Get them rats!

Next up for National Train Your Dog Month is barn hunt!

As always, these posts focus on my knowledge and experience of the sport. Consult the various links in the posts for more information.

What is it?

Cookie competing in a barn hunt trial, January 2020.

The essence of barn hunt is hide and seek with rats in a maze of hay bales. Fear not; the rats are safely secured inside plastic tubes with holes. Depending on the level your dog is competing in, the number of rats hidden will vary. There will also be at least one tube that is completely empty, while another will have “litter” (or bits of hay/bedding that smells like rats).

The tubes are hidden in a course of bales of hay. Your dog is to sniff out the rats, signal to you that they found a rat, and you proclaim, “Rat!” In addition to successfully identifying all hidden rats, your dog must also climb atop a bale of hay and complete a tunnel.

As far as I know, the only organization that sponsors barn hunt trials is the Barn Hunt Association. Your dogs must be registered with them to compete in trials hosted by various dog clubs. When you earn barn hunt titles, the American Kennel Club (AKC) will recognize the title, for a fee, of course.

How we started

Ziggy finds rats in a barn hunt trial, January 2020

When Cookie started her journey with agility, we became members of a local dog sports club. Barn hunt was another sport that they hosted competitions in. I was a bit averse to the concept of searching for rats, but friends in the group suggested trying it, telling me that no training was needed.

So I did. Cookie and I signed up for an initial trial. She started with the instinct level, the most basic round. There are 3 tubes that are not hidden in hay. They sit in a rack on the other side of the tunnel. Climb and tunnel are optional at this level. The goal is for your pup to identify the tube with the rat, for you to correctly guess based on your dog’s cue, and move on.

Chip shows off his RATI (instinct) title, August 2023
Chip shows off his RATI (instinct) title, August 2023

Cookie, Ziggy, and Chip all competed in barn hunt, but Cookie is the only one not to title in Instinct. The reason is that titling in instinct isn’t required to compete in the next level up, and once you title in novice, you can’t compete in Instinct.

Once Cookie got started in novice, she quickly moved up to earn her novice title and came one qualifying run short of titling in the open. Cookie got stuck in open when Ziggy came along. When Ziggy started competing, he would bark the entire time that Cookie was competing, and she instantly became more preoccupied with the well-being of her brother than finding rats.

When the pandemic hit and Ziggy’s cancer journey began, all competition stopped. Last August, we signed Chip up for his first barn hunt trial. He’s a pro at finding the rats but is too nervous to tunnel. And Cookie remains uninterested in finding rats.

What they don’t tell you

The club that I started with in barn hunt always said that you didn’t need training in barn hunt and to just rely on your dog’s instincts. This worked for Cookie and Ziggy, but Chip would benefit from training (which I didn’t know was a thing for barn hunt until after his first trial). While the instinct may be there to find the rat, your dog may need training to learn to tunnel or also to exit the ring. Chip was hard to catch once our turn was up. The judge advised that it is something that he could be disqualified for, which would be a shame had he qualified in novice.

Competing in barn hunt is significantly more expensive than agility. It may seem surprising at first, but upon inspection, it makes sense. The equipment in agility can be used for years through countless competitions. But the key “equipment” in barn hunt are live rats. Additionally, while bales of hay can be reused while they remain intact, it’s not uncommon for dogs to mark on them (or paw or bite them). While it’s common to charge the owner a fee when this happens, bales of hay don’t last nearly as long as agility equipment.

How dogs signal that they’ve found a rat can vary wildly. I’ve seen some dogs go CRAZY barking and biting bales of hay to say they found a rat. Meanwhile, others, like Cookie, go completely still. (According to the judge who made this observation, Cookie was “disgusted” by the rats!)

I also learned how your dog signals can change over time. Once Cookie started getting stuck in open, I wish I had taken a break from trials and instead took a couple of classes or done a fun run to learn if she was changing how she was signaling or if she truly lost interest in the sport.

