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by RLHAR on 24 March 2016 - 18:03
For the long bite, you have a dog who naturally goes for the center mass of the helper. Doesn't matter if he's steered right or left, he defaults to center mass, often forcing the helper to draw the sleeve inward and spin himself to the side out of the way.
1) Do you find this a fault?
2) What methods would you employ to train it out of him?

by Q Man on 24 March 2016 - 19:03
~Bob~

by RLHAR on 24 March 2016 - 19:03
by vk4gsd on 24 March 2016 - 19:03
by Bavarian Wagon on 24 March 2016 - 21:03
by vk4gsd on 24 March 2016 - 22:03
by raykarli8808 on 27 March 2016 - 16:03
by Haz on 27 March 2016 - 16:03
by vk4gsd on 27 March 2016 - 20:03
No decoy but I thought decoys create a tunnel and let the dog maintain a straight line of flight no matter where they target??
A dog can't change direction while in mid air but the decoy can change his body location.

by RLHAR on 27 March 2016 - 21:03
Raykarli has the solution we ended up utilizing with him, which was to work with his center mass targeting and to follow through the catch towards the stick hand.
When I say the half sleeve off to the side didn't work for my dog, I don't mean to shut down the conversation. My purpose in putting this topic up was to discuss the different "tools in the tool box" to work with in a scenario like mine.
Haz you said you were able to move your Mal off center to the elbow with the half sleeve method, I know how fast Mals can come, did you feel like you needed to proof the shift? Or how in the training did you get to the point where you were comfortable the transfer had taken hold?
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