This is a report from Darren Doran describing his latest training line for Theo. Regular readers of the blog are very familiar with this tracking team from New Jersey. Darren used a new design of tracking shoes, which is produced by Ray Holohan. We will have a separate post about them soon, when Ray is ready to start selling his product.
TRAINING LINE
The line is 1000 yds. long. This line was my first line using Ray Holohan's buck shock tracking shoes. 4 oz. of blood was used. Blood, feet, and articles were from the same deer. The line will be 36 hrs. old when ran and is set in an area the County burned this spring. The soil is very sandy here. The vegetation is sparse due to the burn and the woods are mostly oak and pine. Visibility is good here and the over story is somewhat open. There are numerous 90’S and one backtrack and one wound bed. Three articles were used on this line and were made from deer skin about 2 X 1 stapled to a 4 inch by 1 inch diameter dried piece of stick.
TRAINING GOAL
The goal of this exercise is to work on article identification, stopping and re-starting on the line and the backtrack. I will also start this line as a controlled search and see how Theo does.
ACTUAL LINE
It was 71 degrees, overcast and humid this morning. I started Theo in a controlled search about 80 yds. from the line and about 50 yds. into it from the hit site. I asked him to search and “find the blood”. He worked nicely in a left to right forward arc until we hit the line. He took the line back towards the hit site and through it and began searching. He looped back to the line and took it back to the hit site and was about to pass through it again when I alerted him on it. He stopped and smelled the hair and turned around. I gave him a piece of meat and we started tracking.
I thought this was going to be harder for Theo but his tracking speed told me differently. We did numerous stops on the line and I would reward him with a piece of meat and give him water. He restarted nicely. He found the articles and these were too big for him to swallow. Articles in the past were small pieces of skin and hair that he would pick up, swallow and continue tracking so fast I was not able to reward him for finding them. He took all the turns but one perfectly. The one he missed only took a minute or so to require the line. His tracking speed also caused him to miss the wound bed. The backtrack took seven minutes to work out. This line took 33 minutes to finish and does not include the controlled search.
CONCLUSION
Theo did real well on this line. What I thought was going to be difficult was very easy for him. He handled the controlled search excellent. There was no mistaking his reaction when he hit the line. Stopping and re-starting was good. The larger articles got him to stop and be rewarded for finding them. The backtrack still needs work but is getting better. Theo has a natural tendency to search forward and away from the last scent. When he circles back he doesn’t always make his circles large enough to cross back over the line. He does handle and when asked to “search here” he will respond. I’ll repeat this line and add 12 hrs. to the age and see how he does.
Tracking dogs for finding wounded big game. Also dachshunds for blood tracking, field trials, their breeding, training and more.
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Thursday, July 31, 2014
Monday, July 28, 2014
The Helderbergs - summer in its glory
Even though I have not posted any nature pictures here for a while let me assure you that I still take them, almost every day. Most of the time I post them on Facebook just because it is easy to post one-two pics at a time without any special story or report to go with them.
We are overrun by rabbits. We did not expect it because the winter was pretty severe, but it seems that many of them have survived and reproduced. You can see them just about everywhere - in our enclosure, by the driveway, in the middle of our fields and even int he woods. This is good news.
It is also exceptional year for wild flowers. The picture below was taken in June. Now the fields have been mowed.
Not a great year for bees, but we saw quite a few of them when sumac was in a full bloom.
We see quite a few birds around our place, and this American Robin fledgling risked its life and tried to get to our dogs' yard. I prevented it from happening and hopefully it survived.
We see at least two different flocks of wild turkeys. These ones came out onto a mowed path to get dry after a severe thunderstorm and downpour.
A new generation of barn swallows was born in our barn, and the young birds have already left. However, just yesterday I noticed a new nest in a different part of the barn.
We see a regular guest to our pond - Great Blue Heron. This picture was taken at a swamp by Tabor Rd in Berne.
This is also where I took a picture of this family of Canada Geese. They were resting by the road and when they saw our car, they walked to the water and swam away.
As always summer sunsets are spectacular and they really make me appreciate all the beauty around us. There is no other place that I'd rather be...
Saturday, July 26, 2014
Andy and Eibe are getting ready for Tracking Season 2014
By Andy Bensing
With
tracking season coming sooner than you think, in addition to brushing up my
dog’s tracking skills, I also want to make sure that she is physically and
mentally conditioned for the long season.
The early season especially, with the higher temps, can be quite
fatiguing.
This 10 minute video shows a
training exercise I did recently.
The main purpose of the exercise was to work on conditioning. My additional goals were to work on
line control and tightening up her check work on turns.
My seven-year-old Eibe has quite a bit of
experience by having taken almost 250 natural calls, and she has done upwards of 120
training lines in her five hunting seasons in the field. However, I still need to do
some training with her occasionally to keep her in top form. If I lay off training completely, she begins
to revert to some of her natural tendencies that are not always the most
efficient, specifically getting a little loose
on her line control and inefficient in working checks. Interestingly, with just a few exercises like
I initially used when she was younger
http://borntotracknews.blogspot.com/2010/04/journey-to-win-part-1.html
http://borntotracknews.blogspot.com/2010/05/journey-to-win-part-2-training.html http://borntotracknews.blogspot.com/2010/05/journey-to-win-part-3-pre-test-and.html
she straightens right back out
and uses what she had learned in the past.
