I wanted to bring my readers up to speed, as a lot has happened since I was routinely blogging.
You
may remember I purchased Hush as my first show dog, and while
conformation has been put on the back burner (for the time being), that
is still my ultimate goal with her. In the meantime, I’ve found I
absolutely love obedience, and am working towards getting her ready for
competition! At the end of last summer/early fall, I began taking basic
obedience classes with Hush at the Mt. Vernon Dog Training Club, a
wonderful group that runs incredible (and affordable!) classes out of
the basement of a church in Old Town Alexandria. Between classes, I do a lot of practicing with both dogs. Here are Hush and Milly in a sit stay while on a walk with considerable distractions (children playing on the sidewalk, cars, and the dreaded squirrel!). I love our practice time almost as much as our class time, as the improvements are so apparent in my daily living!
Basic
went very well – we took an 8 week course where no treats were allowed,
and this put a great foundation on her (you may remember I took the
same course with Milly). Treats are an incredible tool, but I have
become a firm believer in needing to know how to get your dog to perform
both with and without treat-based rewards. By not having treats in
class, I was able to really hone my skills as a handler, and learn the
importance of verbal and physical queues, and most important, verbal and
physical praise! The lack of treats in a very distraction filled class
enabled me to be firm when necessary, and produced great results –
particularly with her sit and stays.
At
the end of the 8 week course, Hush graduated alongside Evan, my best
friend Eileen’s dog. This was a great milestone, and we hosted a
graduation party for our dogs at Jay’s Saloon and Grill in Clarendon (a
section of Arlington, VA for those non-DC readers). The doggie
graduation party was a blast for both people and dogs, and was well
attended by friends and canines alike. Yappy hours and restaurants with
outdoor/dog friendly seating are always fun and a good way to reinforce
obedience with a multitude of distractions… so graduation was a perfect
excuse to get everyone out to celebrate! Here are some pictures from the patio of Jay's saloon on graduation! Hush is the golden and Evan is that handsome boy in the natural tuxedo! They're BFF - which makes obedience class even more fun and challenging - talk about a MAJOR DISTRACTION when your dog is in a down-stay, you're 30 feet away, and their best friend walks by in a loose leash heal!
After
basic, we continued obedience classes and moved up into the advanced
basic course – the goal of this course was to prepare owners and dogs
for the AKC Canine Good Citizen test. Advanced Basic was a 10-week
course, where treats were allowed. The class reinforced and perfected
everything we learned in the basic course, and incorporated more
distractions and exercises geared towards passing the CGC test.
All
dogs learn at different paces, and Hush is no exception. She has always
been a dog that takes quickly to certain things, and seemingly takes
forever to understand other concepts. For Hush, “down” is one of those
areas that she and I both struggled greatly with. In basic, this was the
hardest thing for us, and that struggle continued through advanced
basic. Down is a very submissive command, where the handler is
exhibiting a great deal of authority over the dog, and the dog is being
asked to go into a very vulnerable position. It was less that Hush was
not obeying or resisting me, and more that she just could not figure out
what I wanted her to do. Luckily, Mt. Vernon Dog Training Club is run
by incredible volunteers, and each teacher spent considerable one-on-one
time with us working on this.
On
the final day of class, we took the Canine Good Citizen test, and Hush
went into a perfect down. For us, down stay is easy, but getting that
down is hard. The rest of the test included walking in a crowd, meeting a
stranger with a strange dog, sit and down, sit and down stays, loose
leash walking, an off-leash recall (with a 20 foot rope dragging behind
for safety purposes), and being left with a friendly stranger while the
owner is out of sight for 2 minutes. Hush was perfect, and passed with
flying colors! We received both an official certificate from the AKC,
and our first ribbon (from MVDTC) upon graduation. While the Canine Good
Citizen is a certificate and not a title, many dog enthusiasts like to
include it as a suffix to their dog’s name, where you would also include
your title abbreviations as you earn them. I can’t tell you the sense
of pride I had as I updated Hush’s pedigree on K9Data.com to include her
CGC. With the updated suffix, I decided to include a more grown up
picture of her, as well. You can check it out here. And remember, those Golden Retriever and lab owners can use K9data.com to research your dog's pedigree! Is your dog not on there already? Do you know your dogs parents? Or have a copy of their pedigree? If so, you can enter your dog yourself!
So
where are we now? After the advanced basic course, we continued with
obedience, taking the Pre-Novice course, but as luck would have it, Hush went into heat for the
majority of the Pre-Novice course. Because of this, I requested I
retake the class to continue to solidify basics. The great thing is MVDTC lets you re-take Pre-Novice up to three times. Hush is no longer in heat, and we're about 3/4 through Pre-Novice, we have
learned so many new things – and perfected those we already know (like
the dreaded down!). I am currently finishing up this level of courses,
and will hopefully graduate and move to MVDTC Burke location, where
we’ll work each week at the Novice level until we're ready to compete! I am one step away from seriously training for competition with Hush, and I am so excited and proud!
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