July 12, 2013

Love my "kids"

If you've ever looked at our training website (www.horsetoothretrievers.com), you'd notice that I try to promptly post results from the trials that we run.

I posted these from our last trial:


COLORADO WOMEN’S
OPEN
2nd - Elmingo’s Flip Your Lid

QUALIFYING
1st - Horsetooth’s Center Ice
4th - Horsetooth’s Otto Know

DERBY
3rd - Elmingos Controlled Power Play
JAM - Horsetooth’s Willie T Wiffic

I raised every one of those dogs.  There is an art to raising a puppy for sure.  I think I do a good job, but I've also had lots of practice...13 puppies in 3 years at last count I think.

I am now raising Hattie and am already on the hunt for my next pup to raise.

Things I've learned from raising pups:
-get one from the best bitch you can afford.  Sires are great and there are some I am really fond of, but by and all, the best dogs I've raised have been out of the best bitches.
-don't fret about anything when they're young.  I had one dog I raised that was a STAR as a puppy.  She looked like the second coming of Lean Mac.  Then the more work we started doing and the harder the tests became...she just fell apart and we washed her out.  She hated the yard and hated the job.  We did everything to make her love it, but she didn't like retrieving with rules and that was that.  On the other hand, one pup I raised did NOT retrieve, even by 5 months old.  He would wander out at a walk, shuffle around and maybe pick it up.  I didn't fret and stopped retrieving with him completely until he showed me he was ready.  I let him be a puppy and raised him the best way I knew how.  He is now 9 months old and a retrieving fool.  He is stylish and fun and LOVES his yard work in the morning.  He looks like he's going to be very nice.  It goes to show that they are just little guys.  One has to be careful not to teach them to hate retrieving and I think I could have done that easily with this little guy if I had pushed him.
-I only teach the mechanics of the retrieve when they're young and nothing else.  Go out, pick it up and bring it back.  A dog cannot be advanced without the mechanics down.  If they go out great, pick it up and then play keep away...everything else stops until I get them returning reliably.  And I stay at 20 yards on short grass until we got this part down cold.
-Pups need to learn to learn.  Teach them everything.  I taught Willie to shake a paw for example.  It is a parlour trick, but she was so wanting to learn MORE, MORE, MORE as a young puppy that I tried to teach her new things all the time.
-Noise (and general obnoxiousness) on the line needs to be dealt with as SOON as it shows up.  It IS a big deal and it is not at all cute if they are thrashing and screaming while we're throwing puppy bumpers.
-Most importantly, just let them be a puppy.  I think the best pups are raised in the house.  So much more opportunity to learn.  Do no get on the counter, do not jump on people, wait at the door while I go out and on and on and on.  I let them have toys (many, many toys) and play and run.  There is THEIR time and there is MY time.  I don't bother them on their time, but I expect compliance on my time.

I have oodles and oodles I could say about this, but the most important part of a dog's life is the first year.  How they are raised and how their Basic Training is done can create or prohibit success of the dog at any level.

2 comments:

Blazingstar said...

Great post Marcy! Some day we must sit down and talk about this over a glass of wine or two.... let me know when you are back in Canada!

Marcy said...

A glass or two...or three??

Would love to see you guys.