by dmg » Fri Sep 20, 2013 3:46 pm
Hi Rio
I'm having a very similar problem with my young dog (20 months) at the moment. She'll go maybe 80-100ft away but not more. Some of the reasons I put it down to
1. At around 12-15mths, she seemed to go a bit feathery on her recall, so I did a lot of recall work to bring her back under control, however, by doing so I realise I created a ranging issue. Obedience is fine but there's a thing of having too obedient a dog that they're too attached and afraid to leave you.
2. She doesn't seem to have the confidence yet to just 'go' and leave me, yet she is a very independent dog so I'm struggling to understand it. I'm doing a lot of general ignoring work at the moment to stop her paying attention to me so that she'll be more willing to leave.
So exercises I'm doing at the moment to try and bring this along.
1. Place a person at a certain distance away, let's say for example 100m away. Bring the dog on lead to where they should wind the person, when the dog winds and raises the nose, release and give the 'go find', on hearing the 'go find' the misper calls the dog. If the dog is moving towards the misper, the misper stops calling. If the dog stops, the misper calls the dog. Dog moves - misper goes quiet again (because the dog is doing what it should be doing, noise is interference). At the same time, the handler stays still while the dog is moving away from him to the misper so as to increase the range, if the dog stops and looks back at the handler, the handler moves instantly in the dog's direction so the dog sees the handler coming his way. The misper does all the work here. Finish the sequence as you usually do on the find. It takes a bit of getting used to and is all about timing. Repeat the exercise from the exact same locations, increasing the distance when appropriate. Treat this as a ranging exercise rather than a search exercise.
2. One I've heard that works but haven't tried yet, is you find a straight forest track, the misper gets in the car and calls the dog mad while driving away. As the car is still moving away, the handler releases the dog, misper gets out of the car and dives into the bushes calling the dog, finish as normal. Might sound mad I know but I've heard it works!!!You could use someone on a bicycle just as easily, just a quick way to create a lot of distance fast.
3. The other thing to be very aware of is yourself and how much you're 'talking' to the dog. Too many commands on a search can be distracting to the dog, be quiet and let the dog work.
4. I've started cycling with my dog now, great way of creating distance, yet she knows it's ok. We'll see how that works...
I would really appreciate any other ideas on this from people. I know if you've the right fantastic dog, ranging shouldn't be an issue but...
Good luck!
PS. Dutchie, in relation to your 'motivated walker' friend, is she walking ahead of her dog? Something I'm told you should never do, dog always works in front of the handler. Maybe I'm misunderstanding what you said though.