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Subject: [working-gundog] on steadiness and how ideas evolve
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cwaltUser is Offline

MH
MH
Posts:180


09/22/2008 1:48 PM  
Steadiness is like pregnancy, the dog is steady or it isn't, there are no real degrees of steadiness. As simple as that assertion might be there are many people who misunderstand it and try to grade steadiness in stages and some even try to train steadiness in stages. This idea evolved from a teaching exercise for novice judges that had nothing to to do with steadiness per se but was about how to judge and score various degrees of steadiness in a test. The inexperienced or non hunting judges would ask how they should assign a number to steadiness for a dog that was steady on one bird but broke and chased on another find. We decided that the easiest way to teach scoring was to divide the act of steadiness into parts such as steady to flush, steady to wing, steady to shot, steady to fall and so on. The earlier in the sequence that the dog failed the lower the score would be and then we could assign a number for steadiness to each bird contact and determine the final score for steadiness overall by averaging the individual partial scores. The teaching exercise was a success, we could explain how to evaluate steadiness and a novice judge could learn to assign numerical scores to a dog's varied performances in the field. The problem occurred when these judges tried to explain the scores to dog owners. It was common for a judge to identify a steadiness score of 2, for example, as a dog being steady for one bird but breaking at the flush for another bird. The judge could also explain to the handler that the dog broke at the shot and/or the fall for two birds and thereby received a 3 for an overall steadiness score. This manner of explanation led to handlers and owners speaking of steadiness in terms of: "my dog is steady to the shot and then breaks, I have to work on it." A year or two after we developed the explanation of steadiness scoring for judges I began to encounter some very strange training exercises in handler's clinics. Handlers and trainers were setting up peculiar situations and were screaming "whoa" at the dogs at different times. These rituals were nonsensical to me and I started asking the clinic trainers what the hell they were doing. They told me that a dog was only steady to flush and they were training it for steadiness to wing, the next stage of steadiness. Handlers would assert that they had trained the dog to be steady to shot and they were working on steadiness to fall and so on. The training clinics were actually trying to teach the dogs to be steady in a sequence of steps: steady to flush, steady to wing, steady to shot, steady to fall and so on! The judge's training exercises had evolved into a conviction that steadiness was trained in four or more successive stages. Naturally the dogs were as confused as the trainers and steadiness training was an exercise in chaotic thinking. Because steadiness is one single exercise, the dog is steady or it isn't, you cannot teach steadiness in four successive exercises. Retrieving can be trained as a chaining exercise where one stage leads to the next but that is impossible for training steadiness because it is a single act. It is very strange to note that ideas can evolve in random directions that we cannot anticipate. Cj //
rospiganUser is Offline

MH
MH
Posts:372


09/23/2008 2:27 PM  
>>>the trainers and steadiness training was an exercise in chaotic
thinking.  Because steadiness is one single exercise, the dog is steady
or it isn't, you cannot teach steadiness in four successive exercises. 
Retrieving can be trained as a chaining exercise where one stage leads
to the next but that is impossible for training steadiness because it is
a single act.  It is very strange to note that ideas can evolve in
random directions that we cannot anticipate.
Cj>>><>
 
Yes, it is amazing how often we in everyday life meet people who think that things can be "just a little pregnant", metaphorically speaking. There are many situations, that are more or less important to the destiny of the mankind, were we found this "partial pregnancy" compromise thinking.
 
I remember long ago there was this dog shrink woman living nearby. She explained that dogs and other carnivorous animals are actually vegetarians. When they kill a grass eating animal the first thing they eat is the stomach content, she said. I told her that when I leave the entrails from a deer or moose on the ground then foxes, badgers, crows, magpies and raven will take care of it. When I come back 24 hours later the only thing that remains is the stomach contains, everything else, every single small piece of it, is gone. When my dog sees the stomach contains it may roll in it but it never try to eat it.
 
I do not know were the woman had got her information from, probably some dog shrink bible,  but she spread it to ignorant pet dog owners. Those people also make the world to a "partially pregnant" place because they think that the "full pregnancy" alternative is too scaring for them. They can not really deny that carnivorous animals sometimes eat flesh, that is; they are sometimes pregnant, but most often they are not pregnant at all and eat vegetables. Well, this is of course true for at least one carnivorous animal, the brown bear that eats anything including old, smelly shoes.
 
This kind of thinking is most often only irritating but when circulating around among the higher governing authorities in the society, or in my profession; the sea safety organisations, it can become dangerous. 
 
There should be one single, universally usable way to steady a dog to flush, shot and fall and that it to train it to sit to a long whistle blast. This must be trained anywhere and anytime and the response from the dog should be instantaneous, like it was struck by lightning. Then you can blast the dog down when it things start to happen.
 