The bottom line

A proud Cookie showing off her barn hunt ribbons, January 2019 (before Ziggy came along).
A proud Cookie showing off her barn hunt ribbons in January 2019 (before Ziggy came along).

Barn hunt is a less physically demanding sport compared to agility. It leverages your dog’s natural hunting instincts but can benefit from practice and classes.

Like with everything else, explore your dog’s interests and simply HAVE FUN!! Even if your dog doesn’t find a rat in the competition, every judge we’ve competed under has made sure that a rat tube is presented to the dog to sniff and for excitement to be demonstrated so they leave the ring on a pawsitive note.

Agility: Not for the faint of heart

Second up for National Train Your Dog Month is agility!

As always, these posts focus on my knowledge and experience of the sport. Consult the various links in the posts for more information.

Full disclosure: I never competed in agility with any of our dogs. It was my husband’s sport with Cookie. I served as their manager, photographer, videographer, cheerleader, and backup handler.

What is it?

Agility is essentially an obstacle course for dogs with a specific sequence that you lead your dog through, and where accuracy and speed matter.

There are several venues that sponsor agility competitions, including the American Kennel Club (AKC), the United States Dog Agility Association (USDAA), and Canine Performance Events (CPE). There may be more, but these are the venues in which Cookie competed.

Agility equipment poster from RedBubble.com
Agility equipment poster from RedBubble.com

Each venue has different levels of competition and different rules. The obstacles may vary but generally include jumps, weave poles, teeter, dog walk, A-frame, table, and tunnel. The obstacles are laid out in a specific sequence. Handlers have the opportunity to walk the obstacle course for a few minutes before the competition begins.

While the obstacles are numbered to guide you, walking the course allows you to learn the course so you can focus on staying ahead of your dog and directing them accordingly during the competition.

Walking the course also lets you think through the types of signals you’ll give your dog to run the course completely.

How we started

Cookie going over jumps in a March 2019 agility trial
Cookie going over jumps in a March 2019 agility trial. Credit: Robin T Brumfield Photography

Last week, I talked about how we started obedience at a shelter near our home. Cookie’s initial classes were outside in a fenced-in field. One week, there was an agility class being held in the field next to us. My husband watched through the chain link fence, looked at me, and said, “We should try that!”

I pretended to ignore him until one of the obedience instructors, also a member of the canine sports club that held agility classes on that field, approached us and said that Cookie would do great in agility. So, I jotted down the name of the group and signed us up for an intro to agility class.

Before we actually started, and while we still lived in an apartment, my husband started practicing agility with Cookie indoors. When we moved into a townhome, he built some basic jumps and weaves for practicing with Cookie at home.

We took classes for at least a year before entering Cookie in her first agility competitions. It probably took her roughly a year of competition before her brain “clicked,” and she started sailing through the competitions.

What they don’t tell you

Cookie flying over a jump in a 2019 CPE agility trial. Credit: Robin T Brumfield Photography
Cookie flying over a jump in a 2019 CPE agility trial. Credit: Robin T Brumfield Photography

We were fortunate to have great agility instructors and a community when we first started. Thankfully, most of this was told to us, but sometimes it takes you experiencing it for yourself before the lessons really sink in.

Most of the work is on you

Cookie, circa 2015-2016, practicing agility through osmosis.
Cookie, circa 2015-2016, practicing agility through osmosis.

This is one that was truly surprising, but validated when I would record Cookie’s classes in addition to competitions. Once your dog knows the obstacles, most of the work is on you. It’s up to you to know the course, be far enough ahead of your dog (spoiler alert: you can’t outrun your dog no matter how in shape you are), and ensure your whole body is giving your dog the same direction.

Record your runs, and you’ll find that when your dog goes the wrong way, 97% of the time, your body language is sending mixed signals. Your feet, torso, and hands need to all be pointing in the same direction.

