Thursday, May 30, 2013

Puppy Class in kids drawings

I came across these drawings today. They are drawings made by my daughter Fenja - drawn probably about 3-4 years ago. I would guess she was about 6 or 7 when she made them.



I remember when she drew them and gave them to me.

Before she got so very busy with after school activities, she used to love coming along to puppy class. Sometimes we have had many puppies living in families and several kids accompany their puppies and come along to the same class - other times there have not been that many kids or none. Being a mom, and also someone who believes very strongly our puppies benefit from having people of all ages take part in the class - I love it when kids come along. So, my own kids were a staple at puppy classes for quite a while. They were great helpers in setting up for class, and sometimes there were bonus puppies that needed a Junior Handler!

Sometimes we would get `bonus puppies` show up from a rescue or shelter.
I have always encouraged the local shelter to get in touch if they have Puppies waiting to be adopted and drop in to Wags` puppy foundation skills class, at no charge. I think it benefits everyone! The puppies get a little outing with some good learning, a volunteer is likely to accompany them - and it gives that volunteer a chance to perhaps learn something new as well as get out and mingle and let the puppy meet some additional people and dogs.

Fenja`s drawings all focus beautifully on the exercises we did with the puppies. (and we still do these types of things, among many others). 

The top drawing  shows an owner working with a puppy to introduce the puppy to go through a chute. It`s just a confidence builder and something simple and fun - yet is very helpful for some more advanced exercises later on. So, dogs who have been introduced to chutes and many strange objects as puppies have a clear advantage.

The middle drawing is equally descriptive :-) It`s extremely beneficial to introduce puppies to as many different kinds of surfaces as possible and get them comfortable stepping on and confidently walking on anything and everything they might later encounter. In the illustration the puppy is practicing sits and downs on a slippery surface (can you guess what the surface is? well clearly: a snow slider toboggan!)

And the final drawing below here shows all the prep work necessary to get ready to teach puppy class. It`s a big job to get ready for the little bundles!

Yup. That`s me with the purple shirt and the mop. Floors always get carefully cleaned before any puppy enters the training room. Carefully selected props and items are brought out. Here we`re obviously setting up the chutes as well as a tunnel. (I believe that to be one of Fenja`s brothers helping with the tunnel).

Before Wags` had a home base and a permanent indoor location, classes moved around quite a bit: I have taught in many different locations in Banff and Canmore. For some of that time I even lugged around my own flooring which was assembled before each class, and again disassembled after...(see the blue rubber tile in the top right: yeah, that`s what that is. This is an extremely accurate drawing!)

What treasures these drawings are. There were a few more...Maybe another day I can share the rest. 

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Tommy in Black and White


Here is Tommy in Black and White. What a character. So many expressions in this Young little Guy. I love the one eyed look as he is engaged with his toy (top right). Tonight I`ll see Tommy in Puppy Foundation Skills class and we are going to work more on play: retrieve and tugging to be specific.

The owners were asked to bring two identical toys for tonight so I can show them a very cool, simple and extremely effective way of building solid retrieving skills in a dog. So many dogs learn to enjoy the `keep away` version of retrieving: with the owner going after the dog in hopes of getting the toy back...not something I recommend. 
So - we`re going to address that tonight, use two toys and get him - and the other puppies - enjoying coming right back to their people with the retrieve object. Simple, and SO much fun!

Teaching your dog to play with you using toys is simply one of the Very Best things you can do. Enough can`t be said about the benefits of human-dog play.
What you can do with great play skills is Magical. Nothing less!
So - on that note, I am heading out with my own dogs to play, tug, and retrieve!

Friday, May 24, 2013

Canine CSI: Murder Mystery in Banff

A shrill scream resonates in the dead of the night. You jump out of bed, to realize your partner is missing. As your mind feverishly races to figure what has happened, your friends surround you and convey the bad news – your partner has been kidnapped. As you grapple with your socks and grab your trusty dog’s leash you realize you have only 2 hours before your friend could be killed. Your hands tremble as you command your dog to search. Questions race through your mind… who could it be? Could it be the cannibalistic tribe that lives in the neighbouring valley? Or the strange man who accosted your car on the way to the campsite? Another scream pierces the air. Visions of the person being tortured flood your mind. Can you find the lost person before it is too late?

Have you always dreamed of becoming Sherlock Holmes? Well, dream no more, join us for this unique opportunity to work hands-on with John Rogerson: canine scenting and crime scene investigation course – it teaches you how to train a dog to find anything – drugs, explosives, even a lost person. Are you up to the challenge? Do you have it in you to become Sherlock Bones? And train a dog to become Dr. ‘Paw’son? Then take up the gauntlet and read on.

