Bob's Agility Blog
Wednesday 29 April 2015
Agility Update
As I am back online am, albeit very slowly, I will try to catch up with results and performances to date as the 2015 season unfolds.
Whilst we pride ourselves in training to a highly competitive level and judge much of our successes on reaching National or local finals ,sometimes what appear slight achievements fail to stress the excessive amount of work that has been put in by handler and dog and I will highlight one such case as more important than any that follow.
Clare Hudson and Sacha recorded 4 clear rounda at the UKA show in Cambridgeshire last weekend and the accumulated points have taken the pair half way to Novice level. What is remarkable is that the pair came to me 12 months ago having all the faults typical of those trained by so called "Fun Agility" instructors. What this term usually means is " I as an instructor dont have a clue about agility but its a good way to make money" and the result was a dog that stuck like glue to its handler,couldnt jump anything higher than small height and attacked weavepoles only if the handler were waving an imaginary piece of cheese from side to side whilst walking backwards. Now Sacha an 8 year old springer x labrador is producing these results at Standard height, and is a lesson in perseverence and positive attitude by Clare. Easily the most improved dog we have trained over the past 12 months and she will help Clare enormously as she trains her young collie.
Now for the catch ups and I will mention the highlights and apologise in advance if I have missed anyone. Firstly Hayley Tindall having spent the winter reducing her dog Fifi s see saw time from over 4 secs ( another result of well intentioned but unknowledgeable trainers) to 1.6 seconds, gained the two Agility wins she needed to make Grade 7, in a day, and joins an ever increasing group of our handlers competing in Championship Classes. Catching up quickly is Sarah Peall with another small dog JRT Megan who has now reached Grade 6 to accompany Hayley in walking the majority of courses.Her border collie Tilly had some top 3 places too at the larger shows and we will mention more of this later.Third member of this super group of smaller dog handlers Suzanne MacLennan reached Grade 4 with Clyde whilst George continues to win consistently and just needs a little fine tuning before competing in Agility classes.
Of the more experienced handlers Hannah Houldsworth continued her good form that saw her 2nd overall at Olympia and 3rd in the international jumping round at Crufts with a debut win, running Ann Hinz,s Twix,and 3 wins at Lincoln with recently speyed Belle,Jenny Lambert ,2nd in the British Open ( medium height) at Crufts had numerous wins ,whilst the effort of 60 year old Ray Lambert outrunning Evie on Good Friday earned him and Rosie good placings. Evie made her Championship debut with Ace and reached the Final whilst also gaining points towards Crufts qualification on the Sunday at Scunthorpe finishing 7th against the best of British Agility,whilst also gaining 2 x 2nd places and a 3rd with.Roxy . Laura Wilson also made her Championship debut and recorded a clear round in the Agility class whilst Mistys strange refusal to take the tyre in the jumping round restricted any progression. They did however produce a very good clear in the Crufts singles class,not quick enough for points but a 15th place ,one behind Greg Derretts World Silver medal winner Detox.
Another of the unsung heroes Helen Jones gained her 2nd Grade 6 win with Belle her 6 year old rescue dog and anyone who knows both dog and handler can have nothing but admiration for this result whilst her even more difficult rescue dog Mac won the Beginners steeplechase at Bakewell,a truly superb performance not only because of the level of competition but because he was traumatised by an unsolicited Rottweiler attack 2 months previously. Still a little nervous of many things he has shown what he is capable of and is a credit to Helen.At the same show Veronica Wilson put her winter training to good use with wins for Ice and a 3rd for the difficult Mr.Celt,whilst Amy Pearce beat Evie and Roxy to 2nd place in the Novice jumping class
Continuing the unsung heroes line, Helen along with 16 year old Amy Pearce,and Veronica Wilson joined forces competing in the UKA team tournament and after the individual rounds were 3rd behind two other Field of Dreams teams consisting of much more experienced competitors with higher graded dogs . In the end the Field of Dreams team consisting of Hannah/Rye,Evie/Roxy ,and Ray Lambert/Rosie pipped Jenny/Wizz,Evie/Ace,Hannah /Belle to reach the national finals joining Hayley Tindall whose long drive to Reading proved worthwhile as she qualified for the UKA Beginners Steeplechase final. Other finalists already are Sarah Peall with Tilly in the G1-3 Vegas final ( won last year by Evie),whilst Hannah with Belle and and amazing run by Ann Norton with Rods Billie joined Evie and Ace in the final Adams Jumping cup. For a G5 dog to beat G6 and 7 dogs to qualify is testament to the work Rod has put in over the winter.
