Armin
Winkler Only the NOSE really KNOWS - Pt2
Only
the NOSE really KNOWS Part 1 of this article was a discussion
of the fundamental concepts of tracking and teaching tracking.
I'd like to focus part 2 on a crucial part of Schutzhund (or VPG)
tracking, articles. I believe that this is also one of the fundamentals.
After all, the description of the task in the trial rules calls
Schutzhund tracking "tracking for lost articles". So we better
make sure that our dogs have a good grasp of what they are.
Considering
how varied the responses are I get from people about what articles
should mean, I figure I will just give you my version of it and
then go from there. The article concept I will discuss is for
dogs who indicate articles and do so by downing at the article.
First principle: An article itself should have no meaning to a
dog. It is nothing more than a piece of material. What should
have meaning to the dog is the odor of human contact on that piece
of material. Tracking is as I have stated before nose work. That
means scent is what the dog is processing. With the endless variety
of materials a dog could possibly come across, it would be impossible
to effectively teach them the smell of all these materials. The
human contact odor is one constant that will always be there and
should therefore be the focus of our teaching. I am deliberately
using the broad term "human" contact odor, and not the "tracklayer's"
contact odor. There are some very gifted dogs in this world who
are actually capable of memorizing the odor of one human and comparing
that against the odor of other humans. Most dogs are not capable
of doing that, they will however be able to identify and indicate
objects which have had recent human contact. For the purposes
of Schutzhund tracking and police evidence searches this is sufficient.
Second principle: The scent of human contact on an object is an
olfactory command to lie down. Read that one a couple of times,
it sounds very simple, but try to truly understand what I am trying
to say. The smell of human contact on an article a dog finds on
a track is a platz command for the dog. Which in this context
takes the place of the audible (spoken) command. I know this sounds
a little weird.
Think
of hand signals for a second though. We can make a dog perform
an obedience command by making him obey the verbal command and
showing him a hand signal until the hand signal replaces the audible
voice command. So if the sense of hearing command can be replaced
by another sense, the sense of sight, why can't it also be replaced
by the sense of smell? I have had a technique to accomplish this
for years, and it is still how I do it. But two years ago on a
seminar trip to New Zealand, I got together with some of the instructors
at the Agriculture Detector Dog School there and had a great revelation.
The Agriculture Detection Dogs learn their work in a very unique
way, which is in principle identical to how I teach articles to
tracking dogs. The "Beagle Brigade" of the New Zealand Department
of Agriculture is world famous for their unbelievable ability
to find and indicate all sorts of contraband. From fruits to insect
eggs and all you can imagine in between; a very important task
in an island nation that tries to remain as disease and pest free
as they are at present. Let me tell you what they do, to give
you some food for thought. They begin their training with citrus
fruits. So how does a Beagle learn to indicate an orange by sitting
for hot dogs? Did you figure it out? The dog is taught to sit
as millions of dogs are in obedience classes using hot dogs as
the food reward. Then, the scent of an orange is introduced and
this scent replaces the audible sit command. And the highly food
motivated Beagles that are selected for this work will not miss
an opportunity to earn a hot dog. For me that was a perfect illustration
of what I have been trying to teach dogs to do when working articles.
The smell itself becomes a command to the dog. Sounds simple,
now that I figured it out. Let's define articles for a tracking
dog once again: Articles are obedience, but the command is scent.
Now that we know what we want to teach let's get into how we go
about doing that. Articles should not be introduced to a dog until
the dog's obedience has advanced to the must stage. What does
that mean? A lot of people do puppy obedience, as they should.
However, most of that is purely inducive. For the article concept
to become a solid one, the dog has to have a reliable platz. And
I don't mean that if you hold a hot dog in front of the dog's
face and say platz, he lies down really fast. I mean that the
dog lies down on command, reliably, even when he is in the middle
of doing something else. I believe to get that kind of platz,
a dog requires some level of correction. What type of correction
may vary from a stern voice command to a physical correction with
a training collar, but some form of it is necessary. How the obedience
exercise platz is taught to a dog varies greatly. My point is
that this exercise has to be proficient in the obedience context
before it is introduced in tracking. Puppies may track well at
a young age, and articles may be the next step. But, they should
not be introduced until the obedience has advanced to this stage.
If a dog does not yet obey a verbal command reliably, we cannot
replace it with a "scent" command.
Since
in the teaching of anything new, there may be conflicts and mistakes,
we should introduce articles away from the track. Then when the
concept begins to take hold in the dog's head, we bring it onto
the track. We need about a dozen articles (I like to use at least
4 or more different materials), a dozen fingernail size pieces
of the oven dried liver I mentioned in Part 1, a flat collar,
a corrective collar, and if possible a person to give us a hand.
Let me jump back to the "Beagle Brigade" for a moment to explain
a teaching technique. As I said, the dogs know the sit command,
and then the scent of the orange is introduced. How? When a dog's
curiosity is triggered, they investigate with their nose. The
instructors put an orange into a cardboard box, and move it around.