Different Venure, Different Rules

While the basics of each obstacle will be the same across venues (i.e., AKC, USDAA, CPE, etc.), the specific rules may vary. For example, in one venue, the table obstacle doesn’t care which position the dog is in, while another requires the dog to sit or lie down.

Similarly, other rules about competition (i.e., whether they can wear a collar or must run “naked”) may vary by venue. If you’re taking classes with an instructor who is experienced in multiple venues, they’ll likely point these nuances out during classes. A recommendation from our instructors was to train with the more conservative rule (i.e., train your dog to lay/sit in a position for all venues).

Even if they do, you’re liable to forget before your first competition (or get them all mixed up). You can research rules ahead of time. Day of competition – be sure to be present for the judges briefing at the start of the day (usually an overview of trial-level rules) and, more importantly, in my opinion, the briefing happening for each specific class. Since judging may be more critical at higher levels, they’ll go over what counts as a fault at the start.

Don’t let your first competition be your first trial

The best way to know what to expect at your first competition is to go to trials before you start competing. You can take your dog to expose them to the chaos of a trial (lots of dogs in crates, loads of baring, speakers, and buzzers).

Observing the routines of the briefings, learning your dog’s results, and more are incredibly beneficial.

Even better than observing: volunteer. All of the trials we’ve been part of have required volunteers. Without volunteers, the competition can drag on and be a worse experience for all involved. Most of the volunteers are likely competing as well, so they may not be able to do set jobs for the whole trial.

Doing so can really set you up for success. I remember that we briefly went to one or two trials, but we purely sat on the sidelines at first. I’ll never forget at our first trial, in between runs, one of Cookie’s instructors came up to me asking how she did. I had no idea. Thanks to her dragging me off the bleachers, I learned that there’s a table where the results get shared. I might have been waiting for results to this day if not for her kindness. Had we been more involved as volunteers before competing, this is something we likely would have learned in advance.

Dogs just wanna have fun

Cookie at an agility practice with her substitute handler (aka me) in September 2019.

Most important: JUST HAVE FUN!! Agility is fun and a great bonding experience. Even if you dream about competing in national or international competitions, fun, and bonding must be at the center of every activity.

Start trialing before your dog is perfect in class. Cookie was incredibly food motivated, and in the beginning, she would constantly jump at my husband’s hands looking for her payday (in class). Treats aren’t allowed on courses, but she repeated that same behavior for a while. It’s something we had to work on with her before something finally clicked in her brain, and she truly started looking (and competing) like an athlete.

Throughout all of the classes we took with Cookie, the common refrain I heard: the tunnel is puppy crack. Once it was taught, few classes would ever include a tunnel in the course because it was so addictive for them.

This isn’t true for all dogs. While Ziggy never got to compete in agility, I taught him to tunnel for barn hunt with an agility tunnel. I tried the same approach for Chip in barn hunt. He was not having it! Tunnel has taken a lot more effort with Chip (and I haven’t kept up with practice with him). He’s made terrific progress with it, but it didn’t translate to his first barn hunt trial last year.

The bottom line

Agility isn’t for everyone, human or canine. I went to all of Cookie’s classes, recorded them, and would often critique my husband. Then, I became his stand-in when he had work conflicts. Agility is much easier from the sidelines.

Even if both you and your pup fall in love with the sport, it can be rough on their bodies. Take the advice of instructors seriously and ensure you know how to teach an obstacle before letting your dog try it out.

Have fun! Agility was our home in the dog sports world for a long time. While there can be just as much drama there as in other areas of life, it was a mostly positive experience.

Doggie New Year’s Resolutions

Whether it’s the pressure of society’s traditions or marking the end of a larger moment in time, many of us are motivated to form New Year resolutions. Last year was the first year that I formed resolutions for my pups.

Cookie and Chip’s resolutions were hopes that I had for what I would accomplish with each of them in 2023.

Resolution Tips

Any article about resolutions will give you advice that is applicable to all resolutions – keeping them realistic, achievable, etc. But there are three that are particularly important with your dogs.