Whilst talking about reaching finals probably the best performance came from Linda Leaning and Standard poodle Benji who finished 9th in the Vegas ABC qualifier and is 1st reserve for the final Considering Linda is in her 60,s and Benji G3, not one of the renowned agility breeds to come so highly placed against allcomers is again a credit to the pair.
Whilst we can look forward to a busy and successful season I need to finish on a sombre note as sadly Jayne Wilkinson lost Percy and Nicky Jessop,Evie to very aggressive cancers, ,both at young ages, 8 and 4 respectively and whilst both were in their prime. It is events such as these that should make us realise how every moment with your dog is precious.In a recent magazine interview Evie was asked to give 3 tips for success and replied ,pick a handling system that suits you and your dog,be consistent, and thirdly "dont take agility too seriously,its supposed to be fun"" Wise words from a young head and epitomised bythe two ladies who suffered such tragic losses.
Wednesday 1 October 2014
Reflections on the WAO Team England Trial
Having just returned with Evie from 2 days and 7 runs at the England trial its time to review the performances and reflect on the whole experience .
At the beginning of the year as we were planning our training program Evie had two main aims, firstly to compete at Olympia and secondly to become part of a WAO development squad, if there was to be one. ( She benefited greatly from inclusion in 2012 but there was none last year). This was hopefully to lead to making the team in 2016 when we both felt her and Ace would be ready. We had worked on the skills we thought would be required in training but I felt Evie and Ace would probably suffer from lack of exposure to the types of courses that would be set as she has only done 3 x Grade 6/7 shows and a Friday afternoon at Dog Vegas hardly warrants sufficient preparation to compete with the best in alien conditions. Our main aim was to see if the pairing were competitive with the best and review our training accordingly.
The first jumping run was messy on a course more typical of a British show but with speed needed at the end. This speed wasnt needed as Evie made perhaps her only handling error of the weekend and was eliminated moving off too early on a relatively simple push round . Snooker was the next run as part of the games competition and we held little hope as Evie had never worked in such a class. She selected her options with help from Jayne Widdess who was familiar with the rules and my only question was whether there was a back up plan if she missed one of the red jumps. Her answer " there is no way i should miss the red jumps" said it all. To be fair I have seen harder snooker challenges but Evies option of going for the maximum points, each of which consisted of 2 sets of 6 weaves plus a jump,emhasised our weave training prior to the trials and a faultless clear resulted. To win against such competition was a bonus but more importantly ,I think, gave Evie the confidence that she could compete. The games class gave a slight relief from the pressure of the overall competition but still showed the selectors the relative merits of the competitors abilities and favourites were starting to emerge. The first agility round ended the day and this was really well run until Evie over worked the weave entrance 2 from home resulting in a missed entry and 5 faults. Even with the re entry and added time there were only 6 faster dogs so thoughts about not being competitive quickly vanished and we reflected on a fairly successful day even though the overall placings of 21st didnt reflect this.
Day 2 began walking the Gamblers course at 7.45 prior to the second jumping round. Ace ran well but what we thought was a decent score was quite low resulting in a 10th place overall in games. However Ace had looked good as we moved onto the jumping round judged by Martin Cavill. I have always enjoyed watching people run Martins tests as they usually involve close control at speed with lots of obsticle discrimination.This was no different and after Evie opted for the more difficult but faster start Ace decided to ignore her for the lure of the floppy tunnel and yet another elimination. This was the sort of error I expected and we sometimes forget how young Ace is and he has yet to sometimes curb his initial enthusiasm for the equipment that would have been learnt had we competed more at this level. It left me thinking Evie needed at least one good round from the last 2 to impress.
