The 2009 Tour de CPE part 2 – Connecticut

So still trying to finish Bryce’s C-ATCH before summer (or at least getting as close to that goal as possible) we set out bright and early last Saturday morning on a 2.3 hour trek to Connecticut for one day of the SNEAK trial.

Day started a little rough … about 5 miles from home my car began doing bad things. Weird, bad things. Weird, scary bad things, like responding erratically to the gas pedal. NOT a good feeling! I almost turned around and went home, but like the “Q ho” I’ve become, decided that I’d give it until the Tappan Zee bridge (i.e. still in an area I know) to either 1) fix itself or 2) break down completely before making up my mind.

Happily, it chose #1, and the rest of the ride was uneventful, if very long!

Got there a little later than anticipated – which would have been fine if we had a NUMBERED course to start with, but what was our first class but Jackpot – and a “non traditional” one at that! For you non-CPE’ers, a “traditional” jackpot is like USDAA gamblers – you accumulate points, at a certain time a whistle sounds and you have a few seconds to do a distance challenge. Some thinking involved (so you accumulate enough points) but not too bad.

In a non-traditional jackpot, anything goes – it’s up to the judge. You really need to catch the briefing and think a lot harder and plan more than with a traditional jackpot. This one had 3 distance challenges on course that you could do at any time, 2 of them overlapping, all with different point values, and there were some fairly complicated rules about what you could/couldn’t do if you attempted one and failed it.

Unfortunately, I misssed the briefing and nearly all of the walk-thru and couldn’t get it into my early-morning-and-scary-drive-frazzled brain which obstacles in the 2 overlapping challenges belonged to which, so for breakfast I had 2 NQ’s, over easy – damn!

Things improved from there – both dogs Q’d in standard, Jayda Q’d in Colors (finishing her level 5 requirements in that class), both dogs had really nice, qualifying runs in Jumpers at the end of the day. I probably could have salvaged Bryce’s Wildcard run, but it was hotter out than he’s used to and he was slow and not looking too happy so instead of fixing a probably-fixable mistake I took him off the course. Good move, he had much more energy and it had cooled down a little by Jumpers and he was much happier on that run.

Here’s the jumpers course – I thought it was fun, but I always like jumpers. Tunnels 9 and 11 were a lot closer than they look on the map (jump #6 was straight in front of dogs coming out of #11)! Lots of teams got “eaten” by the dummy jump at the end – that part was really quite easy as long as you didn’t handle with the jumps on your left (which put that jump right in the dog’s path).

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And here’s the Colors course. Colors is two short nested courses, you choose which one you run (we did the square one). It’s really too easy, especially for the upper level dogs. I think it would be a LOT more interesting if there were a handling restriction at the first decision point, like a tape line you can’t cross until the dog takes one of (in this case) the #2 obstacles…

sneak042009cpecolors

I should probably shut up before I give anyone ideas!

Raven came out a few times to sit ringside and socialize, both of which she enjoys. She’s not at all bothered by any of the sights or sounds at trials – *I* enjoy that! She’s very sweet and very good when watching, the one thing I have to be careful about is that she wants to play with EVERYBODY so I have to be vigilant to keep her out of trouble when walking through crowds of people and dogs (who may view her as more of a snack than a playmate).

There was a vendor there with some very cute colorful collars and leashes – I was tempted to invest in a spring wardrobe for my little foofoo but I resisted (only because they didn’t have martingales).

We left right after we ran Jumpers – it was around 6 PM and IF by chance my car was going to have problems and IF I were to end up stranded and waiting for AAA in the Middle of Nowhere with 3 dogs in the car (one of them being Jayda), I figured it would be somewhat better if it was still light out! Fortunately none of that came to pass, and the car WILL be visiting the car doctor before next weekend!

There was a photographer at the trial, but it seems he was only shooting the “baby dogs” (levels 1, 2 and 3) ring on Saturday – boo hoo :( !!! Oh well – here’s a picture of Jayda jumping from another trial – this picture makes me laugh! I have no idea HOW she keeps bars up with those dangly back legs, but she always does!