This
particular training line was 1100 meters long in a hardwood forest and aged 72
hours. I used tracking shoes with minimal blood along the way with
stretches of upwards of 250 meters with no blood at all. There were ten 90-degree turns and eight mountain
bike/deer cross trails along the way.
The line configuration was actually designed for Eibe’s granddaughter,
Addi, who ran the same line at 24 hours two days before.
Initially I
was going to run this line at 96 hours to make it very difficult for Eibe, but
when we had a big thunderstorm that dropped almost an inch of rain on the line
on the third night I ran it at 72 hours instead. Sometimes tracking shoe lines do not hold up
too well in the rain. I
thought there might be a possibility that the line would be gone but as you
will see in the video, conditions were quite difficult but doable. Actually, they were perfect for what I was trying to do. The
point of the difficulty was to make Eibe struggle both physically and
especially mentally. A line of this length (1100 meters) would
typically take my dog about 45 minutes or so to run but the minimal scent
available created the desired effect and Eibe had to work very hard. It took her over double the normal time, 110
minutes.
As you
watch the video you will see that I put two ribbons on turns and on each turn
there is either a wound bed or at the very least I put a pretty good
squirt of blood right under the double
flag. I often do my turns like this in
training. For my young dog it encourages
close check work on the turns (which I wanted to refresh Eibe on). If the line were too difficult for Eibe and I needed to help
her advance to keep the exercise going, I would absolutely know where I could
find a good spot of scent to restart her. Luckily that did not occur and Eibe required
very little handling along the way. In
that same regard I also knew that within 2 or 3 yards of every bike trail/deer
trail crossing there was also a little extra blood squirted on the ground. That extra blood was for Addi to encourage
her to cross directly over to the other side of cross trails/roads/paths and
check for the line before checking left or right along the cross trail.
As you
watch the video I hope you enjoy Eibe’s careful hard work in the difficult
conditions and perhaps gain some insight into how to set up training lines to
maximize the learning opportunities for you and your dog when in the field.
The video can be accessed at
Labels:
advanced training,
Andy Bensing,
blood tracking training,
check work,
Eibe,
line control,
line sense,
scent shoes,
video
Thursday, July 17, 2014
To buyers of European dachshunds: Dual register your dogs with the AKC
By Jolanta Jeanneney
If you bought a dachshund fromEurope ,
it was probably registered with one of the FCI kennel clubs such as the
Deutscher Teckelklub. You bought your European puppy because you admired the
hunting desire and the conformation standard that was developed to ensure
stamina and agility. Now you wonder whether you should register your puppy with
the American Kennel Club. You probably heard how breeders associated with this
club breed mainly for the show ring and exaggerated conformation, with
disregard for performance and health. And why would you want to register your
teckel puppy with the AKC that has a different breed standard and provides no
quality control when it comes to selection of breeding stock? The reasons are practical rather than ideological.
If you bought a dachshund from
If you live in the United States , you need to register
your foreign-born dachshund puppy with an American-based registry. The American
Kennel is your best option.
By the way, it should be mentioned that the terms like
dachshund, teckel and dackel refer to the same breed. The word “dachshund” is
actually of German origin, and it means “badger dog”, as in German “dachs”
means badger and “hund” means dog. These days the Americans who work with
dachshunds bred out of European lines often refer to them as “teckels”. But make
no mistake about it – teckels are dachshunds!
The North American Teckel Club (NATC), which John and I
co-founded, is affiliated with the FCI and DTK. It is a small club, which
handles 9 teckel breeds that are differentiated according to the size and coat
type (standard, mini and kaninchen x wirehaired, longhaired and smooth). In the
AKC system dachshunds are registered just as “dachshunds” (one breed). It is
obvious that the United
States is very different from the European
countries. The distances in our homeland are vast by European standards. Field
and show events for FCI registered dogs are very infrequent and widely
scattered. The NATC holds events once or twice a year.
This post is not intended to criticize NATC, DTK or FCI, but
to show what a breeder loses by not registering an imported dachshund with the
AKC.
If there is a possibility that you want to breed your foreign-born
"Teckel" in the USA
according to the FCI regulations, your dog must be approved as suitable for
breeding by an FCI judge at a "Zuchtschau" and this may involve
driving a thousand miles or more. After the breeding takes place the subsequent
litter must be evaluated by a North American Teckel Club breed warden, and
there are few of these in the USA .
A procedure that makes a lot of sense in densely populated Europe is not very
suitable for the USA .
Quality control and genetic awareness in breeding are very important, but we
must encourage them here through education, not through the application of rigid regulations that may
require traveling long distances.
Teckel breeders in the USA must think ahead. At present,
it is possible, if not convenient, to operate within the FCI system, thanks to
the presence of the North American Teckel Club. However, it is not certain that
the NATC will survive over the long term. The NATC membership of less than 150
has remained static for a decade, and it has not been very successful in
recruiting those who use dachshunds for finding wounded big game and hunting.