One look at the Agility course proved this to be the point, it was difficult but the lines were good and I felt if they got past 5 they could do well. In the end they did and my concerns regarding the course were confirmed as there were only 4 clears from 40 runs. Evie finished 2nd 0.17 seconds behind. That put us into a trickier than usual Speedstakes with a real chance of attracting the selectors eye. Evie for once admitted to being a little nervous but that comes with expectancy and until now her only aim was to run well and show her talents. My advice was merely to ignore what could go wrong, focus on the line we had decided and think of nothing else. She opted for the tighter serpentine start and front cross before the a frame that I had concerns about. I am rapidly, however, leaving such decisions to Evie who executed both parts perfectly and combined with a superb second entry into the weaves completed her best run of the competition. It was only when after the show I checked the times that I realised she had won beating current internationals and previous WAO medal winners.
Having reviewed the performances and relative times etc it is pleasing to see that despite their youth, Evie and Ace are competitive on these courses and the occasional lack of consistency is IMO merely lack of experience. From my point it is pleasing to know that we have worked on the things that matter and her trust in the dog to do what he does hundreds of times in training showed in those two final pressured runs. We rarely run courses , tending to make the simple handling skill " world class" and I think we are on the right track.Doing the simple things well and ingraining the correct behaviour to an early cue is our mainstay work.
For the record and for the statisticians Evies 2nd placed agility run was beaten by only 2 standard dogs,the awesome Puzzle with Gold Medal winner Karen Marriott and the ultra consistent Jess Clarehugh,again a medal winner last year, both by less than 0.6 seconds and the Speedstakes win beaten only again by Karen this time by a mere 0.23 secs. As both these dogs were jumping at a lower height it gives me confidence that next years ambition of being competitive with the "big boys" is realistic.
My overall view of the selection weekend was of a very well run and professional event but I would expect no less,my only concern now,not just on a personal note , is how the selectors judge performance. The top 3 maxi height dogs owed their placings much to the fact that they didnt suffer eliminations that the majority further down the list did,however these combinations were 2-3 seconds behind the fastest times of the class in Agility and 3-6 seconds behind Aces winning Speed stakes time. The Standard class was remarkably strong with Jess Clarehugh,Alan Wildman and Jo Tristram almost faultless and Karen Marriott quickest in all classes with the exeption of one elimination. As we go further down the heights the variance between speed and accuracy enters a whole new area with the higher placed dogs going clear but some 10-15 seconds behind Steven Richardson and Libby. On the World stage there is little reward for accuracy at such a cost to speed and highlights to me the ridiculous situation we have with KC grading system and minute numbers of small dogs in classes leading to promotion to grades well above their ability. There were some quick exciting smaller breeds but like their larger counterparts,speed comes at a cost and one elimination ,that is par for the course put some of these way out of contention if overall placings are any guide.
In the end it was a very enjoyable weekend and we more than achieved our objectives,like many we will have to wait until December to see if the session brings the ultimate prize but we have at least ruffled a few feathers and got the partnership noticed. Evies attitude has been exemplary and despite healthy differences in opinions we work well together . I would like to thank Greg for his help when needed and Evie will no doubt point to the benefits of working with Shaun ,Jo and Anthony at the Clear Q summer camp. We couldnt have won the snooker without help from Jayne Widdess and we couldnt have been as successful with out the weekly challenges and time comparisons offered by the Lamberts,Hannah and Ann Hinz ( agility trainer extrodinaire).
The next two months are geared to Olympia and re enforcing the contact criteria in the ring. If we manage a jumping win to G7 that will be a bonus.
Having just returned with Evie from 2 days and 7 runs at the England trial its time to review the performances and reflect on the whole experience .
At the beginning of the year as we were planning our training program Evie had two main aims, firstly to compete at Olympia and secondly to become part of a WAO development squad, if there was to be one. ( She benefited greatly from inclusion in 2012 but there was none last year). This was hopefully to lead to making the team in 2016 when we both felt her and Ace would be ready. We had worked on the skills we thought would be required in training but I felt Evie and Ace would probably suffer from lack of exposure to the types of courses that would be set as she has only done 3 x Grade 6/7 shows and a Friday afternoon at Dog Vegas hardly warrants sufficient preparation to compete with the best in alien conditions. Our main aim was to see if the pairing were competitive with the best and review our training accordingly.
