How can I even begin to summarize a "handling clinic"? To me, handling is such a personal thing.....good or bad: it is each handler's special qualities that present itself with each of their own individual dogs! That said, I went to a four day Scott Glen handling clinic up at Fido's Farm. Being one of the hottest stretches of the year.....I wrestled with taking the RV...which gets hot and does not stay cool without the generator running for dry camping.....or taking a tent that is as breezy as sleeping out side. I went with the tent. I took a sleeping bag pad...and though big, thick and promising the comfort of my temperpedic mattress.....I learned this about myself....I am not a good camper...happy yes, good NO!

Sally, Gyp, Nell and Bella all slept in their crates in the car.....which was cool in the evening and they are all used sleeping there. I took Snook into the tent with me.....she kept me warm when the temps dipped....and kept the coyotes away!
Each morning dawned with a light fog.....that dissipated with the intense sun. The clinic started as soon as the field cleared, trying to beat the heat.
As I mentioned, the clinician was Scott Glen from Canada.....the 2004 USBCHA champion and reserve champion....and 2009 Nursery Champion. He brought his very own special chair for use on the field......it doubled as a training stick on occassion.
Since the focus was on handling....I chose to work Nell. My intense 'Nell focus' started in March....and Nell is really starting to work nicely as a good team member for me. I have been mulling over some feedback I have received from a couple of different open handler friends that have watched me run Nell at a few trials this summer....and I had some questions I wanted to sort out with a little different handling perspective. Armed with two pages of a legal pad worth of questions.....that is exactly what I got!
What I took away from this clinic was.....I love how Scott handles his dogs, what he sees, and the precision of understanding he strives for. Those qualities bring really nice runs on a consistent basis. Though he handles a bit different from how I have trained....I do believe we met in the middle! That precision of understanding was lacking in my relationship with Nell...mostly because of the ambiguity I was creating. My "lie down" command had about 4 different meanings.....which was creating confusion when I really wanted a firm stop at the top! After some intense analyzing of my head and what my dog understands...I actually had some more effective tools in my shed for hitches.....instead of using a "lie down" meaning hitch instead of an actual stop. We did a whole open type of trial run today...and I really pounded on my head to use my communication tools to convey exactly what I wanted.....my poor head hurt a bit from using this precise muscle that I have not used before.....but Nell loved it! So then I loved it....and the wheel goes round and round!
My friend Monique wrote on her blog something that Scott shared with her at a lesson a while back "Your job is to always know where your dog's mind is, and be able to anticipate her next step at any instant during work. It's your responsibility to be one step ahead of the dog at all times." That tid bit has been burned into my brain....and is what I learned again and again at this clinic. KNOW YOUR DOG! If Nell wants to go to head.....the closer I put her there with a flank....the more I will have to lie her down to keep her from going to head. That is a "good" use of my lie down and I had best mean it. If I see tension in Nell, it is my job to see it and use the tools we have established to take the tension out.
The best part of going to this clinic was to be able to walk away and begin to formulate a plan using what I have learned with adjustments to each of my dogs and what I know about them. I am really looking forward to a very special trial that starts Thursday....LaCamas. I think I should go get KNOW YOUR DOG tattooed on the inside of my eyelids....that and WATCH YOUR SHEEP!
Tomorrow ends the four day clinic....I came home a day early to check the ranch but my "check engine light" came on and my van going to the shop for a check-up will keep me from going back for the last day. I'm really okay with how my clinic experience is ending....on a really great note with handling ideas for me to ponder and have become a part of my relationship with my dogs! Thank you, Scott Glen......for all that you gave me! Priceless.
Seize the Day!