Jackie took her first agility jump today! In introducing jump training to an agility novitiate, one starts low and slow. At first you show Jackie the jump, then toss a treat across it onto the floor and she hops over and eats the cookie. Then you gradually add distance while you point to the jump and toss the treat out in front of her after she jumps. Keep your arm up pointed at the jump line until the dog is across.
Keeping the bar low helps build confidence for jumping, and in Jackie’s case since she is a three year old adult her bone plates are fully fused, but when introducing puppies it’s best to keep it low and not do much jumping until their growth plates are closed, which can be up to 18 to 20 months in very large dogs, or usually about a year in average sized dogs.
It was suggested by our coach that for Jackie we keep the bar well under 16 inches. Basically we want it high enough for her to just have to jump it, to avoid her walking over it. As Jackie’s handler, it is going to be important for me to keep Jackie busy, so speeding up my own approach helped keep Jackie’s energy and focus.
Our homework this week also includes continuing to reinforce two on two off contact behavior “Feet!” with adding distance, and sending to front paws up on a perch “Go bucket!” with adding distance.
It was good being back in the classroom after a week off while our coach competed both her puppy and her established dog at ASCA national championships last week.
In anticipation of ongoing jump training, we’ve ordered this backyard quality agility jump from Dog Agility Jumps by Midlee:
- Jumping is fun! Keep the jump low (well under 16”) to build confidence and keep things moving quickly so that Jackie stays busy
- Homework this week includes two-on-two-off contact behavior “Feet!” using a plank and nose target, and sending to a perch “Go bucket!” with increasing distances
- Stay safe by allowing dogs to play with agility equipment only while supervised and with their handler paying attention
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