Nosework Training August – September 2024

Nosework Training
August – September 2024

My friend, Denise, and I are training every weekend at our favorite place, the storage yard at Craftco Metalworks.  They are always moving completed work out and bringing in supplies, so new places to hide scents are everywhere.

Denise is going to retire in October and told her employers that she would no longer work weekends, so we are able to work every Saturday and Sunday. She brings her three dogs (2 Shelties and a Cockapoo who are all competing), and I bring three of mine.  Each day I bring an experienced competitor (Spirit, Mercy or Lovely), a younger dog with whom I’m competing (Hopeful or Justice) and one of the beginner dogs (Pascha, Zest, Zeal or Dakuya) who won’t start competing until next year.  These practices that we’re photographing are their introduction to real searching, so we don’t yet ask them to do the harder hides (either high or hard to get to).

The young ones also do not yet wear the tracking harness, which is itself a pre-command, as I only put it on just before the starting cones, or in a trial, when the dog ahead of us goes into the search area.  And I take it off as soon as we finish our search, so the dogs know when the serious work time has ended.  Instead, their cue is a box with a cocktail of all 5 scents, set by the car, so that they come out of the car and have a reminder what we’re going to do.  Pascha is about ready to graduate to the harness.  The other three will hopefully be ready to wear it before the Craftco training ends for the winter.

You may see photos of me helping the young dogs when they’re struggling – and rewarding them at times for a partial indication because they just can’t remember to do the required sit or down with everything else going on around them.  Beside the stimulation of a BIG new place, bunnies occasionally dart out under their noses, people walk their dogs past the training area and often several people go by, talking away.  Zest was really distracted on August 24th because the airport (next door) was having an airshow and people were parking along the road and walking everywhere as they headed to the gate.  Zest also has trouble focusing at any time – she tends to bounce around excitedly and have difficulty kicking into nose mode.  She always craves petting, so I am using it along with treats for rewards.  It has been tough on all 4 of the pups whom I kept last year because they have to share all the extra attention that comes with forming them into working dogs, but Zest seems more needy than the other three.

I also rotate Varoom! occasionally.  She was supposed to have had a litter  in August but failed to conceive.  With luck, she’ll be busy with a litter next May when we have our nosework trial, so there’s no rush on her training.  Spirit, Mercy, Lovely, Hopeful and Justice are entered in our October trial.   

We start training at 8 a.m. so that we finish before it becomes unbearably hot.  We usually finish about 11 a.m. We get lots of shadows in the photos of the earliest runs, and glare in the later runs, so some photos are much better quality than others. 

Another reason to train early is to finish before the hornets get too active.  They, unfortunately, target us for our training treats.  I swear they target our vehicles and know when we arrive.

We set two separate searches so that each of us gets to run “blind” (not knowing where the hides are).  Each search contains all 5 UKC scents and 1 or 2 distractions (balls or treats).  You can often see some of the hides in the photos, when they’re in little silver tins or copper-colored “bullets” that reflect the light.

All the dogs do both searches.  I have organized the photos by dates, so you can see how the competition dogs handle a search area if you don’t quite understand what the “baby” search dogs are doing. Denise sometimes gets a whole series of photos of a search, while other times she just gets one or two photos, but by looking at the photos of both the other dogs on that day you get a good sense of each search.

I work with the pups in the house several times during the week, working on indications.  Since I have no puppies, I set up a bunch of “clean” articles in the whelping room and put down two “hot” articles.  I put other “clean” articles in the back bedroom where I store dog food and supplies (great distractions!).  We practice our start routine (Are you ready?  FIND it!) at the door, and then I let the pup in to search.  After we do both rooms, we search another area of the house (office, bathroom/washer/drier area), or kitchen.  That’s a little more difficult because the other dogs are barking, wanting their turns, so we work a little bit on focus.  That should help them remember soon to do a real indication at Craftco.

I am always surprised, as I edit the photos, at how many show the dogs’ tongues out as they leave the indication to receive their treat.  Some of those photos are extremely cute.  I never notice that when I’m working my dog.  I guess I’m too busy reaching for a treat and, in Hopeful’s case, preparing for her enthusiastic body slam.

Training Sessions   
Names that are enlarged and bolded contain links to photos. 
Check back frequently for new photos.

8/10/24:  Lovely, Justice and Dakuya.  I didn’t think to take my camera, so the only photo we have is a really cool one of Dakuya that Denise took on her cell phone.

8/11/24:  Mercy, Hopeful and Pascha

8/17/24:  Justice, Varoom! And Dakuya

8/18/24:  Spirit, Hopeful and Zeal

8/24/24:  Lovely, Justice and Zest

8/25/24:  Mercy, Hopeful and Zest 

8/31/24:  Spirit, Hopeful & Pascha (not yet edited)

9/1/24:  Lovely, Justice and Dakuya (only Justice’s photos have been edited)
I edited Justice’s photos out of order because we had seen that Denise got some good photos of him being a dork, and I wanted to use some in the weekly letter that I write to a bunch of nursing home residents who love funny stories about my dogs. She also got a nice series of my start-line routine of putting on the harness as a signal it was time for serious work.

See photos of the Craftco Metalworks storage yard where we train
See An Illustrated Explanation of Nosework for Those Unfamiliar with It