9.09.2007

Schutzhund Saturday

Well yesterday was definitely a Schutzhund Saturday.

Champ's tracking is abysmal mainly because I don't spend enough time doing it and because I am constantly wondering if I'm doing it right. So I decided to go back to basics in tracking and just do lots of long straight tracks. I made it out to the tracking field by 9:30 with just enough time to lay a couple 100 pace tracks. I put food in each and every step. Champ kept his nose down but blew over 80% of the food and didn't do anything near methodical sniffing of each footstep. I comforted myself by stopping at Starbucks on our way to the training field.

Our fellow club members also reported lousy tracking - at least we're all in this together! It was a really nice day with the fog burning off into not-too-hot sun. I wanted to have our TD, Pat, watch us do OB since I missed our last OB day. Champ does his down nicely and I'm confident that he will do at least that well during his BH. We worked on sit out of motion (surprisingly easy) and fronts (not so easy). I got some good tips about paying Champ at the exact right moment. Unfortunately a little ways in, his brain just turned off and he was done working OB today, thank you very much. He hasn't done that before and both Pat and I were puzzled. So back to the truck he went.

Protection went well. We are working on handler sensitivity while doing the hold and bark. Champ ran two blinds very nicely. He improved and didn't look at me at all when I walked by the blind. He got a couple good bites from that. I wanted to work on the speed of his "outs" because he has been slowing down lately. So we did some driving bites and then outed him with Chuck holding his pinch collar line and correcting him if he wasn't quick. Chuck and Pat thought I was being picky until we did the exercise. Champ is going through some sort of slight testing phase. He got rewarded with an escape bite and he was a happy boy at the end of protection.

A lot of schutzhund training is sitting around with other club members for hours watching others train. Yesterday part of our discussion was about the liability of schutzhund dogs and their ability to protect in a real life situation.

I left schutzhund club around 3, ran a couple errands and went home to drop Champ off and go swimming with my mom and sister. I pulled into our driveway and went inside. I heard noises and thought maybe Matt or Kgosi was home (since Marty's car was gone). I called out their names and no one answered. I went and used my bathroom. While I was in there I heard noises in Marty's bathroom that were definitely a person. So I walked into Marty's room saying, "Marty?" and as I crossed his doorway a man came out of his bathroom. I started screaming and backing up into the hall. He cam into the hall fast. He was holding his head and making noises. I tripped as I backed up and fell onto the floor near my doorway. I was screaming, he was screaming, it was nightmarish. I have no idea where Champ was after I fell. Before that I had him next to and a little in front of me. The man just wanted to get out of the house and he ran by me and out the front door. I watched him run down the street and then I ran into my truck, taking Champ with me and drove away calling 911.

The police came and we walked through the house together. The thing that really made my heart sink is that when we walked into Marty's room I saw that the man had taken Marty's baseball bat into the bathroom with him. He was standing there trying to decide whether to come out with a weapon or not. So scary. More than anything I feel so grateful that he wasn't violent.

Turning my thoughts to Champ, I am concerned. He's been raised to be social, no human has ever been unkind to him. He really doesn't know that there are "bad guys" in the world. I have wondered in the past if doing a little personal protection would be a good or bad idea. I am thinking at least a little handler protection! Although I do feel that if the man had made any aggressive moves, Champ would have bit him. The man was very defensive in his body language, as was I. I am wondering if I should have had the presence of mind to tell Champ to bite or guard or something. But honestly, the whole thing happened so fast that there was no time for anything but instinct. And I haven't trained myself to launch my dog as instinct.
I put a call in to Frank and I plan on talking to Patrick about this. I want at least to teach Champ to do a building search.

What a long first post!

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