The first jumping run was messy on a course more typical of a British show but with speed needed at the end. This speed wasnt needed as Evie made perhaps her only handling error of the weekend and was eliminated moving off too early on a relatively simple push round . Snooker was the next run as part of the games competition and we held little hope as Evie had never worked in such a class. She selected her options with help from Jayne Widdess who was familiar with the rules and my only question was whether there was a back up plan if she missed one of the red jumps. Her answer " there is no way i should miss the red jumps" said it all. To be fair I have seen harder snooker challenges but Evies option of going for the maximum points, each of which consisted of 2 sets of 6 weaves plus a jump,emhasised our weave training prior to the trials and a faultless clear resulted. To win against such competition was a bonus but more importantly ,I think, gave Evie the confidence that she could compete. The games class gave a slight relief from the pressure of the overall competition but still showed the selectors the relative merits of the competitors abilities and favourites were starting to emerge. The first agility round ended the day and this was really well run until Evie over worked the weave entrance 2 from home resulting in a missed entry and 5 faults. Even with the re entry and added time there were only 6 faster dogs so thoughts about not being competitive quickly vanished and we reflected on a fairly successful day even though the overall placings of 21st didnt reflect this.
Day 2 began walking the Gamblers course at 7.45 prior to the second jumping round. Ace ran well but what we thought was a decent score was quite low resulting in a 10th place overall in games. However Ace had looked good as we moved onto the jumping round judged by Martin Cavill. I have always enjoyed watching people run Martins tests as they usually involve close control at speed with lots of obsticle discrimination.This was no different and after Evie opted for the more difficult but faster start Ace decided to ignore her for the lure of the floppy tunnel and yet another elimination. This was the sort of error I expected and we sometimes forget how young Ace is and he has yet to sometimes curb his initial enthusiasm for the equipment that would have been learnt had we competed more at this level. It left me thinking Evie needed at least one good round from the last 2 to impress.
One look at the Agility course proved this to be the point, it was difficult but the lines were good and I felt if they got past 5 they could do well. In the end they did and my concerns regarding the course were confirmed as there were only 4 clears from 40 runs. Evie finished 2nd 0.17 seconds behind. That put us into a trickier than usual Speedstakes with a real chance of attracting the selectors eye. Evie for once admitted to being a little nervous but that comes with expectancy and until now her only aim was to run well and show her talents. My advice was merely to ignore what could go wrong, focus on the line we had decided and think of nothing else. She opted for the tighter serpentine start and front cross before the a frame that I had concerns about. I am rapidly, however, leaving such decisions to Evie who executed both parts perfectly and combined with a superb second entry into the weaves completed her best run of the competition. It was only when after the show I checked the times that I realised she had won beating current internationals and previous WAO medal winners.
Having reviewed the performances and relative times etc it is pleasing to see that despite their youth, Evie and Ace are competitive on these courses and the occasional lack of consistency is IMO merely lack of experience. From my point it is pleasing to know that we have worked on the things that matter and her trust in the dog to do what he does hundreds of times in training showed in those two final pressured runs. We rarely run courses , tending to make the simple handling skill " world class" and I think we are on the right track.Doing the simple things well and ingraining the correct behaviour to an early cue is our mainstay work.
For the record and for the statisticians Evies 2nd placed agility run was beaten by only 2 standard dogs,the awesome Puzzle with Gold Medal winner Karen Marriott and the ultra consistent Jess Clarehugh,again a medal winner last year, both by less than 0.6 seconds and the Speedstakes win beaten only again by Karen this time by a mere 0.23 secs. As both these dogs were jumping at a lower height it gives me confidence that next years ambition of being competitive with the "big boys" is realistic.
My overall view of the selection weekend was of a very well run and professional event but I would expect no less,my only concern now,not just on a personal note , is how the selectors judge performance. The top 3 maxi height dogs owed their placings much to the fact that they didnt suffer eliminations that the majority further down the list did,however these combinations were 2-3 seconds behind the fastest times of the class in Agility and 3-6 seconds behind Aces winning Speed stakes time. The Standard class was remarkably strong with Jess Clarehugh,Alan Wildman and Jo Tristram almost faultless and Karen Marriott quickest in all classes with the exeption of one elimination. As we go further down the heights the variance between speed and accuracy enters a whole new area with the higher placed dogs going clear but some 10-15 seconds behind Steven Richardson and Libby. On the World stage there is little reward for accuracy at such a cost to speed and highlights to me the ridiculous situation we have with KC grading system and minute numbers of small dogs in classes leading to promotion to grades well above their ability. There were some quick exciting smaller breeds but like their larger counterparts,speed comes at a cost and one elimination ,that is par for the course put some of these way out of contention if overall placings are any guide.
