Coel in Scotland

Coel in Scotland

5.11.2015

Clinics and trials


Brilliant weather and good company
(c) Jonna Paasila
Ned O´Keeffe 9-11.10
Elisa and Kari Kotikoski organized a clinic with Ned O´Keeffe again, this was the third time he was over this year. This time there were 7 dogs on the clinic, Ned knew us all from before which was good.
Last time we worked on the pace with Coel, this time we worked on calmer flanks. In the drive I start to get them right, to get them right when I´m preparing to shed still need a lot of work when he is way too fast there and frightens the sheep.
The weather was great, and we had a big bunch of about 100 ewe lambs, some dogs worked with a small bunch and some on the big flock. Ned is a demanding straight coach which I like, he digs out both handlers and dogs weak points, if you can take the straight feedback you will find pearls. He likes to play with the challening youngsters, so their sessions are often longer.
One afternoon we put up a small trial, this was good because I got to train trialling. Didn´t do any good, but managed still to keep the concentration.

Pop up -trials at Kotikoskis 24-25.11. Warning for cockalorum!
I was really happy when I heard about this, I have been working at the home field on the pace and flanks, so it was great to have the opportunity to test them at trials, before the Nordic Nurserys in Norway.

Saturday
The course was on a tricky field consisted of two fields with a big ditch between them. Outrun is about 300-350m, the first "fetch gate" was a brigde over the ditch and the line to the second fetch gate was dog legged to the left. If you are s shorty like me, you loose sight of the sheep and dog totally for maybe 20m when they come over the bridge and after that. The bridge is in a dip and some meters before it they have a strong draw to the left. If the sheep stops before the brigde, it´s really hard to see how they stand and what commands yuo should give the dog... You can´t push too much because then they are to scared to go over...if you don´t push, they won´t go either...or try to go along the ditch on the other side.

Trial 1
Rhy went first of my dogs and had an okay run I thought, drive a bit wobbly in the beginning and near to grip in the shed but didn´t. The judge seemed to like it though, so he got 101p which was in my opinion on the kind side
Coel had a good beginning and really good drive (27p), I think he was one of the few or the only one, who managed to make the sheep walk the whole drive. It was a bit slow so were timed out in the single, I was really happy with the drive.
Rhy won and Coel was 6th.

Because there weren´t that many dogs running, they decided to run an other class 3 (open), after class 2 and 1 were over.



Fog seems to suit Rhy
(c) Jessica Saukkonen


Trial 2
Coel run as third last, it started to be a bit dark and foggy, and the sheep were really testing. He managed to get them over the bridge, but there was a ewe challenging him...so before the first gate when he was preventing them to run to the exhausting pen for the third or fourth time, he got fed up and nipped the challening ewe. Thank you and good bye.
Rhy run as the last dog, I couldn´t see the sheep on the other side of the ditch at all because of the fog. Rhy had a really really good run, got 94p (?)
I think I have never ever had a run like this with Rhy, the sheep liked and trusted him totally (usually they are scared of him), he was smooth to both sheep and my handling and escorted the sheep gently trough the foggy course, the sheep were calm and me and Rhy were calm but concentrated. Jessica said it looked like the ewes had thrown their lives in Rhys paws, that they thought he was the only one on earth who could take them home safely.
Anyway, Rhy won again.

Jessica and Dew also had a really good run, but the bell rung as Dew came in and took the singled sheep. They really showed that they´ll be dangerous soon even if they still are unexperienced,  now they became second!


Sunday
Rhy run first of my dogs. He had a little issue before the brigde, after that okay, think he got 90p.
Coel, this time his run was brilliant. Perfect outrun and fetch, only two off the fetch. Super drive, 27p again, he just walks with the sheep, the turns around the gates were calm and smooth, perfect on lines,good shed. At the pen they stopped and Coel was nose to nose with a stroppy ewe, if I had told him to walk on there he might have gripped, so I took the preassure off and flanked him and started over and in they went. Good single, but he was starting to get a bit too excited...and I had to shout to prevent him to not "stop" the ewe harshly.
Coel won with 101p, and this time he had really earned his points! Rhy was second with 90p.

The sheep at Kotikoskis are brilliant, they are light to drive but they often test the dogs, they aren´t giving anything for free.
Outletting bunch for class 2
It might be that the training tools I have found with Ned´s help, have started to show now and it´s rewarding to see that at trials also. Like usually I will come down soon again, but now I´m gonna sip on this candy again for a few days!


