Thanks again to Maura for contributing to the blog!
A Tiny Dog’s Nosework Journey
by Maura Warnecke
I was very excited when Jeff asked me to guest blog this
week to share Rookie’s Nosework story. Rookie is my 9lb Chihuahua mix whose
dream came true the day I started Nosework training with him. He was happy to
be done with agility, a sport that hurt his body too much, and start doing what
all dogs love - sniff and get treats for it! People are always intrigued with
his Nosework journey because he is so small yet he has the same drive and
excitement towards the sport as the more traditional breeds that are bred for
scent work. I've never thought of his height as a problem but more as a great
training challenge!
Our Start
We started training in 2010 and Rookie quickly proved to
me that he was obsessed with Nosework, and pretty darn good at it! He nailed
his NW1 title on his first time out and it built my confidence enough to sign
up for a NW2 trial shortly after. Our first NW2 trial he missed only 1 hide -
the highest hide of the day on top of a table. I got asked the dreaded “Where?”
and out of the 2 objects sitting on top of the table I chose the wrong one. I
knew right then that I hadn’t waited long enough, got excited and called alert
before he was truly giving me his sure-proof alert signal of licking his lips.
If I would have waited 2 more seconds, he would have stopped moving and alerted
under the right object. It seemed obvious after the fact and I knew exactly
what I had to go home and work on: reading him better when it came to different
types of high hides. So that we did.
Human AND
Canine Training!
Rookie and I practiced so many high hides that I almost
trained him to never search low anymore! Truly, it wasn’t him who needed the
extra training; I needed to learn how to better read him. The hardest thing to
decipher was how does he alert when the hide is up on top of a table verses in
the hinge of the cabinet door or somewhere else along the way up that is also
out of reach? A lot of practice and watching videos of ourselves helped me pick
up small signals he was giving me to differentiate the different hides. Bobbing
his nose and trying to nose-touch if the odor is just out of reach as opposed
to scratching and pawing like crazy if the odor is really high like on top of a
table. Also giving him extra time to source the odor and stop moving is a good
sign that he’s as close to it as possible.
Another thing I had to practice was how to state “alert!”
not question “alert?” Sometimes it’s something that simple that is going to
mess you up in the end. I was always asked where the hide was, whether it was
high or low because I always questioned the alert instead of stating it. So my
Nosework practice friends helped remind me every single time I sounded the
least bit unsure. How are you supposed to sell the judge on the fact you know
where the odor is if you sound unsure?
Progress
Our next try at NW2 proved successful - all that hard
practice paid off and I’ve never been asked where a hide is again since my
alert training! We came across a very similar table hide like we messed up on
the first time and I knew exactly what to do. I was happy to show that a
vertically challenged dog could title at NW2 since at the time I knew a lot of
small dog handlers who had or were about to give up training their short dogs
due to so many times at trials with no title to show for it. I then realized
that each dog, breed, handler, etc. is going to have their advantages and
disadvantages. When Rookie enters a search area if there is a high hide he will
start standing on his hind legs to get a better whiff and it gives me a clue
that the odor is above his head, thanks to the fact that odor falls. I’ve seen
tall dog handlers have to train just as hard to teach their dogs to drop their
noses low to find those ground hides. I knew then that height wasn’t going to
be an issue anymore, but when you overcome one issue there is always another
one not far behind that needs tackling!
NW3
After getting our NW2 we went to a very helpful NW3
seminar to start prepping for the many added challenges that come at that
level. The seminar was the best money and time I ever spent. We came home with
videos that I could reference over and over. The best things I learned from
this seminar:
- Always keep moving. I thought I was always moving my feet but apparently I wasn’t; when I stopped and bent over I would start to convince Rookie he was close to odor. So I learned to keep my feet moving and give him more space when I thought he was in odor instead of crowding him and talking him into something that wasn’t there. It was also then I learned that if he was trying to fake me out he would move along with me but if he was truly on odor he would plant his feet down and stay on odor, regardless of where I went.
- Plan your route. Always have a route planned and if your dog strays off of it to go to odor then go with him; but always remember where you left off and get back to that area to continue your planned search. Having a plan has helped us both focus a lot better while searching.
- Clearing a room. We also started training clear rooms and soon learned that clearing a room wasn’t scary at all, it was actually quite simple. When we started clear room training I noticed instantly that Rookie would take in deep breathes through his mouth to try to smell odor so I could easily tell after a short time in the room that there was no odor because he was having to try too hard to source it. If you have a hard time hearing the difference, try training in the dark and listening to your dog!
Rookie’s first NW3 trial was a breeze- we had a great day
together and although we didn’t title we had fun working together and came in 3rd
place overall. I really thought we were prepared and NW3 wasn’t going to be so
bad after all… what a deceiving day that was! Our next trail was our worst; we
came in last place and didn’t find half of the hides that day. Rookie wasn’t
having fun because he seemed tired and hot therefore I wasn’t having fun
either. Rookie can only trial in cool months due to the fact that he thinks
heat is for sunbathing in, not working in. Also he is severely fearful of flies
and will completely shut down if they are present. Trying to desensitize him to
flies is something I chose not to work through with him, instead just planned
to never trial in the heat of summer when flies are really present.