In the end it was a very enjoyable weekend and we more than achieved our objectives,like many we will have to wait until December to see if the session brings the ultimate prize but we have at least ruffled a few feathers and got the partnership noticed. Evies attitude has been exemplary and despite healthy differences in opinions we work well together . I would like to thank Greg for his help when needed and Evie will no doubt point to the benefits of working with Shaun ,Jo and Anthony at the Clear Q summer camp. We couldnt have won the snooker without help from Jayne Widdess and we couldnt have been as successful with out the weekly challenges and time comparisons offered by the Lamberts,Hannah and Ann Hinz ( agility trainer extrodinaire).
The next two months are geared to Olympia and re enforcing the contact criteria in the ring. If we manage a jumping win to G7 that will be a bonus.
Friday 12 September 2014
UKA successes
We are now beginning a month of UKA shows to practice for the WAO Team GB trials starting at Bakewell on the 6th. This is quite a small show but the inclusion of the "Masters" class means a few of the countrys top UKA handlers venture in search of points that will take them to either the Grand Final or automatic qualification into the England team.
Evie continued her aim of making as many finals as possible this year ,thats 11 at the moment with all dogs,and unable to run Ace because of a slight injury she qualified Blaze and Roxy for the "Agility for Juniors " Final sanwiching Amy Pearce who came 2nd with Calli. This is yet another junior final for Amy, a popular member of the Thursday night sessions and she is now looking like the "Ice Queen " seemingly unaffected by nerves as she produced a faultless clear agility round to go with her 5 faults in the jumping leg.Mum ,not so confident,still hides behind the tent until the end.
Sarah Peall continued her successes with wins for Megan and Tilly as did Suzanne MacLennan with both George and Clyde,the latter running superbly until boyfriend Steve became more attractive than her handler and he ran past the lat two jumps ,twice, thus consigning .Steve to a weekend in the caravan. It is so rewarding to see the progress these two handlers have made this year and we watch expecting fast clear rounds and are surprised if either dont. As both are still in their first year of competing it is quite remarkable.
Suzanne however excelled all expectation and achieved her 4th place in the UKA National finasl by finishing runner up in the Circular Knockout. Apart from qualifying 2 dogs for the Beginners steeplechase final Suzanne has qualified in the pairs ,with Helen Jones and Knock Out beating handlers who on paper, work much higher levels. This latest success saw her finish only 0.2 seconds behind England International,Stephen Richardson and multi Championship Winner Libby. We now have 6 handlers and 9 dogs competing in 6 classes at the finals and for all but Evie this will be their first appearance, so what a brilliant achievement for all.
Finally on par with Suzannes success is Helen Jones run with Mac her young rescue dog. Helen doesnt do it the easy way and has worked so hard to take Belle to grade 6 and has worked even harder with Mac. It was therefore brilliant to see him go clear and finish 3rd in his first ever run beaten only by 2 Veteran dogs with solid agility pedigree. Dianne Beresfords Wookie,a grade 7 dog until last year,and Evie with Moss.Helen has worked so hard on his focus and this is the start of a successful career.
A quiet weekend for most I think but we make a 5 o clock start for Cambridgeshire on Sunday where I will be judging
We are now beginning a month of UKA shows to practice for the WAO Team GB trials starting at Bakewell on the 6th. This is quite a small show but the inclusion of the "Masters" class means a few of the countrys top UKA handlers venture in search of points that will take them to either the Grand Final or automatic qualification into the England team.
Evie continued her aim of making as many finals as possible this year ,thats 11 at the moment with all dogs,and unable to run Ace because of a slight injury she qualified Blaze and Roxy for the "Agility for Juniors " Final sanwiching Amy Pearce who came 2nd with Calli. This is yet another junior final for Amy, a popular member of the Thursday night sessions and she is now looking like the "Ice Queen " seemingly unaffected by nerves as she produced a faultless clear agility round to go with her 5 faults in the jumping leg.Mum ,not so confident,still hides behind the tent until the end.
