We didn't go.
But we did a couple of years back, and made the local news:
A corgi!
A blog about agility, corgis, and agility corgis
A corgi!
It was hot in Hitchcock - damn hot. We only ran two days. Maya got 3 Qs and a QQ on Monday. Annie got only one Q all weekend, but it turned out to be our best video, so she gets featured above.
Now we're in the dog days of summer. Only one or two trials between now and September.
The law, which comes into force from September 1, is particularly strict over dogs: prospective owners will have to pay for and complete a two-part course — a theory section on the needs and wishes of the animal, and a practice section, where students will be instructed in how to walk their dog and react to various situations that might arise during the process. The details of the courses are yet to be fixed, but they are likely to comprise about five theory lessons and at least five sessions “in the field”.
That went alot better than Tex's first run, which I posted earlier. In fact, Annie has done very well, and we are closing in (ever so slowly) on her MACH.
As you can see, my handling technique consisted largely of running around and occasionally, at random and unpredictable moments, waving my arm at Maya for emphasis (of my incompetance).
Fast forward three years - here is video from the 2008 AKC Nationals in Tulsa:
Oh, right. Still the same.
I've managed not to mess Maya up too badly - we've been to AKC Nationals twice, making the Challenger Round in 2007 and finishing 11th overall in the 8" class in 2008, and one of these days we'll get to MACH3. Unless my arm waving handling methodology fails me, that is.
He seems a good example of the handler using his own speed to motivate the dog. Of course, the dog is pretty fast on her own...
"You know," said Doc, "if you were to cross Lassie with a Cardigan Welsh corgi, you could get a colling card."http://www.lataheagle.com/full.php?sid=3481¤t_edition=2008-05-01
"You send that same corgi on a blind date with a shar-pei," said Dud, "and you could end up with a bunch of card sharps."
Aw, isn't he cute? The other dog in the clip is our old (and now departed) poodle mix Scooter, who Tex learned was a great deal of fun to torment.
So Tex and I started training for agility, which proved to not be any where near as easy as I anticipated. To make a long story short, I made every training mistake in the book, and some other mistakes that had not been published yet. But we forged ahead and tried our best. Here is some more rare footage, this of our first ever run at an AKC trial:
Nothing like a well trained dog being run by a skilled handler, eh? The AKC World Team tryouts are going on this weekend, and I bet alot of runs there looked just like this one.
We improved some after this, but not a whole lot - I should put together a blooper reel in fact. Tex is a great dog - smart, loyal, fun, energetic, kind to man and beast, and relatively clean. But he would rather stick his head in a bucket of live snakes than run agility, so I don't ask him to run (or do the snake thing either). We go for walks at Eisenhower Park instead.