Past courses of this type have included:
  • Tracking, scent detection, advanced control and problem solving
  • Team and relationship building exercises in a variety of groups
  • Working on almost every exercise connected to controlling and having lots of fun with your dog
  • The first couple of days you and your dog receive training to become a super sleuth
  • The final days participants work in a small team of dogs and handlers while attempting to solve a heinous crime using your canine detective, your powers of observation, and problem solving skills to sort out the case
  • Arson, explosive, firearm, and drug detection (real weapons, accelerants, explosives and drugs are NOT used)
This is going to be an Amazing experience! What a privilege it is for Wags unlimited to be hosting this fun learning opportunity. You can find more details here.
We're booked in to do this course in Banff June 20-23, 2013 and the course sold out incredibly fast! Now it just so happens that *ONE* auditor spot has opened up as a cancellation. Some lucky person who has dreamed of getting in on a John Rogerson course will have a chance to join us...

Please Note: This course is not intended for law enforcement officers as it is a fun mystery course designed to “have some of the most fun you could ever imagine having with your dog” (quote from past course participant) as well as create new ideas for running dog training classes where there's a real purpose and end result to the training.


So what do you need to join? Do you need a degree in forensics? Be able to shoot straight or run like the wind?  Nah. What is needed is a huge amount of enthusiasm, the ability to get along with others and work in a small team, and… nerves of steel. This training course is like no other – can you handle the challenge? Yes? Then sign up today and don’t forget to bring along your thinking hat – you’ll need it!

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Everything feels great after a walk in the woods.

Sharing just a couple of shots from the other day with my patient and extremely cooperative models; Maggio and Pinot.


I walk around with a lot of photo inspiration these days - seeing trees, bushes, branches, and grasses as potential backdrops. Opportunities seem to be everywhere - it`s fun to be riding a massive wave of inspiration!

Bringing the camera on a dog outing brings me a lot of joy right now - and fortunately I think the dogs are really loving it, too. 

The reason I love to photograph my dogs in the woods so much is likely very very simple - it`s my `daily therapy session`- the time for me to recharge and renew and just spend time with these amazing four-legged friends of mine. 

I`ve heard a neat saying that goes  something like `there`s no problem or worry in the world that can`t be resolved from the back of a horse`and I feel a bit the same about our daily outings into nature. 

How could  Everything not feel great after one of these adventures!

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Tommy

Meet Tommy - the Awesome and Very Handsome 9+ week old English Bulldog puppy. He`s recently enrolled in Wags`Puppy Foundation skills class. I talked about him in a blog post just a few days back.
Yesterday I had the great honour to do a photo shoot with him. What a cute Dude! 
Here are just a couple of shots of Tommy. Enjoy.


Friday, May 17, 2013

The garden hose - in frequent use these days.

After a long winter and walking dogs that always were nice and clean when we came back home from our walks - the garden hose is now out, ready to hose off dirty dogs on a moment`s notice.
Most days I can`t deny Pinot and Maggio a good roll in puddles and mud - they get hot and want to cool off in whatever water they find. So be it. That`s a dog. Then we come home and hose off in clean water and quickly try to close the bedroom door so they don`t go have their after-run-nap in our bed!

AAWH. The pleasures of spring. Dirt. Muck. Dogs.




Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Puppy graduation

Here's Betty, the Beautiful. 
She will be graduating from Puppy Foundation Skills class tonight. If you read the previous blog post on "just let the puppies go - they'll figure it out",
there was reference made to Betty. Well, here is is.
Awesome puppy,and beautiful to boot.

Thanks for bringing her to a Wags' class - it sure has been fun to see her grow, develop skills and confidence!




Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Just let the puppies go - "they'll figure it out" ?

Some time ago I had a private one-on-one session with Meghan (not her real name) and her young adolescent dog, Sam (not his real name either). The main reason she had booked the appointment was because she needed some help with learning how to address Sam's fearfulness toward many things (including unfamiliar people) and reactivity toward other dogs.

As we sat on the floor talking, Meghan started by describing some events from the first couple of months after getting Sam. She had been told how important puppy class is, and heeding the advice, she took him to a puppy play group.

The play group was made up of a fairly large number of puppies, many of them considerably larger and older than 8-9-week old baby Sam. As people and puppies entered for class: they were encouraged to put the puppies down on the floor and let them go. Sam was completely overwhelmed by the commotion and all the rowdy puppies running up to him and often right into him, but the instructor tried to comfort Meghan and tell her it was all fine and that Sam would soon "figure it out."