Motivating
Rookie
Our second NW3 trial day was unseasonable warm so I crated him outside my vehicle near a friend’s dog and the heat mixed with lack of good rest throughout the day made for a tired dog. We did however get all the high hides that day. Going forward I knew I was going to have to be more careful about how Rookie spent his downtime at trials and how far we’d travel to a trial as to not wear either of us out. After that trial we took some time off and when we started training again he seemed to have lost a little bit of his enthusiasm towards the sport. I decided we’d give NW3 one more try but if he wasn’t into it then it might be our last try. In the weeks leading up to the trail I practiced more and it seemed his enthusiasm was partially based on the quality of reward I was providing him. The week before he seemed ready to go after we had our best practice in months with our Nosework friends. I wasn’t going to risk him shutting down again so I brought out the heavy artillery of treats on our trial day, steak cooked in bacon fat- and boy did that get his attention! I made him rest in his crate all day in between searches and I stayed away from the van so I wouldn’t distract him. He was ecstatic to go search every time I took him out that day so he would earn more steak and finally all the pieces fell into place and we earned our NW3 title! The extra rest, amazing treats and previous NW3 trial experience all came together and paid off making it one amazing day of searching together! We definitely weren’t the fastest that day but we got what counted. We didn’t go for speed, we actually ran the clock down to the 10 second call during every search, something we don’t often do, but I knew when leaving each search area that Rookie tried his hardest, searching down to the last second and then even on the way back to our van. I kept his energy up by talking to him on the way into a search or right after in my excited high-pitched voice so he could tell I was excited and that he was doing great!
Our second NW3 trial day was unseasonable warm so I crated him outside my vehicle near a friend’s dog and the heat mixed with lack of good rest throughout the day made for a tired dog. We did however get all the high hides that day. Going forward I knew I was going to have to be more careful about how Rookie spent his downtime at trials and how far we’d travel to a trial as to not wear either of us out. After that trial we took some time off and when we started training again he seemed to have lost a little bit of his enthusiasm towards the sport. I decided we’d give NW3 one more try but if he wasn’t into it then it might be our last try. In the weeks leading up to the trail I practiced more and it seemed his enthusiasm was partially based on the quality of reward I was providing him. The week before he seemed ready to go after we had our best practice in months with our Nosework friends. I wasn’t going to risk him shutting down again so I brought out the heavy artillery of treats on our trial day, steak cooked in bacon fat- and boy did that get his attention! I made him rest in his crate all day in between searches and I stayed away from the van so I wouldn’t distract him. He was ecstatic to go search every time I took him out that day so he would earn more steak and finally all the pieces fell into place and we earned our NW3 title! The extra rest, amazing treats and previous NW3 trial experience all came together and paid off making it one amazing day of searching together! We definitely weren’t the fastest that day but we got what counted. We didn’t go for speed, we actually ran the clock down to the 10 second call during every search, something we don’t often do, but I knew when leaving each search area that Rookie tried his hardest, searching down to the last second and then even on the way back to our van. I kept his energy up by talking to him on the way into a search or right after in my excited high-pitched voice so he could tell I was excited and that he was doing great!
If We Can Do
It, So Can You
A week later and we are still high in the clouds over our
achievement. I hope Rookie inspires other handlers to overcome whatever poses
as a challenge to you and your dog, and don’t let it hinder you; let it make
you a better trainer. My last
tips:
- Practice with many different people and dogs because there is something to learn from everyone.
- For those dogs who aren’t super high drive, don’t over practice, less is more most of the time.
- Listen to your dog, trust him, and most of all have a blast playing this game with your dog!
Check out Maura's blog, onthegomutts.com, you'll find lots more fun posts and pictures. As for the next blog post, I'm thinking since hell has definitely frozen over in the midwest, that it's time to make good on my promise to give K9 Nose Work a try with my Shiba Inu and get the results out to the blog for all to see!
Happy Sniffing!
Thank you so much for sharing. I have a 8 lb dog and hope to have the ability to learn so well as you have. Great insights into the training and trialing that will help others.
ReplyDeleteCarol
Good luck to you and your little one Carol! Have fun and we'll see you at NW3 one day :)
ReplyDeleteGreat post! Thank you! I agree that little dogs just have a different training challenge. What my dogs lack in height, they make up for in attitude. :-)
ReplyDeleteAin't that the truth! Too much attitude a lot of the time on Rookie's end;) Thanks for reading!
DeleteMaura
Vets Weston
ReplyDeleteDefinitely not true because whether a small or a big dog has the ability to smell better compare to other animals. And attitude of a dog depends on its environment.
http://wellpets.co.uk/