PROFILE: Bruce McClarin & Debbie Curtice
Bruce McClarin has been involved with the sport of dogs for over
forty years. His first dog was a coonhound that he trained to
hunt rabbits; later he bred and showed Shetland Sheepdogs. He
has competed and titled his dogs in obedience, agility, flyball
and herding events. Currently Bruce is breeding and training field-bred
English Cockers for field trials and hunt tests. An accomplished
sporting clays shooter, Bruce also enjoys hunting and shooting
over his spaniels.
Debbie Curtice has been training dogs for seventeen years. She
has been in obedience competitions in the U.S. and Canada, and
titled her American Cockers in both countries. Debbie has taught
obedience and agility in group classes as well as in private one-on-one
sessions. She has been trialing field bred English Cockers for
the past few years and, along with Bruce McClarin, co-owns Windsor
Beach Cockers.
Debbie enjoys shooting Sporting Clays and also has shot pheasants,
chukar, quail, grouse and woodcock over the cockers she has trained.
THE AMATEUR TRAINER
I had been training and campaigning my dogs in competition obedience
trials for a good eight years before I got my first field dog.
I had studied extensively the theory of animal behavior, the use
of operate and response conditioning, attending seminars on the
subject. I taught many obedience training classes incorporating
the technology of shaping behaviors. Yet when I got my first field
bred cocker Ellie, I felt totally incapable of training a dog
to compete in field trials. This was foreign ground, different
from the familiar obedience trial world. I felt overwhelmed at
the prospect of actually training the dog myself.
I read everything I could get my hands on about field training.
I picked the brains of the best professional field trainers around.
It all seemed to come down to, you needed birds to make a gun
dog. Birds I didn't have, and at the time I also didn't know how
to shoot for a dog.
Most trainers believe that you should let your pup chase birds
so that they learn that they can't catch them. This theory is
also based on the principle that chasing builds bird drive. I
always felt that bird drive was bred into the genetic background
of any quality field dog.
I believe there are better ways to get a young dog fired up for
birds than to let him chase. For months the young pup is allowed
to chase across the field in hot pursuit of birds before he learns
the whole picture is about to change. How does one teach a dog
that chasing is no longer allowed? By the use of force, either
to run the dog down and give him a good shaking or incorporate
the use of the e-collar. I believe both methods can create problems.
This whole chase concept felt wrong to me, like putting the cart
before the horse.
Now my dog Ellie was the type that loved to chase birds, just
for the fun of chasing. She knew she would never catch them, but
she would still burn across the field and chase her bird into
the next county. I was told by many a pro to give up and start
over with a new pup. This was never an option as Ellie was my
love. That's when Bruce McClarin entered our lives. Not only was
Bruce one of the best wing shots I'd ever seen, but he also had
years of training dogs behind him. Bruce's stubborn Scotch nature
would soon do battle with Ellie's willful personality. Many a
time Bruce would pick me up off the ground as I sat head in hand
sobbing. He never gave up on us. Steadying Ellie was not unlike
breaking a wild horse. Sometimes I feel Ellie has taught me more
than I've taught her. She taught me to go deeper into my bag of
tricks, to use the behavioral training methods I used successfully
in obedience training.
Our new generation of Windsor Beach Cockers are being trained
using positive conditioning. Our method shapes top performance
rather than trains for it. There is a difference.
I'm still learning a lot about the field trial game. This past
fall I had a long conversation with a top pro trainer who pointed
out that field trials are a game, it's not about hunting. I balked
at this at first, but later gave it a lot of thought.
In a trial we have flags that give us a clear boundary. We know
the birds have been planted in the field and about where they
are. The dog is to quarter his ground thoroughly, exhibit good
use of wind and stay within gun range. He must also hup to shot,
stay steady until sent and honor his bracemate. This is a simulated
hunting scenario. In a real hunting situation I want my dogs to
hunt objectives. I don't worry about the perfect ground work.
I'm unsure as to where game is; I rely on my dog's natural game
finding ability. Needless to say the dog must always work to the
gun and remain steady.
Finally the light went on in my head. Yes, this was a game not
unlike obedience, agility or any other AKC trial. The dog is performing
a controlled set of exercises.
Amateurs don't always have the resources or the time that the
professional trainer has. I believe the larger part of training
is accomplished through the yard training. Yes, birds are a vital
part of the training, but not until later, after control has been
instilled. One of the greatest handicaps the amateur faces is
not the training, but the handling. This, I have come to realize,
is the key difference between the amateur and the pro competitor.
Over the next few months, Bruce and I look forward to sharing
our training ideas with other amateur trainers. We will also share
resources we have found beneficial in training our cockers.
See you next month with Puppy Training 101:Shaping Behaviors.

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