Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Scout Meetings

Presentations to scout groups recently were on our canines' calendar. We took both to my sister's Girl Scout troop and Cub Scout pack meetings - on the same day! Afternoon with the GS, dinner with cousins and then to the cub pack. Too long a day for Amanda's energy level; she did the minimum by evening. Dogs enjoyed almost everything - except crate confinement while we ate dinner.

The girls in Amanda's troop are older so I discussed therapy dog visits as well as other dog activities - agility, rally, etc and we talked about dog training. Both Noche and River did tricks. River was in his element and Noche handled the attention quite well. I discovered that I can talk about dog activities for quite a long time LOL

Kept it a bit shorter for the younger boys - a little intro about therapy and activities and right into demos using volunteers. Finished up with a line for each dog as all the scouts and some family members got a turn to greet each dog and have them do a trick - although River was a bit sick of play dead by the end and I had to take that off his repertoire near the end. Noche only had to "boing" to be a hit there!

Used a chair as a walker to demonstrate walking with a dog. Made a tunnel with a child leaning agaisnt a physio ball so River could do under and then holding a hula hoop for jumping - using as many volunteers as we could. Had to limit jumping because of the slippery floor.

This week I visited a Brownie GS troop with River, along with 3 other KPETS teams. The previous experience gave me some confidence about this presentation. I knew River would do his part, as long as I could handle the talking. Amanda was originally planning to participate, but got a last-minute babysitting job. As this was an official KPETS visit, Noche was not eligible to go; certainly I couldn't take both dogs anyway.

They had seen the KPETS video just beforehand ( although it's been over a year for me, so I had to wing that part), so I reviewed very basic info. Then talked about other dog activities. Golden owner mentioned breed ring and demonstrated "stacking"; Rottie owner explained carting (no demo), other team has a St Bernard. She coordinated the visit as her daughter is in the troop. Other teams fairly new to KPETS, so I got the talking gig. And River is a great demo dog. Touched on rally, obedience, agility, freestyle in the demo. Mentioned other acitivities, too - used a helpful KPETS-provided outline that I expanded. Tried to use volunteers for similar demos as with the Cub Scouts. Wish I had remembered to have "posts" for a figure 8 heeling - next time?

Interesting difference between Cub Scouts and Brownies appraoch to the dogs - the boys wanted to individually give them a command to do a trick and reward with a treat - the girls mostly wanted to crowd around and pet the dogs - River enjoyed both types of attention.

Allergy notes - the peanut butter game suggested in the outline was a no-no due to peanut allergies; we also banned peanutbutter flavored dog treats. There were also 3 Brownies allergic to dogs who were not allowed to get close and pet - one was quite tearful. I did have River do a trick for her that she could tell him from a little distance using a hand signal. One girl insisted that she could pet the hypoallergenic coated one - River, so I think she pulled that off. When we took a group shot - carefully separating the dogs with Brownies in between, one girl asked me about Shih Tsus and beamed when I told her they have coats that don't shed.

This was our second presentation event with another team, since the - "maintain a distance between dogs" ruling. I do prefer that. I must admit there was some growling when certain dogs got too close. With age, River has gotten less tolerant of dogs in his face. (although, he wasn't the one growling).

It was great to have a variety of breeds represented and others to share their experiences as well.

I had also done a Daisy scout meeting at Patty's a while ago - before we even had Noche. That was an outdoor meeting, which made it even easier to do demonstrations.

Dog, treats in pouch, water for dog, his vest, leash, hula hoops, kids tunnel, exercise ball. I've also taken a step stool, toys ( although River usually will not retrieve at these - go figure?), toy piano, balloon on a string, target, extra leash. Music and a freestyle routine would be something to add. I did have River off leash for some - jumping, freestyle, tunnel - he was extremely well behaved - of course, I had food. And he always gets a laugh when he makes a mistake - should actually plan that into the presentation. And some nosework would be fun, too.
He does get a little demanding initially if he isn't getting treats fast enough! he is excited and eager, whining in the car when we arrive, but he did lay down and chill when I was talking for a while or someone else was talking, smart dog!

Playing CatchUp

Seems to be a common pattern in blogs, enthusiasm and frequent entries, then dwindling posts, a break and hopefully, a return with renewed energy.

Noche and River are both still training in agility; private lessons with Karen Sage. We also added classes at Flexible Flyers Agility in Honeybrook for a while. Amanda's health issues have necessitated a break from those for the moment. They were certainly a valuable learning environment. Both dogs had an adjustment to make dealing with a new location and other dogs. It is especially challenging in the cooler weather; classes are held in a 4H building, unheated, mostly dirt floor and port-a-potties ( Amanda dislikes!) and did I mention the 45 minute drive? Classes are a reasonable size, but of necessity, there is taking turns for runs, so it is scheduled as an hour and a half class time. Excellent teacher and lots of experienced competitors, although she was in an advanced beginner class. I'm optimistic that she'll get back to it, perhaps in warmer weather?

She discontinued the Novice Obedience class she disliked - preferring when she can talk to the dog, not the style of traditional competition. River has also enjoyed some classes in Nosework at Wendy's.

Our other adventure was attending a flyball tournament in York where we got a tutorial from Kim & Eric and watched several of their teams run. Lively atmosphere is an understatement! Amanda was interested enough that we took Noche to one of their team practices. He did pretty well after some adjusting to the new location. It was an eventful practice with one injury to a team member - no gloves and a dog caught her hand. Amanda decided against further participation at this time. Health constraints, combined with a full schedule, and again, a long evening drive to the location ( although they do have heat and real bathrooms). Not ruling it out for the future - Noche would really love it, in my opinion.

Noche is making progress in Rally. Also improving his focus overall. Still some challenges with reactive barking. Amanda contends he is fearful of big black dogs and so barks at them. We are also working on getting him comfortable with new people; getting better there, too. Maybe we'll make a therapy dog of him yet!