First, keep it fun. Even if there’s a serious goal of improving behaviors (a la Chip), training should be fun – for both of you.

Second, consider your dog’s personality and interests. You may want to get them to jog with you, but if they don’t enjoy it or are not otherwise equipped for it, don’t do it! Make it YOUR resolution, not theirs.

Lastly, if the resolution is exploratory in nature like Chip’s trying new sports, be sure to monitor their response to it and adjust accordingly. Chip has a knack for barn hunt, and seemed to have fun. But, he refused to tunnel (a requirement to title beyond Instinct) and was difficult to leash up after his run. So, instead of just entering him in more trials, I’m going to take the time to try some training with it.

Similarly, I wanted to try nose work with him. After trying some initial training attempts after an unrelated class, he’s afraid of boxes. So whether or not we pursue anything will depend on whether I can help him overcome his fear.

Chip’s 2023 resolutions

Chip posing with his 2023 resolutions last year.
Chip and his 2023 resolutions last year.

Chip’s resolutions were easy, considering he was a few days shy of six months old and still learning how to behave. Here are his resolutions (and subsequent outcomes):

Change [his] “official” name from Leave It Drop It No Chip to Good Boy Chip!

Result: Achieved! He’s not perfect, but we did five classes with him throughout 2023, culminating in earning his American Kennel Club’s Canine Good Citizen certificate.

Try new sport(s).

Result: Achieved! I hoped to introduce him to multiple sports this year, but we only managed one – barn hunt. While he earned his Instinct title, he has a lot to improve upon before competing in another trial. Hopefully, in 2024, we can try a barn hunt class to see if he stands a chance of competing again.

Make [his] sister ❤️ [him].

Result: Achieved! As evidenced by the below photo taken yesterday, Cookie let Chip snuggle with her for more than 10 seconds (it lasted several minutes!). Cookie is not particularly affectionate and usually relocates almost immediately after any attempt to snuggle with her. She is increasingly tolerant, and she even sometimes worries about him being left behind. Make no mistake, Chip is still an annoying little brother that Cookie needs a mental health break from on occasion. But she no longer wants to return him.

Cookie letting Chip snuggle with her on the sofa, December 2023.
Cookie letting Chip snuggle with her on the sofa, December 2023.

Dig more holes ‘cuz [he] ain’t nothin’ but a hole digger!

Result: Much to his father’s dismay, achieved! This was clearly a silly resolution and one that we hoped wouldn’t come true. But Chip has a penchant for digging holes. We’re managing the behavior by limiting his time unsupervised in the yard and ensuring he has better outlets for his energy.

Cookie’s 2023 Resolutions

Cookie posing with her 2023 resolutions.
Cookie posing with her 2023 resolutions.

At the time, Cookie was eight, going on nine, years. Over the years, she’s taken road trips and competed in multiple sports. The perennial good girl, defining resolutions for her was more challenging.

Do more sports (at a senior pace).

Result: Achieved! Similar to Chip, I’d hoped to do more than one sport with her at a senior level, but we only made it to barn hunt. While she participated, she is clearly no longer interested in the sport. I may enroll her in a class with Chip just to see if she regains an interest by taking a formal class. This resolution, though, was more about doing stuff with Cookie. She’s always enjoyed classes and loves pleasing us. So maybe it will take the form of classes next year, or maybe just going out for fun activities like farmers’ markets.

Tolerate [her] brother more.

Result: Achieved! Cookie has always been pretty patient, but she’s truly embraced the role with Chip. She is even more likely to initiate play with him than she was a year ago.

Eat more homemade food.

Result: The jury is out on this one. I intended on putting a Christmas gift from last year to use by making homemade treats. For many reasons, I ended up not doing this. On the other hand, we replaced Cookie’s kibble breakfasts with gently cooked food. Technically, it’s not homemade, but it is fresh food and higher quality than her kibble.

Move upstairs without anyone noticing.

