Well, we had a reactive dog class this Saturday and Gusto did pretty well. I wanted to push things a bit with him, so I've decided to work him on his regular buckle collar and not on gentle leader. I kept it in my pocket and figured if he had an outburst, I'd put it on him. Doing so would undoubtedly be a negative punisher as despite years of classical conditioning with the head collar, it is still a slight aversive for him. Anyway I didn't have to put it on him because he managed to hold himself together.
In our first session we worked opposite a Jack Russell. We had worked with this dog before, but the quickness of these little energetic dogs often puts Gusto on edge. We started with U-Turns at 5 steps from 80 ft. and progressed to 12 steps. Then the trainer had us progress to an approach and turn on her cue. I find this the hardest exercise because I don't know when the turn is going to happen and I'm not in control of the exercise. I might be a bit of a control freak... Anyway it does help me stretch my personal comfort zones a lot. Out in the real world, I'm definitely not in control of the other dog or the owner so this helps prepare me for this lack of control. We progressed to following and then to parallel walking. I'm hoping that next time we will do some more difficult and challenging exercises with this dog. I'd like to do some "incoming" or parallel recalls. If I want to be able to compete in agility I really have to start amping up the difficulty. He has to be able to make the right choices in much more difficult situations.
Our second session was MUCH more challenging for Gus. The dog we were working opposite was a lab. The energy of the labs has always been a challenge for Gus. The added size is also more challenging, but perhaps the single largest trigger he has is a jingling collar and panting. This dog had both of these in spades. She had a wad of tags and was a heavy panter. As I predicted Gus found her challenging, but we did push him from U-turns, to following, to parallel walking, to pass-bys and he managed to keep himself under control. We had a lot of looking and one little growl, other than that he attended to me very well. I attribute some of this success to our work on the "look at that" game from Leslie McDevitt's book Control Unleashed - Creating a Focused and Confident Dog. During the U-Turns we had one lunge, but I managed to plant my fist to my gut so that any leash correction he received was self inflicted and not due to a jerk from me. I was happy with this as it is something I've been trying to work on. Planting my hands to keep them still so that I don't jerk or chock up on the leash.
Overall it was a very positive session with many challenges for both Gus and me.
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