obedience heelwork, and Scoop loves it too.  I like jump drills, so does Scoop.  I love serps and threadles, and I think Scoop has a great understanding of those skills. I need to get my brain in gear to go train contacts, so, guess what? My contacts are good, I want them to be phenomenol, but admittedly I don’t always put the time and energy into them.

I did train frames and dog walks the last two days, and I proofed my weave exits in a couple different training sessions. I stayed away from the fun jump handling  drills in the field and did some grid work with spreads in the small yard. I have been working handling but not simple grids and spreads and I had some bars down over the weekend. I don’t always have the time, nor does Scoop have an unlimited amount of energy to train everything we might consider doing every day. That might be better written by saying Scoop does have the energy but I really doubt that hours of agility training everyday is what my puppy needs. I want him to get exercise and play time that does not include physically taxing agility exercises. I don’t want to break him, he is not a machine I can pay to get repaired.

This past weekend I was at an AKC trial. Scoop did a nice job on open jumpers, but pulled the last bar when I opened my mouth a couple feet before he was going over it. He was curling back to me as well, but I will blame my jaws on the error. I have still not gotten really serious about teaching him to go on at the end of a course at a trial. He does not  know to look for his leash and he is turning back to me in his excitement. I am throwing the toy too much in training rather than leaving it at the end. For many years I would not throw a toy at the end of a course, I always placed it and let the dogs run to it. I did it because I didn’t want the dog to crash on the thrown retrieve at the last jump. Now I seem to have gone the opposite direction. I am throwing way too much. I CAN leave my toy at the end, Scoop won’t run around the jump or crash into it. I just forget to do so.  All the toy control work I did is wasted if I I don’t use it. Starting today I am going to balance up the end of the course work with toys left at the finish as often as I throw.

Here is Scoop’s jumpers course for you to critique:)

 

And I thought I would share one of Ace’s standard runs, he got another triple Q that day.

 

Genetic Studies

Katy Robertson and I swabbed every border collie at the trial this past weekend that had not been done in the recent past. We got at least 30 new samples. If you are willing to hand out swabs at a trial, and send them back postage paid by the researchers, we will be farther along the road to getting thousands of DNA samples of border collies for the control group for epilepsy, deafness and the ETS study. If you write to me at powerpaws@aol.com I will see that you are sent a package of swabs and you can join us in helping with the research.

I hope your juvenile agility dog is as much of a training adventure as mine is and that you are balancing up with your training act too.

NJG

wildman

this entry has 0 Comments/ in Fixing bad behavior, health, Scoop, seminars, teaching / by Nancy Gyes
March 2, 2011

Scoop is wild, maybe feral. He looks a lot like the photos at the top of this page, only bigger! I was only gone 5 days but he went south on me while I was in the east. I got home from teaching seminars at Clean Run yesterday afternoon and immediately took him to the field to play and train. Maybe I was too tired and he just thought he could take advantage of my obvious deficit in brain power. He barked his way through teeter, frame and weave training. He was still crazed today even though I got him and the rest of the dog family out for some vigorous exercise in the fields a few times.

I was pleasantly surprised to see that even with him acting like a feral beast, he still had a good sit stay. ha! I think taking him off the course 10 days ago at the show, as well as lots of really high value rewards last week in training made some lasting impression on him. ( i can dream can’t i?)

The weather is bad, every jump in the field was lying on its side when I went out to train this afternoon. Wind and light rain on and off then clearing for tonight’s classes which was nice. I have a show this weekend and want to train lots in the next two days. On the list: dog walk and teeter targeting and proofing; start line rewards, 20 A-frames and no more, lateral distance on weaves. Rain rain go away.

I wish I had time to do some of the fun drills I did at the seminar. Maybe next week. I put up five of the drills I did on the first morning. They are somewhat elementary as that is how I like to start a seminar, but there are a few threadles thrown in because it was a masters level group and I just couldn’t resist. They are at the end of this post, maybe you’ll have time to run them even if I can’t!

I put up a new page on the epilepsy study which can be accessed on the front page of the blog on the right side. The email of the researcher, Allison Ruhe is on the page, and the form you will need to send a bloodwork sample is there too. Just click and it will open up.

The ETS study is on track. The researchers are setting up a web page for information about how to participate, and there is more cool stuff to tell you about in the coming days. Thanks for reading, thanks for participating, thanks for your patience.

I hope you have a great week training your beast this week, even though mine is wild, he sure is fun and I sure do love him.

NJG

CR 2011 first set1CR 2011 first set2CR 2011 first set3CR 2011 first set4CR 2011 first set5

more on health studies

this entry has 7 Comments/ in health / by Nancy Gyes
February 27, 2011

I am so happy to read all the comments from those of you who have taken the time to write and express an interest in participating in the epilepsy study. Your willingness to take the time to send a blood sample will make a great difference I hope in finding out more about this horrible disease. All of us with epileptic dogs hope to spare others our anguish as well as hope that we can avoid bringing an afflicted dog unknowingly into our homes and live in the future.

Allison Ruhe is in charge of the study and I have begun forwarding your emails to her as well as sending the instruction form out as quickly as I am able. I am teaching a seminar at clean run through tomorrow and when I get to a real live computer I will put up the files here. I love my iPad but it isn’t easy to manipulate files on it.

Just to clarify a few details on the early takeoff study. That study is one which had it’s inception a short time ago and was initiated by Linda Mecklenburg. Allison Ruhe is also organizing that study but it is more complicated than just sending in blood work. A video of your dogs jumping will need to be analyzed to determine if your dog does indeed have symptoms of early takeoff. A website may be developed and more information will be forthcoming soon on how you can participate.

I hope to be involved in helping with the study as much as I am able. Right now I am collecting names and emails and will be passing them along to those involved in the study. I am sure Linda will update those that she has spoken to in previous months about this same study.

I have been asked about other breeds participating and I believe the hope is that more breeds that have been shown to have a high incidence of early takeoff will also be included. I am not a vet as Linda is, nor a researcher or scientist so many of the questions I have received will need to be answered by experts but I hope I can help get you closer to those experts and us all closer to a diagnosis or understanding of this serious health issue.

I have had a couple great days teaching here in Hartford for Clean Run! Great handlers, great dogs, great dinners:) and lots of fun! One more day to go till I am back home with my dogs and husband and oh yeah….the computer!

NJG

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