Sarah Peall continued her successes with wins for Megan and Tilly as did Suzanne MacLennan with both George and Clyde,the latter running superbly until boyfriend Steve became more attractive than her handler and he ran past the lat two jumps ,twice, thus consigning .Steve to a weekend in the caravan. It is so rewarding to see the progress these two handlers have made this year and we watch expecting fast clear rounds and are surprised if either dont. As both are still in their first year of competing it is quite remarkable.
Suzanne however excelled all expectation and achieved her 4th place in the UKA National finasl by finishing runner up in the Circular Knockout. Apart from qualifying 2 dogs for the Beginners steeplechase final Suzanne has qualified in the pairs ,with Helen Jones and Knock Out beating handlers who on paper, work much higher levels. This latest success saw her finish only 0.2 seconds behind England International,Stephen Richardson and multi Championship Winner Libby. We now have 6 handlers and 9 dogs competing in 6 classes at the finals and for all but Evie this will be their first appearance, so what a brilliant achievement for all.
Finally on par with Suzannes success is Helen Jones run with Mac her young rescue dog. Helen doesnt do it the easy way and has worked so hard to take Belle to grade 6 and has worked even harder with Mac. It was therefore brilliant to see him go clear and finish 3rd in his first ever run beaten only by 2 Veteran dogs with solid agility pedigree. Dianne Beresfords Wookie,a grade 7 dog until last year,and Evie with Moss.Helen has worked so hard on his focus and this is the start of a successful career.
A quiet weekend for most I think but we make a 5 o clock start for Cambridgeshire on Sunday where I will be judging
Thursday 4 September 2014
Here is my first blog which I intend to update on a regular basis. Its purpose is 3 fold. Firstly to highlight all the successes our handlers are achieving and as there are so many this will have to be updated weekly, secondly to promote any events of interest to our members, and thirdly to allow my thoughts on Agility to reach a wider audience. In the past I have been very controversial in print and I havent mellowed with age but I will also try to be constructive with any criticism I make on a sport/activity that I have been seriously involved in for 12 years now.
Olympia
To those new to agility the highlight for most ambitious handlers is to reach the finals at Olympia. This IMO surpasses Crufts particularly as finalists will be running in front of 10000 noisy spectators at the Horse of the Year Show in December. We are delighted that two of our girls have made it to this prestigious event. Evie Coyne with Ace in the Novice class and Hannah Houldsworth with Ann Hinzs Belle at the top level, Senior class. Both are exceptional achievements and Evie would have had two dogs there but for Roxy falling of the sub standard dogwalk in the semi final ( I will comment more at a later date).These two girls train together every Tuesday afternoon along with the Lamberts who we mention later and I am convinced the support each handler gives to each other has helped them achieve their success
Crufts
The largest most prestigious dog show in the world and we have two handlers competing in the most important 2 classes of the event and to top it all they are husband and wife. Jenny Lambert qualified for the British Open recently at the KC festival with Wizz, an event open to all g6/7 dogs from all over Europe. She did this with an injury that meant husband Ray ran Wizz at the Northern Championship show where his win qualified him for the Championship Final. Both have trained with me for about 4 years now and there success is thoroughly deserved.
Of less standing in the overall picture but of no less importance to one of our longest standing members is the Qualification by Veronica Wilson and Ice for next years Laser Pairs final,a fitting end to a year of frustration for Veronica and also Evie and Jayne Widdess ,whom I train in Norfolk turned " professional " recently ,Evie winning the Dog Vegas Final along with £100 ,whilst Jayne won a similar sum taking the UKA National final from Nikki Collins who also used to train here.
Progression
There are too many wins here to mention but firstly huge congratulations to handlers in their first year of competition. Hayley Tindall and Fifi reached Grade 6 with numerous wins ,as did Sarah Peall who reached Grade 5 with Megan. Both compete with small dogs and we are developing quite a few of these now so the competition will be interesting over the next couple of years. Im sure these handlers welcome each others input and certainly provide the competitive edge in classes where quite often the competitive element is lacking. Similarly Suzanne MacLennan with medium sized working Cockers had 8 wins over the past 2 weeks and Clyde has progressed to grade 2. Suzanne I predict will be running at Grade 6 next year whilst the other two will be Grade 7.
