September 30, 2019

Installing Horse Show Dog Manners

Hank is a dog that I'd eventually like to come to horse shows with me.  He's smart, listens well, rarely barks or howls unless it's on command or he's hungry, and doesn't have a shred of separation anxiety.  And he LOVES adventures.

#porchin

But good horse show dogs are made, not born, and Hank needs the chance to learn how to be a good one.  Luckily, I got a perfect opportunity to give him an education when, due to a marathon in my city that would clog the roads for the entire day of the show, I had to haul Connor in to the horse park 24 hours before my ride time on Saturday.

Definitely not allowed on my couch
We've had Hank for a year now, and his obedience training is MILES better than it was when we got him.  We've slowly worked up to doing obedience in increasingly more distracting/challenging public places, til we're at the point that he's a Good Boy in most situations.

Like learning that he has to down/stay while in the checkout line at Rural King
Now that he's at that point with obedience, I've started bringing him around the horses, which is VERY EXCITING!  At Rolex, he boinged up and down feet into the air on the end of his leash every time a horse ran by.  Thankfully we were hundreds of feet away so the horses didn't notice, but it was clear that we need to make horses running around boring for this dog.

So since I had nothing to do except unload my trailer and feed my horse on Friday evening, that's exactly what Hank and I did.  We watched horses run around for HOURS.  After he was already worn out physically.  When the riders were just practicing, so if something did go horribly wrong, it wouldn't happen during an actual test.

Tense, active, forced down stay
Eyes on swivels
I had a pocket full of training treats with me, and did a lot of boring obedience with him - sit, down, stay, high five, gimme paw, lay on your side, roll over, crawl.  Just to prove he has to listen to me rather than stay on high alert.  Then we went back to the barn for a brief mental break for him.

Tied to the wall
And finally we went back to watch my trainer teach a lesson in the warmup ring, sitting right up against the rail so the horse cantered right by us, and this is when he FINALLY started to get bored with it.

Relaxed, willing down stay a few hours later
It was nice having him there, people I didn't know came up to introduce themselves and ask about  him.  I joked that he was on "horse show probation", and even though he improved a lot over the course of the afternoon, I didn't bring him back for the actual show the next day.  He's not good enough to where he wouldn't be a distraction for me, and I didn't need that while showing.

Future horse show dog.  Future very weird horse show dog.
Someday though!  He'll get there.

13 comments:

  1. Good horse show dogs are nice, but definitely take a lot of effort to get them that way! I'm slowly working with my 6mo old GSD on trying to be a horse show dog too!

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    1. How cool! This is my first GSD mix and I love it. He's got that Husky joyfulness with the Shepherd obedience and alertness. It's a great combo.

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  2. Very pretty dog! And on behalf of all horse show competitors (even though I'm nowhere near your area) thank you for taking the time to train him properly!

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    1. Thank you, and you're welcome! Even as a dog lover myself, there's nothing more annoying than a badly behaved dog, at a horse show or otherwise. We work pretty hard to make our dogs solid citizens.

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  3. That is great. I'd love to bring Guinness but he's not so good if another dog challenges him. That said, he's great on the trail with us and when I'm riding outside. Although he sometimes believes he has to heel in the ring.....

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    1. Yeah, other dogs are Hank's kryptonite too. He sees them and loses his damn mind wanting to play with them (but thankfully he's never growled or even pinned his ears at another dog, daycare has been great for socialization). Someday...

      Would love to get him good on trails too like Guinness, that's useful!

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  4. hahahaha oh Hank! horse show manners take time to download. Like the AOL days.

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  5. Oh how I wish everyone took this much time and thought before bringing a dog to a show. Mine are great..now, but you're right it takes time and exposure!!

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    1. It does, and it might be different if I could convince my husband to go to shows with me, so that I had someone to mind the dog, but he has to be absolutely bulletproof old hat good at horse shows before I can bring him alone. We approach all public situations like this, lots of work getting them used to shopping, sitting outside at the bars downtown, stuff like that.

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  6. That's so great you had time to work with him without the added stress of showing at the same time. Sounds like he's well on his way to being a good horse show citizen.

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    1. Yeah! It was a good opportunity. He got to learn, and I didn't have to compromise my show day stress level.

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  7. Very cool. What a great opportunity! I want to get Moshy out more but it can be tricky to find dog appropriate times especially for such a tiny dog that’s pretty heat sensitive. I do dream of having her as a tiny horse show companion eventually!

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