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A so-so weekend of agility beats a depressing weekend of sleeping in, printing your tax forms and writing a big check to the IRS

Since we don’t HAVE to do the latter until Wednesday, we opted for the agility – an indoor day of CPE on Saturday and an outdoor day of NADAC on Sunday .

We went into Saturday hoping for Standard, Jumpers and Wildcard legs for Bryce. I don’t know what it was – maybe because I was uncentered because the whole feng shui of my household if “off” without Jasmine, but my first jumpers run with Bryce was easily some of the WORST handling I’ve done in years! Somehow, he qualified, no thanks to me – it was bad. Bad as in “I’m really glad nobody was taping this” kind of bad.

Our standard run started well but ended quickly when he slipped off the side of the seesaw 5 obstacles in. Stupid, freak thing to happen. I was relieved that he didn’t get hurt – he actually seemed to be running even BETTER in his remaining runs. Why did it happen? Who knows – maybe his dain-bramaged handler did something weird again … or maybe his foot just caught a slippery spot. Anyway, he got a Wildcard Q and one in Colors so 3 out of 4, (but we NEEDED that standard Q :( .)

Jayda was Jayda, cranking out 5 q’s, finishing her first Level 4 title (CL4-H), and making it look easy. The highlight of the day was when she made a 90 degree entrance from a double jump into a set 12 weave poles (and completed the poles) like it was nothing. When she’s “on”, she’s good.

Which brings us to Sunday – our first outdoor trial of the year. I’d prayed to the Agility Gods for dry weather and got it. Unfortunately, I forgot to request a side-order of No Wind. How windy was it? The judge had a special 2nd briefing mid-morning to discuss it and later pulled the dogwalk from the Chances courses. Big 30-35 mph gusts, things blowing around all over the place, nasty stuff.

Here are a couple of pictures of the windswept Miss Raven:

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No way I would have let that little featherweight up on the dogwalk in that wind!

Bryce got out of the car and went “We’re outdoors and it’s really windy – WOOHOO!!!” Raven got out of the car and went “We’re outdoors and it’s really windy – WOOOHOO!!!”. Jayda got out of the car and went “We’re outdoors and it’s really windy – AW ****!!!”

Did I mention Jayda is major-freaked-out by wind? So as luck would have it, Jayda, Ms Q of the day before, had major meltdowns in both her runs.

Bryce had a great time in regular but took a wrong-course tunnel on a tunnel-dw discrimination (maybe I was conflicted about sending him onto the dw under the conditions, but it was a tough angle and they were really close too). I was happy to see him running nice and extended – he looked pretty darned good. Another NQ for him in Chances (Note to self: running him as a skilled vet his takeoffs and landings are VERY different which totally changes the “best” strategy for his distance work).

We finally managed to eke out a Q in Hoopers – NOT Bryce’s favorite class, to say the least. He started all happy and enthusiastic … then he realized what it was, ran it dutifully, but it was obvious that he doesn’t see the point of those silly hoops. It’s funny – most of NADAC is so motivating but leave it to them to come up with a game Bryce hates even more than that other NADAC classic (and Brycey un-favorite), Weavers.

Sunday’s big smile of the day was thanks to Raven. Since nobody was using them, I took her over to play a little with the practice jump/weaves between classes and she TOTALLY took me by surprise by doing a beautiful “sheltie bounce” through a set of straight poles – several times! She’s made her way through straight poles before, but this is the first time she’s ever done it with the speed and footwork I want.

In my experience, those breakthroughs usually come in the living room or the back yard or in class or someplace else cozy and familiar. Here we are – brand new place, super-distracting sounds and visuals, scary stuff blowing around and just yards from the food truck to boot and she goes hopping through straight weaves for the first time like she’s been doing it all her life? What the??? Sometimes I just have to look at this funny little dog and ask “who ARE you???!!!”