We must also mention Amy Pearce who comes from Rotherham each week reaching Grade 3 with Calli, Kirsty Ann Mitchell finally believing in herself winning into Grade 2 and Laura Wilson taking Misty to Grade 7 almost in a weekend not forgetting Shky Austin reaching Grade 4 with Oki.
There have been many other highlights particularly Irene Ward our oldest handler who had two second places with the lovely Rosie despite almost quitting competition the previous week and this brings me onto my final note as we go from one age extreme to the other. We have already mentioned Evie aged 14 and Amy15 ,but we now have 15 year old Ryan,8 year old Rees and 5 year old Mia training regularly on Monday nights and it is so rewarding to see the enthusiasm and understanding develop in these youngsters,
There ends my success catch up, future blogs will be shorter and more current but my first major Agility posting will be on what I feel is the ridiculous current grading system
Olympia
To those new to agility the highlight for most ambitious handlers is to reach the finals at Olympia. This IMO surpasses Crufts particularly as finalists will be running in front of 10000 noisy spectators at the Horse of the Year Show in December. We are delighted that two of our girls have made it to this prestigious event. Evie Coyne with Ace in the Novice class and Hannah Houldsworth with Ann Hinzs Belle at the top level, Senior class. Both are exceptional achievements and Evie would have had two dogs there but for Roxy falling of the sub standard dogwalk in the semi final ( I will comment more at a later date).These two girls train together every Tuesday afternoon along with the Lamberts who we mention later and I am convinced the support each handler gives to each other has helped them achieve their success
Crufts
The largest most prestigious dog show in the world and we have two handlers competing in the most important 2 classes of the event and to top it all they are husband and wife. Jenny Lambert qualified for the British Open recently at the KC festival with Wizz, an event open to all g6/7 dogs from all over Europe. She did this with an injury that meant husband Ray ran Wizz at the Northern Championship show where his win qualified him for the Championship Final. Both have trained with me for about 4 years now and there success is thoroughly deserved.
Of less standing in the overall picture but of no less importance to one of our longest standing members is the Qualification by Veronica Wilson and Ice for next years Laser Pairs final,a fitting end to a year of frustration for Veronica and also Evie and Jayne Widdess ,whom I train in Norfolk turned " professional " recently ,Evie winning the Dog Vegas Final along with £100 ,whilst Jayne won a similar sum taking the UKA National final from Nikki Collins who also used to train here.
Progression
There are too many wins here to mention but firstly huge congratulations to handlers in their first year of competition. Hayley Tindall and Fifi reached Grade 6 with numerous wins ,as did Sarah Peall who reached Grade 5 with Megan. Both compete with small dogs and we are developing quite a few of these now so the competition will be interesting over the next couple of years. Im sure these handlers welcome each others input and certainly provide the competitive edge in classes where quite often the competitive element is lacking. Similarly Suzanne MacLennan with medium sized working Cockers had 8 wins over the past 2 weeks and Clyde has progressed to grade 2. Suzanne I predict will be running at Grade 6 next year whilst the other two will be Grade 7.
We must also mention Amy Pearce who comes from Rotherham each week reaching Grade 3 with Calli, Kirsty Ann Mitchell finally believing in herself winning into Grade 2 and Laura Wilson taking Misty to Grade 7 almost in a weekend not forgetting Shky Austin reaching Grade 4 with Oki.
There have been many other highlights particularly Irene Ward our oldest handler who had two second places with the lovely Rosie despite almost quitting competition the previous week and this brings me onto my final note as we go from one age extreme to the other. We have already mentioned Evie aged 14 and Amy15 ,but we now have 15 year old Ryan,8 year old Rees and 5 year old Mia training regularly on Monday nights and it is so rewarding to see the enthusiasm and understanding develop in these youngsters,
There ends my success catch up, future blogs will be shorter and more current but my first major Agility posting will be on what I feel is the ridiculous current grading system
Thursday 24 July 2014
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