Well, that was the theory. It works well for spaniels and retrievers but when you have trained that with a 454 cubic inch blockhead setter until its ears have fallen of, you will rather frequently find that it still is only partially pregnant, when the course of events get hot :-))) 
Torsti
Borta Med Vindens Kennel
"Ask not what your dog can do for you.
Ask what you can do for your dog."
www.rospigan.net
jmurrUser is Offline

MH
MH
Posts:158


09/23/2008 3:01 PM  
Here's another random direction to consider. Steadiness is a concept which needs to be defined within some context. You seem to be adopting the NAVHDA concept - the only acceptable dog behavior after a point is to remain in place until released by the handler. The lack of steadiness is manifested by the dog breaking it's stand, sit, point (condition of remaining fixed in place) on occurance of some triggering event. Typical events which are innate triggers are the flush and flight of a bird. Conditioned (perhaps alternative innate - they seem pretty natural when they occur) triggers are the shot and subsequent fall of a bird. The dog trained NOT to break on the natural trigger of a flushing and fleeing bird has been counter-conditioned to ignore that trigger. If it is allowed to then break when the gun is fired and/or the bird is seen falling from the sky, one or both of those events replace the natural trigger in the behavioral conformation of the dog. This dog may well be steady enough for many practical purposes - but not for testing/competing in a venue which demands the dog remain stationary until released by the handler such as NAVHDA tests. Question: When the single bird pointed by a dog flushes or is flushed and the dog is still standing, is the dog exhibiting the innate point/staunch action pattern? Or is it's behavior a conditioned response - the result of training? I seem to remember a tale told here of an unsteady dog, a setter I believe, which remained fixed in place until its hunting partner stopped moving at which point it broke and flushed the pointed bird. Was that dog "steady?" > It is very strange to note that ideas can evolve in > random directions that we cannot anticipate. > Cj > // >
cwaltUser is Offline

MH
MH
Posts:180


09/23/2008 4:31 PM  
Maud & Torsti wrote: > > There should be one single, universally usable way to steady a dog to flush, shot and fall and that it to train it to sit to a long whistle blast. This must be trained anywhere and anytime and the response from the dog should be instantaneous, like it was struck by lightning. Then you can blast the dog down when it things start to happen. > > Well, that was the theory. It works well for spaniels and retrievers but when you have trained that with a 454 cubic inch blockhead setter until its ears have fallen of, you will rather frequently find that it still is only partially pregnant, when the course of events get hot :-))) > > Torsti > `````````````````````````````` It's difficult to train with any universal steadiness command. The 'whoa' for pointing dogs and a 'hup' for flushing dogs or a 'drop' for some continentals all require that the dog do different things. Obedience to a single absolute control command can and should be trained to the point of an instant unthinking response but the command should suit the expectations for the breed. Blockheads often require alternate training methods but they should be as well trained as a soft cooperative dog. Training a block headed early retrieving pointing dog often requires some training that doesn't diminish or obliterate the pointing instinct but this can almost always be worked out so that it doesn't cause more problems than it cures. There's a training method for almost anything and you can usually do it without tearing off the dog's ears. {:-) Cj
rospiganUser is Offline

MH
MH
Posts:372


09/24/2008 11:25 PM  
>>>Training a block headed early retrieving pointing dog
often requires some training that doesn't diminish or obliterate the
pointing instinct but this can almost always be worked out so that it
doesn't cause more problems than it cures.  There's a training method
for almost anything and you can usually do it without tearing off the
dog's ears.  {:-) Cj>>>
 
 
Actually I meant that I would blast the dogs ears of with the whistle, but then again, what's the difference :-)))
 
I do not remember for how long the setter have been bred mainly for one single purpose, to find and point birds, but it must have been some 300 - 400 years, to the days when netting birds begun. It is important to remember this before we go any further in this discussion and focus on setters only. In this process other characteristics have been weakened like aggression, competition drive and perhaps something that is very pronounced in some other gundog breeds like spaniels, Labradors etc., namely "the sense of being a pack animal"! I do not find a better expression for the moment, even though this one also is deceptive since: It is difficult to find any other breeds, besides of spaniels, pointers and retrievers, than setters, that can in a new hunting camp, beaming together from all directions,  accept and enjoy the company of other dogs as immensely and spontaneously.
 
While this kind of friendliness and sense of belonging to a pack goes all the way to easy co-operation with man under most or all situations on the hunting grounds with the other breeds mentioned, and to a great extent pointers also, the setters often seem to be a different kettle of fish.
 