The rest of the day I was setting out sheep with Elisa in class 1 and 2. It was raining now and then but we still had fun,  and it´s always interesting to see the dogs in the lower classes.  A lot of the dogs seemed to be scared of the sheep, they try to avoid lifting them or rushes in or chase them rather than walk up and lift them. People often wamts to train long outruns and trial, before their dogs are ready... And when they ask you why it isn´t working and you tell them what you think, that the dog is scared and tensed near the sheep, that they should train close work and bild up the dogs confidence first, they get mad at you...


James McGee clinic at Putkisalo 27-28.11

I knew of course who he was, everybody does, but I didn´t know him. World Trial 2011 in Cumbria, was the first really big trial I had been to as a spectator. I still think James and Beccas run is the most exciting I have ever seen. When they got them not so cooperative sheep penned after an exciting international shedding, the grand stands just exploded and we cryed like babies. Becca was the World Champion 2011. Then I have seen Beccas son Silver only 1,5 yrs at the WT in Tain 2014 and winning the Supreme same year, really impressed of that youngster!
I had heard that James is a very strict coach, so we didn´t know what had in front of us...and I think all of us were a bit nervous.  I think he was very calm kind and maybe a bit shy in the beginning, you had to bring up the problems you wanted to work with.  He has a really good eye for details and a huge sheepsence, I understood he wants good listening dogs whit good feeling for it´s sheep.
I got a couple of new tools for outruns and shedding,  plus confirmation to continue training the same way I have been doing. Maybe he said it to all of us, but for a change it was nice to hear that I have really good dogs that are extremely well trained.


In the evening we had dinner, Mika had made a madly good burgundy stew, the meat just melt in your mouth. Good wine, ice cream and James´s storys were a good ending of a good day.



Dinner
(c) Jonna Paasila




Back home training, Jessica Svanljung took a picture of Coel , after he had been  watching Mac training...he is drawling like a st bernard...

Coel drawling
(c) Jessica Svanljung














3.11.2015

Mind control and Continental Sheepdog Championship, Italy 25-27.9

Mind control
After I had been writing earlier on facebook, about me loosing concentration after I felt it wasn´t going as planned and ruining our runs at trials, two friends contacted me about it. After talking to them, I realized some things I can change and work on, and also understood why I might have reacted that way.
I have now tried to also "train trialling", split the run in peaces etc. and also worked with my own mind, talking even more to myself . I think I have found a good path to continue on now. Thank you so much, you two know who you are!!

Italy

Wednesday
Me, Leena and Jonna with Rhy, Spot and Magda
flew to Rome in the morning. Flight went well, got all our bags and dogs. Found our rental car, a big van so there were plenty of room for the cages, suitcases etc.
Italy here we come

First stop after Rome, pizza and beer
Jonna, me and our guide who didn´t understand one word english

On Thursday me and Jonna went riding for 2 hours, nice horses but a bit too slow and boring...we had hoped for some yahoo on the beach. When it was time to pay, I had to explain with my hands that "my wallet is not, here but I´ll drive and get it...and that Jonna will stay as a deposit..." hah, don´t think he understood me, but he got his money in the end
On the afternoon we took the dogs to the vet control and checked out the trial field, it was quite big and wide. The outletting post was just in front of the outletting pen in the the upper end of the field (still a lot of room behind it), it was possible for the dogs to end up behind the pen if it would go wide. Sending right meant that the dog had to run past/in front of the pen...sending left was safer if you had a dog who loves the pens...but, the dog could get lost and still end up behind the pen...

In the evening there was a parade trough Piombino.

Team Finland in the parade trough Piombino
Friday
I was going to run first of us Finns, as number 19. I would of course had prefered to run on the second day, when the sheep often have settled down a little by then. But, as someone said, you have to think this is the perfect place to run.
The outletting
We came to the field in the morning when a couple of dogs had run... We heard that the outletting people had big problems to bring the sheep to the post, that the sheep were running trough the 6-8 persons with one dog who are trying to hold them.
Well, I don´t even know how to describe it...so I won´t, all I can say it was a chaos no-one had seen before, brave and determined dogs were needed to lift and fetch the sheep in the middle of it.

