Thanks to Fred Lutz for this fun action shot.
Fred is one of our dropshippers at: www.agilitytools.com.
Thanks to Fred Lutz for this fun action shot.
Fred is one of our dropshippers at: www.agilitytools.com.
Tags: member stories, simply funny
Thanks to Joe, Judy, and “Gizmo”, for sending me this photo. They have an indoor course set up inside a pole-barn style building that Joe uses for his business. The course shows our mini-travel teeter and contact trainer/table combo in the background. It is inspiring, isn’t it? He has a smaller dog, so can get away with the obstacles a bit closer together, though in trials, to encourage more speed, and for the safety of bigger dogs, there should be more spacing. See the fencing? We’ll be getting it soon on Affordable Agility. See the matting? It’s inter-locking pieces of rubber that you can buy in Home & Garden stores to floor children’s rooms. This provides far more cushioning than just cement, which is bad for dogs’ joints. Gizmo is a lucky dog!
WebTalk Radio (The DogTime Show) did an interview with me last week, and it was aired yesterday. I talk about getting started in agility training, and some basic principles that everyone should know. You can listen to the podcast here:
Tags: Affordable Agility News

Patch, Beverly Skilling
Summer is off season for Florida agility except for the DACOF state team competition in July (indoors of course). I spent my summer giving lessons in the evening after it cools down and I took on a new dog.
Patch was offered for adoption because of health issues with his owners and because a 60 pound energetic dog is not what they expected when they bought a cute puppy 10 months ago. An AKC registered Australian Shepherd and a beautiful boy, he was offered by the breeder free to “active” home.
Patch came to my home a counter-surfing, home destroying, untrained doofus soon to turn a year old. I puppy-proofed (I thought) a room so that he would not have to live in his crate. I soon discovered that his idea of puppy proofing and mine differed greatly. Carpets were chewed, crates were chewed, window shades were shredded. I gave him a doggy door so that he could go outside at will and he chewed the doggy door.
I decided, on the encouragement of one of my agility students (who is a certified instructor for the Karen Pryer Academy), to try clicker training for the first time. What an eye opener!
He was learning how to learn! In just days, this dog was targeting from across the room, offering behaviors quicker than I could mark them. Whenever he would start getting into mischief around the house we would have a short training session and learn a new behavior. This helped keep him out of mischief by occupying his mind with the added benefit of some cool tricks to show off with.
We soon moved the targeting to a board 2o2o and then right on to a small teeter. In just a couple of weeks we moved the target outside and clicked our way over all of the contacts. Tunnels? no problem. He really was not paying enough attention to the jump bars so we went inside for some one-jump excercises from the book Developing Jumping Skills by Linda Mecklenburg. I clicked for a bar left up, just reset with no comment when the bar came down. The rate of bars left up has improved greatly.
After only two months of training I took him to his first public run-through and was very happy. He took all obstacles, left all bars up and stayed with me. I feel that my “off season” was well spent by learning a new training method and starting another dog on the road to the fun of agility play and competition.
Beverly Skilling
AnnaLuna (JRT) O-EJC, O-TN-E, ECC, S-TG-N, EAC, O-WV-E, HP-N
OA, 0AJ, XF
Kaikaina (BC), AX, AXJ, NF
OAC, NJC, NCC, WV-O
Navrock’s Snuggle “Patch”(Aussie)
Tags: member stories
Christine, a regular member and poster here at AgilityFusion has a question for everyone. Her beloved dog Sideway just got confirmation from her vet that she needs replacement surgery for hip dysplasia. She is wondering, are there any people on here whose dogs have had the surgery? And are they still running in agility? (thank God for veterans and preferred classes, right?)
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