The older, bolder puppies who had come to the playgroup a few weeks already were all wild and happy and excited, running around like kids too high on sugar - often bowling little Sam over as they swept around the room. Sam kept looking for an escape - his tail tucked,  his ears flattened against his head. He kept looking for a place to hide. When Meghan's instinct kicked in to protect him from some of the older puppies who kept coming over to him, running him over and pinning him to the floor - and she wanted to pick him up - the instructor told her not to do so: that this was important learning and again reiterated that "Sam would soon figure it out" and that this was all part of the very important socialization process.

Meghan's gut instinct was that Sam did not enjoy the play group. But she was conflicted because she had heard over and over again about how important it was to "socialize your puppy". She was told if she just keeps it up and introduces him to more and more dogs and puppies - "Sam would soon figure it out". She went back to that same puppy play group two more times. Each time with the same result. Sam would look for a place to hide: but Meghan was encouraged not to let him hide but bring him out to the face his foes. The encouragement being "Sam needs to figure this out."

After three visits to the play group, Meghan stopped going - deflated, unhappy but unsure what to do. The only thing she was somewhat certain of, was that this play group was not a place Sam enjoyed to be. 

Months then rolled by. Sam's fear issues now escalating and concern with other dogs getting bigger and bigger. And that's how I first met Sam and started to address these issues. 

Very unfortunately for a puppy like Sam: that puppy play group was really not a good confidence boost at all. On the contrary - within minutes of arriving the first time, Sam had already been convinced that perhaps this was not a safe place at all, nor were the other puppies safe. Add to that repeated exposure of the same...it would be like taking a young child to a playground full off bullies and saying "just go in there and join the fun - you'll soon learn to enjoy it".

When we put it into human language, we can see just how absurd that is - yet there is this very prevalent belief that somehow puppy "socialization" is just that: letting them loose together and they will all come out fine.

Sometimes we get it so wrong. 

"Socialization" is not a word I like at all. I think it encourages JUST that kind of thinking: just throw puppies into any group of puppies and "they'll figure it out - and better yet: they will learn to love it".

Maybe sometimes. But definitely Not always. What about all the many puppies out there - who are exactly like Sam and don't come out of it thinking it was any fun at all.

There are many things and situations we put our puppies and dogs in - the question we need to remember to ask is: 
"At what cost?" (to them). 
And the beautiful, yet simple question Suzanne Clothier reminds us to repeatedly ask: "How is this for you?"


Little wee baby Tommy -  on the left - is gaining confidence
by the minute and thinking he'd like to go see what this
big Betty-puppy is all about...
We need to learn to see what the puppies are saying in the moment? Their body language is extremely truthful: a direct mirror of how they are feeling - if they are not having fun: it really is our responsibility as their guardians and Best Friends to help them out. 

It's impossible to build confidence in a puppy who is pushed to feel overwhelmed, is scared and worried about his safety. 
They need, first and foremost to feel safe!

The iPhone photos here are from last nights' Puppy Foundation Skills class: where we could have had a "Sam situation". A tiny, wee baby puppy; Tommy - with three much older, bolder, way more rambunctious - and confident pups. Had we just thrown them together - I am not sure the little baby Tommy would have had much fun at all.

But instead we went very slow - to hopefully be able to go fast - later.

I like to start puppy class with the puppies on leash and by doing some training before we ever let them have an opportunity to play and go free. These 15-20 minutes are golden: for one, it allows an opportunity to work owner+puppy and practice some simple skills, but it also takes the focus and wild emphasis away from the other puppies and puts it where it belongs: on the dog-human bond. And lastly - it also allows plenty of time and opportunity to identify if there is a puppy in the group that needs to be given special consideration before the group is let go off leash.

Before we eventually did let them go off leash to have playtime, we had first talked about the big size and confidence difference in these puppies and how it was important to make certain that the older puppies would not be free to bowl over little baby Tommy. 
To gradually build him up: we encouraged him to stay in safe spots where the other puppies could not run into him! Having a tiny puppy sit protected by a person's legs on the floor is a great, safe spot for them to be able to see what's going on without being right in the middle of it.

The first several minutes Tommy spent sitting safely between his owner's legs.
He wasn't quite sure what to think about the older puppies. And that's fine! He's just a little, tiny baby. He needs to be able to develop at the pace he is comfortable and safe. 

All the people in the class were most fantastic, and all helped and "got it" about giving Tommy a safe "protector shield" so that the older puppies never once had a chance to take him out, roll him or bowl him over. Toward the end of the class - now with a good and safe experience under his belt  - he actually started to venture off and go explore a few feet away from the safety net of his person. And here's the gem photo to finish off with. Tommy, now braving it over to a much much bigger puppy: actually offering a baby bark, play-bow and inviting Betty to play!


What was the "cost" of going very slowly and carefully?

Confidence.