My Sweet Jasmine

March (?) 1993 – April 7, 2009

jasmine

Almost 15 years ago, I went to the pet food store on some long-forgotten errand and came home with a cat.

It was shelter adoption day at the store, but that wasn’t on my agenda. She wasn’t the first one that caught my eye, but she was the one that held it. When I first saw her, she was in a cage by herself – this beautiful little orange-eyed orange kitty. They had her stacked on top of a cage full of young kittens and she was wistfully watching them play with some toys through the bottom of her cage. She was barely more than a kitten herself but nobody’d thought to give her a toy. She wanted one so badly …

The next thing I knew I was signing the papers and questioning my sanity.

The shelter people didn’t know how she was with dogs – or if she’d ever even seen a dog before. Just after I handed over my $20 and finalized the transaction, in walked a customer with … a sheltie! Sheltie innocently put his nose near the cardboard carrier containing my brand new kitty … kitty went hissy-ballistic and nearly clawed her way of the carrier! Oooo-kay – answered THAT question!

But a promise is a promise so nevertheless moments later I found myself putting her in my car, all the way home berating myself for being such an impulsive idiot, certain I was introducing a major source of strife into my household and consigning us all to 13-odd years of Hell …

Within an hour of letting her out in my house, I knew she was where she belonged. Rescuing Jasmine was the most wonderful, demented-impulsive thing I’ve ever done in my life.

Jasmine

She gave us all so much joy over the years, making friends with everyone (even Kacey!). I loved watching her sleep with and play with the dogs – first Tiffy and Sally:

Tiffy and Jasmine

Jasmine and Sally

… and later with Bryce, Jayda and Raven.

Jas and Jayda

Jayda and Jasmine

As you can see, once she got used to the idea she really LIKED dogs!

And how Jasmine loved to snuggle! Like a hot water bottle like feet, she was always in my lap or curled up beside me – or if I wasn’t available, she’d snuggle with Kacey or one of the dogs (if they’d have her!) I always loved sleeping in with her curled up under my chin – lulled to sleep by her mesmerizing purr.

Jasmine and Kacey

There was also her fun-loving sense of humor. The girl just LOVED to play, and she remained playful right up until her last few months (when that awful tumor started taking over her mouth) – chasing toys (the dogs’ tennis balls were a favorite), wrestling with my shoes and my head, making “crazy cat” runs through the house or up the scratch post, playing “beast in a blanket”, doing death-defying leaps across several feet of open space from one piece of furniture to another …and knocking all my pens on the floor. How she loved to play with pens! She’d eyeball them with this mischievious little “look” on her face and send them flying.

Now I’ll always be able to find a pen… but I’ll miss her very, very much.

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Note: The best pictures I have of Jasmine are of her sleeping – not because she was a lazy cat by any means, but because she LOATHED having her picture taken! At the first hint of any camera noises she would very sweetly swear at me in Cat and leave.

I am the world’s lamest blogger!

… because I’m OK about WRITING but I keep forgetting to take PICTURES!

Case in point: Raven has a new friend – another little tri sheltie girl who’s in the agility class after ours. At first glance they could be sisters – Daisy is 1/2″ shorter, 1 lb heavier and 1 month older than Raven. The two girls hit it off immediately and we thought it would be fun to get them together for a play date, so yesterday we did!

Daisy has a lovely, big yard all to herself, complete with a tunnel, jumps, weaves and a little tire. All surrounded by a 6′ fence, with plenty of room to run.

And run they did! Up the hill, down the hill, around the garden, through the tunnel, Daisy chasing Raven, Raven chasing Daisy. Lots of photo ops … did I take ONE freakin’ picture? No! OK so I didn’t have my GOOD camera with me, but I had my cell phone. It takes kind of gray-ish pictures but in a pinch would have been better than nothing. Never crossed my mind – duh!