The Beagle investigates the box sniffing it intensely. They sniff
the cracks and openings in the box. After a period of this sniffing,
the instructors can be assured that the dog has gotten a whiff
of orange. At that point they give the sit command. When the dog
sits, they reward him for sitting with a piece of food. This process
is repeated a number of times and a point will come when the dog
sniffs the box and as he registers the smell of the orange inside,
he sits on his own. As if he had gotten the command to sit, because
in his brain he did. Classical conditioning is great isn't it?
Thank you Prof Pavlov! We will apply this very same concept with
our article training.
We
take our articles and we ensure that there is obvious human odor
on them. We do that by spitting on them and rubbing them with
our hands and even against our arms. The spit helps, because it
already smells human, plus, it allows other scents from our hands
to stick better and to be more detectable. We then place them
all over a field somewhere close enough together so we can find
them, but far enough apart that the dog has to walk a few steps
in between them. We place a single fingernail size piece of liver
under each article. I use the liver, because I want to ensure
that the dog will register the smell of the human contact odor
on the article long before detecting the smell of the liver (that
is why hot dogs or cheese is less desirable). Next we put the
dog on the flat collar and have the assistant person go to the
first article. The handler walks the dog up to the article, restraining
him by the flat collar. The restraint helps to stimulate the dog's
curiosity.
The assistant points at the article, even taps on it getting the
dog interested in it. The handler allows the dog to stretch at
it and sniff it. After several strong sniffs, we can assume that
the dog has registered the human odor we put on it. At that moment
the dog gets a firm platz command. Don't be gingerly here, say
it like you say it in obedience, with a bit of a bang to it. The
dog downs, the assistant flips the article over and the dog gets
his food reward for platzing at the spot he did it at, the article.
Praise him "good boy." And on to the next article. Same routine.
Restraint, tapping, sniffing, platz, reward. Be sure to maintain
the restraint part of the set up. Handlers sometimes get a little
rushed and let go of it too fast. Hold the dog back a bit and
control the situation. You can do the same thing alone, without
an assistant. But you have to play both roles. You have to hold
the dog on the flat collar with one hand, then make him curious
by pointing with the other. It still works, but it is a little
harder. The corrective collar is there, in case the dog needs
a reminder what platz means. But as I said that should not be
necessary more than once or twice. By the time you get to the
end of this batch of articles, you will see the dog starting to
drop as he gets the smell of the article. Of course there are
other clues here too, that help, like the pointing and the sight
of the article.
That
is why I said maintain the restraint on the collar. Make sure
the dog has to wait and gets to sniff the article before he downs
and is rewarded. Sniffing is absolutely essential. http://www.finographics.com/schutzhund/
As nifty as this little exercise is, it has its limitations. I
rarely repeat this more than 2-3 times as a field exercise. I
do not want the dog to make other associations which are not intended.
The sight of the article, for example. Also, ensure that you use
different materials right from the beginning. Dogs learn to lie
down when they smell leather as easily as they do when they learn
human contact scent. We should ensure that we set it up so there
is only one constant, the human contact odor. If you do this right
from the start, you don't have to practice unconventional articles
like metal or plastic or anything else the dog has not encountered
before. If it has human odor on it, it means platz in the context
of tracking.
After
our initial introduction of articles to the dog, we have to bring
them onto the track. During tracking the dog is truly working
with his nose, and we make sure that the association with the
articles will also be one of scent by bringing it into that context.
Depending on the tracking stage the dog is at, we place an article
at the end of something that is easy for the dog. What I described
in Part 1 works great for some dogs, but there maybe some who
do not advance very far with that method alone. Some will not
go significantly further until after the introduction of articles.
So what stage of competency in tracking a dog is at may vary.
A single article, with a piece of liver under it at the end of
what our dog can competently handle. We let the dog track as he
always has, as he gets to the article we will see a reaction.
It will look like "Uh-oh, did I just hear a platz?" You have seen
that before - you tell your dog to platz a fair distance away,
don't say it very loud, he hears it, but isn't quite sure you
mean it. So you get that kind of dropping of the shoulders. That
is pretty much what you will see on the track when he stumbles
across the article. It does register as a platz, but just not
that strong.
Follow it up with a verbal platz as well to reinforce the replacement
command. Then let him get the reward. Some dogs may flip the article
over and reward themselves. For those that do not, you flip it
over for them and let them have the treat under it. Do this a
few times the next few tracks and you will see the dog dropping
and rewarding himself. I hear questions. "Isn't the flipping going
to be a problem later?" It would be if it stayed. But it won't
stay. The reason this is important is the following. The dog needs
to be rewarded where he downs, no better way to do that than to
have the food at the article. You have to have the food covered
up though and the smell of it too, or the dog can't make the connection
we want.
When
we first teach the dog to down with food, we have it in our hands
and give it to them as soon as they move into the down position.
