She is so happy to be back in agility that I realize we’re going to have to
practice a little control. In one of her last classes, she purposely body
slammed me, something she has never done and not something I want to
continue. While I’m allowing her to do all the things she enjoys, I do so with
an acknowledgement of needed caution, but then I don’t think that’s a bad
thing when you’re working a dog on equipment that’s several feet off the
ground or a series of tight jumps with quick turns.
Since we had not been to class in a while, due to weather conditions, I
decided to visit the agility field to take a look at her movement over the jumps.
This evening, she was as wild as ever, over the jumps and flying up the
a-frame. Then, she headed up the dog walk, heard a telephone ring and
froze. You never know what is going to cause this little girl concern. Seeing
her reaction, I simply lifted her off the walk and she continued on, happy as a
clam. It had nothing to do with her balance, just her quirky
personality. She was up and over the teeter without a problem.
We had been doing very low jumps (12 inches), as I saw no need to jump
higher; my desire was just to get her back into this, see how she was doing
and let her have fun. Her jumping looked so strong that I decided to increase
the height. I moved the bars to 16 inches. She cleared them with no
discernible change in her gait, style or self-assurance. YES!!! Another step
forward!!! In our upcoming classes, we will do most of the jumps at 12 inches
and occasionally increase them to 16 inches now that I see how strong she is.
I am also going to have to ask her for some control--I admit
that I’ve let her run a bit wild, as I was just so happy to see her strong and
self-assured, that I wasn’t concerned about control. We had it before, we’ll
just have to work on getting it back!