If NATC fails, those who have not registered their FCI dogs with the AKC will
have nowhere to go in the United
States unless they want to turn to such
organizations as the privately owned United Kennel Club, which is run more for profit than for quality. Most
breeders will have to leave the country to qualify their dogs for registration.
We are very fortunate that the DTK/FCI allows their
registered dachshunds to be dual registered with the AKC. In this respect it
differs from the Verein Deutsch Drahthaar, which does not allow their registered dogs in North America to have anything to do with the AKC.
The AKC offers a registration system, which provides
pedigrees and DNA testing for parentage verification. But it offers more than
that. For people who are interested in versatile dachshunds, the AKC offers
performance events such as field trials, earth dog tests, human tracking,
agility etc.
Last year, seven dogs in the top ten AKC field trial dachshunds
in this country were either direct imports from Europe
or American-bred descendants from European lines. The all-time best field trial
dachshund FC Danika vom Nordlicht was bred in the United
States , but her pedigree goes back to dachshunds imported
from Europe . Her conformation was judged by an
FCI judge as Excellent (Vorzuglich).
Besides her AKC Field Championship Danika has other AKC titles: TD, ME
and EE2, which are earned in tracking and earth dog tests. She is a tracker of
wounded game as well. This year, so far the number one spot in field trials has
gone to Sherry Ruggieri’s Tüsöksori-Ugrasztó
Husniya, who was imported from Hungary .
Over the years
we have imported more than 10 dachshunds from Germany ,
France and the Czech Republic ,
all FCI countries, where dachshunds are bred according to the FCI standard
#148. All these dogs were subsequently registered with the AKC and they
participated in all kinds of events and tests in the States and Canada : United Blood Trackers and Deer
Search blood tracking tests (not associated with any registry), NATC shows and
tests, and AKC field trials. The offspring of these dogs are also registered
with the AKC so puppy owners can participate in the AKC events and breed their
dogs within the American-based registry.
If you choose not to register your foreign-born dachshund
with the AKC, the puppies you are
going to breed will not be eligible for registration with the AKC and offspring
of your dog will not be able to participate in AKC events.
So for practical reasons it makes good sense to dual
register your imported dachshunds with the AKC. This does not require you to
give up the advantages offered by such FCI organizations as DTK, but it does
give you maximum flexibility. You will
always have the possibility of
participating in AKC events like field trials, breeding to either FCI or AKC
dogs, and finally the assurance that your puppies will have the status of being
registered.
Ask yourself a question – what am I going to lose by
registering my European dachshund with the AKC (nothing) and what am I going to
gain (a lot)?
To register your foreign-born dachshund, you need to
send a copy of an FCI export pedigree, two pictures of the dog and fill out the
AKC application form http://images.akc.org/pdf/ADIMPT_1112_edit.pdf.
The fee is $100. More detailed instructions are listed on page 3 of the form.
John Jeanneney (left) is holding FC Gerte vom Dornenfeld, SwI/1a, who was imported from Germany. Gerte tracked wounded deer and hunted rabbits, and she is one of the foundation bitches of our breeding program. Late Jim Pitcher is holding FC Zuzelek's Gold-digging Gita, who excelled on rabbits. |
Labels:
dachshund field trials,
dachshunds,
dog breeding,
DTK breeding policies,
FCI dachshund,
teckels
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
Advanced blood tracking training with Darren and Theo
Darren Doran is continuing advanced training with Theo. A week ago he did a training line, which was 24 hours old, 1000 yards with 2 oz of blood and tracking shoes. The track had numerous 90 degree turns and 1 back track.
Besides working on the back track, Darren was also training for article identification, stopping and re-starting on the line and the "easy" command.
He says:
"I saw a deer get out ahead of us and I really like the way Theo ignored the hot scent and stayed with the line.
The line crossed a gas line and the brush was so thick in order to get back into the woods, I angled the line down to a walking path and went about 25 yardss to a hard right turn. Theo crossed the gas line and hit the path. He went right across the path and back along the edge of the gas line and woods.He went about 15 yards, came back to the path, went right down it and aced the turn.
At the back track he worked about 12 minutes before he reacquired the line. He's getting better at the back tracks, but we need more work there.
Theo took 45 minutes to do this training line and we're getting ready for bow season. The picture shows Theo cooling off in the Ireland Brook after the track.
Besides working on the back track, Darren was also training for article identification, stopping and re-starting on the line and the "easy" command.
He says:
"I saw a deer get out ahead of us and I really like the way Theo ignored the hot scent and stayed with the line.
The line crossed a gas line and the brush was so thick in order to get back into the woods, I angled the line down to a walking path and went about 25 yardss to a hard right turn. Theo crossed the gas line and hit the path. He went right across the path and back along the edge of the gas line and woods.He went about 15 yards, came back to the path, went right down it and aced the turn.
At the back track he worked about 12 minutes before he reacquired the line. He's getting better at the back tracks, but we need more work there.
Theo took 45 minutes to do this training line and we're getting ready for bow season. The picture shows Theo cooling off in the Ireland Brook after the track.
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