Lyra - Nine Months - IPO obedience

I do not want Lyra to believe that the ONLY thing she does on the IPO field (or in the presence of the IPO helper) is protection work.  Dogs that associate the field with biting and not with obedience can end up with serious control problems later on; both in IPO obedience and in protection.

To prevent that, I'm beginning to work Lyra in obedience on the field - and in the presence of the helper.

The first few times I tried obedience on the field she spent most of her energy checking out the gopher holes.  I was sufficiently irritated that I put her away (being irritated is ok; just don't train!)

Next she figured out that we were going to work on obedience, but I had to work to keep her focused and motivated.

Now I feel like we're reaching a more equal partnership; I make the work possible and she rises to the occasion.  Today she was strong enough in her overall skills that I introduced the sit and down "out of motion" exercises for the first time.   I also did more "IPO" style heeling with my hand on the side of her head.  Eventually that hand will be moving, but for now I use it to position her and to give her comfort.

For those who will need to teach out of motion exercises, note that my body blocks her forward motion and my hands structure her to be correct - pretty much making it impossible for her to develop any bad habits.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vegZG9PG3m0

I don't plan to do a lot of out of motions until her heeling is consistent, but I'd like to introduce the idea.  Next I'll start doing them out of her "happy leaps".

I'm thrilled with the way she holds the toy while I give the commands; it removes the issue of rewarding for position and allows her to focus on what I am asking for.

2 comments

Madeline Gabriel

I’ve been enjoying reading about your IPO training. I’ve had a sort of high level overview understanding of the sport, but never thought I’d be interested because of the prevalence of corrections and rough handling. The way you write about it makes the bitework sound really fun for the dog. Since I’m planning to do tracking and some sort of obedience with my 4.5 month old puppy anyway and he loves to tug and is (so far) an unusually steady, confident dog, I’m doing a tiny bit of thinking about IPO. My puppy, however, is a Flat Coated Retriever. If you get stuck for topics to write about, would you consider writing on what makes a dog enjoy or not enjoy IPO? How do you know if you have a dog that would be a good fit? What are some of the pitfalls or cautions? There are a few other +R trainers in my area that are taking another look at IPO, partially thanks to the joyful way you describe your work/play with your dogs. Thank you for that!

nadeen

love this!! i actually saw someone use the in-motion exercise with her dog on sunday ;) it worked out very well.

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