MOTIVATION
 
While the other British breeds, except for the pointer, perhaps, are generally easy to artificially motivate to do and enjoy many different tasks far apart from actual hunting, you will seldom see setters are general purpose service dogs. They lack what we over here call "the social competition drive" and they lack the needed patience but you could also say that they are genetically programmed to find birds, birds, birds. I do not know if it possible to write a program for a dog that says: Find birds no matter what the effort may be! Maybe these specialist dogs were created by out-breeding any other interest, motivation from them but the last single one; the drive to hunt small game. Small game because the courage and sharpness needed to tamper with big game was bred out from them - and so on. When co-operation and pack-sense was out-bred perhaps you got the wide ranging and independent search.  I have seen a few young, totally raw setters that have been completely un-interested in what is going on around them, sitting or standing with closed eyes, nose high, inhaling and analysing whatever scent the wind brought to them, blind and deaf to any other stimuli. They belonged in another world and they did not want to belong to our world.
 
Fortunately few setters are today totally un-fostered as youngsters, they have at least got some house training, so to say. 
 
When we humans act instinctively, we use to say that we act with our "reptile brain". I try to find an explanation to why particularly setters can be so excluding towards any human commands once they have found fresh scent and I am very curious about what goes on in the dogs head when it is on point or has started to locate the birds. Beyond any doubt it is very, very concentrated and Cj has in the past mentioned "nasal deafness" as a mental state the dog can have with fresh scent in its nose. In other words the dog is so concentrated on the scent so the stimuli from its ears simply will not reach its brain. This would not indicate disobedience since the dog is unable to hear any commands.
 
The dog would be disobedient if it can hear and interpret the command properly but still neglect it. In order to neglect a command the dog understands, it must be motivated to follow it's own judgement of the situation, rather than the handlers judgement. Now, if this was any other breed but a setter we could call it's behaviour for obstinacy and obstinacy comes from a strong competition drive and can be cured with even more leadership and obedience training. Since in most of our setters the major part of the social competition drive is out-bred it must be something else that caused the dogs unwanted and sudden separation from co-operation with it's pack-leader once it has got scent in it's nose.
 
We can whip the dog into obedience in such situations but we would loose something for ever, namely the dogs ability to work with and present the birds for the gun in a favourable way. Since we loose something with the whipping the method is not very attractive and the sensible handler may understand that there is something going on in the dogs head, once it has found scent, that he or she do not understand. 
 
Is it the "reptile brain"? It is beyond any doubt for sure that the dog can be left to handle the birds the way it finds best and with experience it will master them brilliantly until the point when they are flushed. I can understand perfectly well the will to wildly run after them once they have flushed, what else could a wild dog without a shotgun do?
 
The question is, if we exclude the situation with nasal deafness, what is the motivation for the dog to totally neglect our commands in this situation? The same dog that was so easy to live with and perhaps also to handle all the way until it got scent in its nose? There must be some higher level of  consciousness for the dog, that is switched on and of with the scent of birds. My experience is that it is much easier to train them to obedience at the vicinity of any other game, including cats and other domestic animals,  than birds and sometimes hares.
 
What is the real difference to a spaniel or Labrador? The prey drive =game sharpness? A spaniel is of course not built to last as long as a setter, the rather muscular and ungainly body, compared to the setters body, makes it impossible for the spaniel to have the physical stamina of the setter but the will, the drive is there. Hence, if it was the strong prey drive alone that caused the difficulty to master the dog that has scent in its nose, the spaniel would be as difficult as the setter but it is not.
 
I call the setters hammerheads or blockheads for the sake of illustration but actually I think they are neither of them. The problem is that I do not know what they are.......
 
No matter how much you work with them in bird situations it seems like they become steady when they are ready for it, not because of what you have done!
 
Next question: If it was not the training: What makes them ready?
 
Torsti
Borta Med Vindens Kennel
"Ask not what your dog can do for you.
Ask what you can do for your dog."
www.rospigan.net
cwaltUser is Offline

MH
MH
Posts:180


09/27/2008 3:00 PM  
Maud & Torsti wrote: > There should be one single, universally usable way to steady a dog to > flush, shot and fall and that it to train it to sit to a long whistle > blast. This must be trained anywhere and anytime and the response from > the dog should be instantaneous, like it was struck by lightning. Then > you can blast the dog down when it things start to happen. > Well, that was the theory. It works well for spaniels and retrievers but when you have trained that with a 454 cubic inch blockhead setter until its ears have fallen of, you will rather frequently find that it still is only partially pregnant, when the course of events get hot :-))) > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ We all give lip service to the power of 'whoa', 'drop' or 'hup' but I very rarely encounter dogs that are sufficiently trained so that the response to the command is reflexive. In most of the best trained dogs there is a hesitation before obedience that shows that the dog is "thinking about the command". The ideal is, as you say, instant response without thought. Cj
rospiganUser is Offline