The run
When I walked to the post, I noticed that Rhy was looking to the left, I was sending right, I thought that´s good so  he might not be too wide then... Well, he went out narrow to be Rhy, I realized after about 100m he was coming in way too much, blew him out - didn´t take it properly so I stopped him, he turned and screened the field - saw the sheep, new right whistle and now he was back on track.
I had got an advice from a top handler, to let Rhy lift his sheep the way he wants, it´s so challening up there so you just have to trust your dog even if it seems he is lifting them to the the left. I trusted him and let Rhy do the job the way he felt was right, the sheep tryed to go over him (Leena had binocculars) but Rhy gave them no chance to run back to the outletting pen, so he got his sheep lifted at first a bit to the left, but then back on line again.
Fetch was okay, drive okay but didn´t trust my feeling that they were a bit too low in the end of the crossdrive, I noticed it too late so we missed the second gate. In the shedding ring I told myself "forget the drive, relax and shed", it worked, we got the shed done even if it took some minute before I got them calmed down and made the gap, Rhy came in calm and steady.
Then to the pen. Not many had penned before us, again I remembered the top handlers advice, give them time. We gave them time but kept enought preassure to make them go in. Rhy was really good here! Unfornately we run out of time in the single.

Rhy at the pen. The outletting in the right corner of the pic, a lot of room behind it
Rhy by the sea

 Anyway, the circumstances had been  hard for us "ordinary" handlers, so I was really happy with Rhy and a little with myself also. I have noticed a couple of times, that when the sheep put a lot of preassure on the dogs, Rhy is on his best then as he enjoys challenges. It´s same at work, after several hours hard work with angry ewes, big bunches of heavy lambs etc. and he is tired, he goes in in a mood were he just works and he doesn´t faint. I think this feature is one of the traits, that in my opinion makes a quality dog.



I should have been able to hit the second gate, but I didn´t and that sucks. I was still a tiny little bit happy with myself, for keeping the concentration and fighting spirit even if I had failed, because that´s where I gave up before. At this stage, I´m at the level were I can do good runs now and then, this one was an okay run minus.
If you have a look at the tophandlers, they manage almost always to perform good runs in all conditions and with all sorts of sheep, with several dogs and several days after each other. I´m not sure if I´ll live long enough to even get close to that...maybe if I turn 120yrs and still go strong ;-)




 

Food tent. Felt sorry for this dog, wasn´t able to lay down at all...
Main course, tryed to save the chips from the meat juice
SaturdayThe second qualification day. We also tried the food tent, slow expensive and bad food, the wine was good tough. In the evening there was a party at our hotel restaurant, the food was bad again but the music and dancing was great fun. The Swedish super ladies started the dancing, and at the end all of us shy Finns were also dancing like dancing queens :-)






 




Sunday

Drama in the double fetch final

Because of the problems with the outletting, the second bunch was set in a cage, which they opened when the dog approached on the second outrun. There weren´t any really good or wow-runs, someone said that on of the last bad runs won.
It was a hot day (again) and for most of the dogs it was really heavy to drive the 20 sheep around the course. There were three really nice dogs, the french who came second and two other, but they didn´t finish so they weren´t placed. The spectators were also really surprised, when one dog took down a ewe twice and still didn´t get disqualified. The spectators favourite parts in the double fetch finals are the look back and the international shedding. This time the winner crossed 2 or 3 times on the second outrun, even a video is up of it, but the rest of the run must have been so good so he eneded up winning after a good shed and pen. The last two runners dogs didn´t find the sheep so they had to go and get their dogs with the quad.
Italy will be remembered for the nice weather, good grand stand and the outletting issue. Next year the Continental Sheepdog Trial will be held in Finland, one is for sure, we might not have a big brilliant infra structure
with grand stands etc, but the sheep are gonna be set out smoothly!


A walk with the dogs on the beach, Leenas first ever, and she even got wild and tasted her first beer
Last evening we had pizza and ice cream in Piombino. 
Referat
- Finnish team became 6th, not bad
- Kari & Sammy had the best run, Juha & Shine ad a good one, me & Rhy okay, Mico&Börje good start, beaten by the standard, Leena & Spot, beaten by the standard, Jonna & Magda, Magda went to the outletting pen

-Nice stands to buy souveniers etc
- Expensive bad food
- Good fried pizzas
- Big grandstand, but the flags were in front of the spectators

- Big nice field
- Good sheep, all weren´t fit though
- Warm (amost too hot) beautiful weather and beach
- Unexperienced outletting people
- Unusual judging, both judges gave exactly the same points
- Nice atmosphere
- Nice hotel area and cottage
- Gala dinner, expensive bad food, good wine, nice party evening
- Piombino, small cozy old town which would have been nice to see more of