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by Q Man on 27 March 2016 - 23:03
I hope this made sense...
~Bob~
by Haz on 28 March 2016 - 00:03
Another way was to use a wedge held next to the decoys body. Dog is sent from distance the decoy move the wedge farther away from his body as the dog comes in if he fails to adjust the decoy simply tosses the wedge to the side away from him making the dog miss and also steps out of the way. (obviously you must have good timing)
The dog is downed before he can get to the dropped sleeve and the exercise is repeated until he swings more to the elbow side in anticipation of the wedge/sleeve going that way.
You can do the same thing for dogs that hit too low but just toss the wedge up making the dog miss low.
If your dog has issues targeting equipment then obviously not a good idea..lol.
Here is a quick vid where I do some presentations to the elbow side and you see he still hits there.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qk1ch1ObqHA

by RLHAR on 28 March 2016 - 00:03
Haz, very handsome Mal! I like the size and speed on him and beautiful grip. We started with the wedge (or I should say when we realized we had the concern, we went back to the wedge) and had a few near catastrophes when he tried to go center mass anyway. The challenge of him not targeting the equipment.
by Haz on 28 March 2016 - 16:03
Thanks.
Yes I would definitely get the equipmwnt targeting under control before worrying about Centre vs offside hits. Maybe more movement with the sleeve and games where the decoy tries to steal the sleeve the sleeve for. The dog and channels his defense into and through the sleeve.
If the dog is super defensive aggressive then you have to be careful with this type of work.
I prefer prey aggressive dogs or aggressive prey dogs for the sport...but that's my preference.

by RLHAR on 28 March 2016 - 17:03
He was extremely clear headed, learned his lessons very quickly, brought strong aggression onto the field but I never needed more than a flat collar to work him because it rarely took more than one correction to clarify the obedience side of things in his head. The coming center mass and the equipment situation not withstanding.
His scores were always strong in Phase C (any mistakes were on yours truly, the dummy behind the leash). I ended up getting out of the sport because of people and politics but I miss training my dog, so like to revisit some of the challenges we faced, just to get opinions and who knows, it may help someone still training!!
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