Result: Failed! Like Chip’s fourth resolution, this was meant to be a joke that she would fail at. Sometime early this year, Chip developed a fear of the upstairs, so it’s now Cookie’s refuge. When she needs an escape from him, she goes upstairs and either lays in the guest room bed or next to my husband when he’s in the office.

2024 resolutions

I’d hoped to share our 2024 resolutions in this post, but I haven’t decided on them yet. I’m still reflecting on what we achieved last year and where I hope the pups are a year from now.

Follow us on Instagram to see us reveal our resolutions in a few days!

Pawliday Activities

Those of us who consider our pups family members are eager to include them in holiday festivities – especially when you see other families, including their pups, in real life or on social media. But should you include them? And what are some great ways to include them?

Considerations

Chip and Cookie sitting in front of the Christmas tree, December 2023
Chip and Cookie sitting in front of the Christmas tree, December 2023

The most important thing is to consider your dog’s personality, training, and preferences. Some dogs are social butterflies that thrive being around people and other dogs. Others, like Cookie, may enjoy going out but prefer limited interactions. Most importantly, while your dog may have the personality for it, will they behave around others?

These are important questions, particularly when contemplating social activities such as seeing Santa and attending holiday parties.

Beyond your dog’s preferences, consider the venue. An important note with Santa photos is that not every event with Santa is dog-friendly. Each year, there seem to be more events with dog-friendly opportunities to take a photo with Santa. Be sure to research in advance and plan accordingly. The Santas at these events are more likely to be dog lovers and have experience with various dog personalities.

Many community holiday events and happenings may be dog-friendly, especially outdoors, but check beforehand.

If you want to bring your pup to a family or friend’s holiday party, ask the host if your pup is welcome. Even if they are, consider the venue and personalities. Has your pup been there before? Is there a space for your dog to escape the crowd if they are overwhelmed? For outdoor events in warmer climates, is the yard fenced in? Will there be other dogs there, too? Have your pups met before? If not, and they don’t get along, how will you handle it? (Don’t assume that if the other pup is “trouble,” the other pawrent will leave or crate their dog.)

Hosting a party? Check out the below post from behaviorist Renee Rhodes on Instagram for great tips on prioritizing your pup’s needs when hosting.

Tips for helping your pup enjoy a holiday party

Advent calendar

Anyone following us on Instagram may have seen us doing an advent calendar with the pups this year. I purchased the bone-shaped calendar on clearance after Christmas last year.

25 days of Christmas dog advent calendar
Our dog advent calendar

You can fill each pocket with an activity to do with your pups or insert a treat. Next year, I may alternate an activity day with a treat day!

Some activities that you can include are:

  • Having a pup cup
  • Making dog biscuits
  • Taking a photo with Santa
  • Christmas shopping
  • Having a howliday pawty
  • Watching howliday movies
Chip and Cookie with their Zippy Paws advent calendar in front of the Christmas tree, December 2023.
Chip and Cookie with their Zippy Paws advent calendar, December 2023.

Better yet, you can buy a pre-made advent calendar! After planning our custom advent calendar, I found the above advent calendar from ZippyPaws (https://amzn.to/47PdbdQ – I’m an Amazon affiliate and can earn from qualifying purchases).

I had to get it because Chip LOVES their burrow toys. So, since yesterday, we’ve also been opening up this calendar. There are also pre-made ones with treats. What I like about this ZippyPaws calendar is that it has toys (I haven’t seen many). Plus, the box seems sturdy enough that I can save it to reuse in another year, potentially mixing it up with toys and treats one day (toys for Chip and treats for Cookie) with an activity the next – plus, have a shorter advent season!

‘Tis the season

Santa photo with Cookie and Chip, 2023
Santa photo with Cookie and Chip, 2023

The bottom line is to remember your pup’s preferences and to HAVE FUN no matter what you do (or don’t do).

We wish you happy howlidays! I’ll be back in two weeks with the next new post!

Merry Woofmas!