Since you probably came to my blog hoping to see pictures, you’ll have to settle for a picture of “Hat”, taken with my cell phone. It doesn’t matter that my cell phone takes gray-ish pictures of Hat because he IS gray. He’s squinting into the sun – I just realized he looks kind of mean when he squints, but nothing could be farther from the truth (he was purring and kneading his big paws on the windowsill while I was taking his picture)
Hat the Cat

Darn – what’s wrong with me? Not even a decent gray-ish photo of a gray cat!

A PERFECT Agility Weekend :)!

The kids and I had a PERFECT weekend of CPE agility this past weekend!

Bryce – 8 runs, 8 Q’s (level 5)
Jayda – 10 runs, 10 Q’s (levels 4 and 5)

Definitely one for the record books :)! Weather (although it was indoors) was perfect too – sunny and warm. AND, for a change, nobody messed with my crate setup so I didn’t have to stack poor Jayda on top of someone else’s dog this time. That made us both very happy – she hates being in the upper bunk and it’s no fun constantly having to lift my HEAVIEST dog in/out of her crate!

Bryce ran well and seemed to be feeling pretty good, but it looked like he had 3 “good” runs in him each day – he was really slow by the 4th. He was sleeping a little between runs, but he never really rests enough when he’s crated indoors. I had ambitiously entered him in 10 runs and ended up scratching him from 2. Not so bad. He’ll probably sleep most of today.

Bryce’s C-ATCH countdown is now:

    6 Q’s in Standard
    2 Q’s in Jumpers
    2 Q’s in Wildcard
    2 Q’s in Jackpot
    0 Q’s in Colors, Snooker and Fullhouse!

I was very pleased with Jayda – she just recently completed level 3 (2 weeks ago – her bad Mommy forgot to blog about it!)

Now we need to find more trials!!

Monday morning = not so perfect. I was planning to sleep in on this 2nd day of Daylight Savings Time, but a passing thunderstorm at 5:15 AM (followed by 3 dogs who were certain that was the cue to get up, go out and have breakfast) put the kibosh on that.

Maybe I’ll post some of the details and some obligatory pictures later, when I’m awake!

Speaking of great weekends, a shout out to my friend Bernadette Bay and the kids’ cousin Zen (Ag Ch Obay Truly Balanced) for finishing 2nd at Crufts in the Medium Agility Dog Championship on Sunday! They’ve both been away from agility for a while and Zen just recently whelped a litter – WELCOME BACK :)!!!

The Outdoor Kitties

One of my favorite (and worst) time wasters is fussing over my 3 outdoor kitties – Kit (male – very feral), Cassie (spayed female – feral or hard-stray) and Hat. Lately all 3 have been coming around together – it’s like a cattery out there! Feeding them is a challenge – Kit is much more timid than the other two and rarely gets his fair share when they’re around. Both boys seem to be very good friends with Cassie. They’re not as cozy with each other, but they seem to get along allright.

Here’s a recent picture of the handsome Kit-Man:

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And another …
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I’m not too sure Hat doesn’t have an owner. He’s friendly – VERY friendly – purrs like a fool and works his big paws if you pet him – he can’t seem to get enough of it! (Neither of the other cats are “touchable”.) When I eventually go indoors, he sits on the porch and stares longingly at my front door.

hat-waiting

He’s also tried to follow me inside the house a couple of times (little does he know there’d be hell to pay from my girls!) And while he’s not FAT (he looks “fluffy” in photos, but he’s just a big-boned male with a very thick coat) he doesn’t seem as thin as the other two either.

OTOH, he’s out at all hours of the day and night in all kinds of weather, including rain, snowstorms and zero degree temperatures. I certainly wouldn’t let MY cats out in that kind of weather, then again, I don’t let my cats outside at all.

Early this winter I broke down and bought a little insulated kitty hut for them. After a few weeks of viewing it with suspicion, all 3 of them are using it now and then. It’s big enough for 2 cats to sleep in, if they’re good friends. Here’s Hat proving that it’s big enough for even a big boy like him…

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Writing this post made me realize I need more pictures of Cassie, but she’s always hiding behind the trash cans or under the car, neither of which are very picturesque!