But we soon get away from that and reward different and later
and change how we reward. All this will take place at the articles
too. I will jump ahead here and say that as the dogs proficiency
in indicating articles gets better and the reliability of the
platz becomes very high, we stop putting food under the article.
The dog will flip the articles and find nothing, we then bring
the reward to them. In the beginning, the reward will continue
to be in the form of food, or in later stages in the form of praising
and petting. The dogs will stop flipping the articles because
the expectation of food under it will no longer be maintained
and supported. I wanted to add this progression in here because
I do not want people to turn off their brains because they worry
about potential problems We have now effectively taught and introduced
articles and their indication to the dog. But, we are not finished.
The
platzing at articles is the first piece of must the dog has experienced
on the track. So far everything he did has been purely based on
his own desires. Naturally that is a bit of a shock to a dog.
If we go from the introduction of an article at the end of a track
to placing them along the track right away, we will surely cause
a problem. An important concept needs to be added into all this
and that concept is capping. What is capping? I have touched on
this concept in my article "Protection Obedience A Closer Look."
And a detailed analysis of the concept is the topic of a future
article. But I will give you a sketch of it here. Capping is the
dog's ability to follow the directions of his handler, in other
words be obedient, and contain but maintain his drive while doing
so. Sounds a lot simpler than it is, especially when the drive
of the dog is focused on something that is not coming directly
from the handler.
The
most important exercises of the sport of Schutzhund where capping
is difficult but crucial are tracking, retrieving, the send out,
and basically all protection obedience. I can make a dog platz
fairly easily if I shut his drive to go forward down completely.
Often that is what happens when some of these exercises are taught.
The dog tracks nicely in drive. Articles are introduced. Bam!
Drive is gone. The dogs do down at the articles, but if they have
not learned to cap, their drive shuts down or diminishes to such
a degree, that they will not go on tracking with the amount of
drive they need to be successful. This is equally true for all
the exercises I mentioned above, but I am sticking to tracking
in this article. A dog has to learn that he can stay in drive
while being obedient. He does not automatically know that. Often
when the must parts of the work start being introduced, the dogs
do not see a direct success outcome from following directions.
Their drive tells them something different. So they resist.
The resistance stops usually when the drive has been lowered to
a point where it no longer tells the dog to do something that
is in opposition to what the handler's direction says. This happens
when I tell my dog to platz as much as when anybody else does
it with his dog. Knowing that it happens makes the difference.
And then taking the time to make sure a dog can cap is what in
the end makes the difference. Do little exercises with your dog.
Make him lie down, put his toy in front of his feet, let him lie
there for a bit and "stew" so to speak. Then give him the go ahead
to grab the toy. See the toy is not coming from you now, it is
right there in front of the dog. He has to listen and stay in
drive. Or you will see that he is not as intense when he grabs
the toy, or he can't stand to look at it anymore, because he can't
stay down and be stimulated by the sight of the toy. Work with
this until you get good intensity and reliable downing. Then tell
the dog to sit from the down. Most will bolt at the toy. No punishment
please. The dog is just not getting it yet, and his brain is so
high on "toy" that he does not differentiate your words clearly.
Patience. Make the dog sit before giving him his food, ask him
to bark, then tell him to sit quiet again. Reward when he follows
your direction clearly. Do not make it too complex in the beginning.
This is not easy for dogs. Ask the dog to down and stop eating
while eating his meal. When he does, tell him to go back to eating.
Now please don't bug the hell out of your dogs every time they
eat. And don't turn into "nags" either. All in good measure. http://www.finographics.com/schutzhund/
Work a dog on a square, tell him platz, then "such" again, gauge
how fast and intense he goes back to work on the square.
The idea is that an obedience command does not have to shut down
drive. It will in the beginning, because it often takes influence
from us to make the dog who is in drive obey our commands. But
if we show him that following direction does not mean the end
of drive, it just means an interruption, then we are teaching
capping. Make sure you do these things with your dogs. They will
allow you to see if your dog can cap at least a little before
you bring articles onto the track in places other than the end.
And if you have a dog who worked well within the parameters of
what I said in part 1, then you can start placing articles on
the track. In the beginning still with food under them. You will
see the down reaction, help them out with a command to ensure
they down completely, walk up, reward, and let them continue the
track from there. Dogs who didn't do so well with the food only
method I described in Part 1, can still learn articles and learn
to do them on simple tracks (for those dogs that may mean just
straights, no corners). You may even find as they learn to cap
better, they will re-gather some of the food drive that seems
to be dwindling as tracks get too long. That will then allow you
to stretch the tracks out a bit further.
Tracking training is by no means finished with the introduction
of articles. We still have to discuss dogs who need to be motivated
through things other than food. We have added a small potion of
duty to the track by introducing articles. But there is still
more we need to do to put it all together so we can feel that
we have a reliable dutiful tracking dog. I hope you will join
me again when I try to shed a little light on those aspects of
the work.
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