MH
MH
Posts:372


09/28/2008 4:43 PM  
>>>>We all give lip service to the power of 'whoa', 'drop' or 'hup' but I
very rarely encounter dogs that are sufficiently trained so that the
response to the command is reflexive.  In most of the best trained dogs
there is a hesitation before obedience that shows that the dog is
"thinking about the command".  The ideal is, as you say, instant
response without thought.
Cj>>>>
 
The hesitating "camel-drop" is rather common among setters and least common among spaniels, provided we think of dogs that have a lively temperament. (I start to think that it is a pity that I am so hooked to the British breeds of birddogs. I could benefit from learning more about the German breeds. Now I only know the Wachtelhund a bit and it is often very responsive in every  aspect.)
 
When you train a spaniel in a positive way it often soon starts to enjoy the training immensely. Since they are so very spontaneous the training must be adjusted to their maturing ability to concentrate as they gain age. Keeping this in mind the training can be kept positive all the time. To them the "drop" becomes just another piece of fun in a game (play) between you and them. You notice that the dog enjoys the drop-game and hence drop it often and everywhere. Soon the action has become reflexive to the dog.
 
Generally it is more difficult to motivate a setter to have fun during the training for any extended time. There has been one Gordon setter in Sweden that was treble champion, FTCH, SCH and finally also an Obedience Champion. The last one is without any doubt the most difficult one to obtain for a setter since it must be genuinely interested in such work for many years before it is good enough. To keep its motivation up, great demands are made on the handler. The kennel name of this particular dog suggest that it was not from Scandinavian breeding but originated from Holland. "Tootsie van der ....something", don't remember now.
 
The great majority of those who are running setters are not any great trainers. Then again nor are those who runs spaniels or retrievers (I think of the small and fast working type "pheasant missile" retrievers). Still the last group does in average better in the obedience part with their dogs, when scent of game or visible game is around.
 
In my opinion the setters are by the scent of game brought into another dimension, a dimension where the normal order of rank and the commands given by the packleader are not valid any more. When the setter hits the scent cone it takes charge of the hunting pack, there is little doubt about it. When you see a first class setter handle the birds there is no doubt about its efficiency, and the handler has little or nothing he can contribute with to the work. It is pretty obvious that the dog is the indisputable master of the situation.  
 
Maybe we should turn the clock back some 150 - 200 years in order to understand. Maybe we should re-read the very old books written by those who originally bred the ancestors to the dogs we have today. Maybe we have misunderstood the entire meaning and the true nature of the setter and the pointer?
 
The manufactures of (ball-) bearings say that their bearing is not a bearing until it has been firmly fixed into the bearing housing and shaft. Until then it is just a precision made but delicate piece of metal. Once firmly fixed in place it transforms into a strong and long.lasting part of a perfectly working machinery.
 
Maybe those who created our British birddogs did not see them as birddogs until they had scent in their nose, and not from what they saw of the dog when it had a lazy time in the armchair or couch!
 
What would happen with our thinking about the training of the British birddogs if we only thought of them as very, very specialist experts in the art of finding and handling birds only - and nothing else? What if we stopped to think of them as still another mutated variety of Canis Lupus and gave them credit for what they by a great effort in time, skill, money, aim and burning desire, were sculptured into both in appearance and mentality, by men whose equal we can not find today?
 
Oh My God.....that was some writing! You should have made me into a philosopher instead ;-))
 
Torsti
Borta Med Vindens Kennel
"Ask not what your dog can do for you.
Ask what you can do for your dog."
www.rospigan.net
jmurrUser is Offline

MH
MH
Posts:158


09/29/2008 6:45 PM  
Maybe Maurice (he has trained a few setters) can find time to comment on the "West Method" which does not use a verbal "whoa" or proxie and does train stop to flush, gun, fall backing etc all together (what I term "in parallel" in analogy to parallel communications between computer and printer for insatance and as oppossed to serial communications in the same instance.). The result is natural point and the steadiness you requested. The pointing dog folks in the USA do not train a sit or similar but this can easily be done. Jere > Maud & Torsti wrote: >> There should be one single, universally usable way to steady a dog to >> flush, shot and fall and that it to train it to sit to a long whistle >> blast. This must be trained anywhere and anytime and the response from >> the dog should be instantaneous, like it was struck by lightning. Then >> you can blast the dog down when it things start to happen. >> Well, that was the theory. It works well for spaniels and retrievers but when you >> have trained that with a 454 cubic inch blockhead setter until its ears have >> fallen of, you will rather frequently find that it still is only partially >> pregnant, when the course of events get hot :-))) >>
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