Kozmo Kringle

Kozmo Kringle
our first day together - December 2011

Friday, January 18, 2013

Socialization continutes and agility classes start

I was so excited for dog socialization class this week. Yes, I wanted my dog to get to play with the other dogs, but I have to admit I was also excited to see some of the humans. It's funny to me how dog socialization is also socialization for the humans and how Kozmo continues to be such a great gift. If it weren't for Kozmo I wouldn't have nearly as many human interactions.

Just like Kozmo learns each week, I'm also learning so this week I felt better prepared for class. I think Koz might have remembered dog socialization from last week. As soon as we pulled in the parking lot he started to get really excited.

I'm calling this week a huge success. We stayed for the entire hour and Kozmo didn't try to hump any other dogs and he didn't poop. He had so much fun running around with the other dogs. The one thing we need to work on is Kozmo coming to me when he's off leash. Although last night in agility our trainer thinks it's because I lean over to grab his collar when he gets close. I need to stand up straight and trust him.

One of the other humans takes photos at dog socialization. I'm thrilled she shares these photos because I'm so busy focused on keeping an eye on Kozmo and making sure he doesn't get into trouble that I'm lucky if I end up with a few blurry cell phone photos at the end of the night. Below are some photos of Koz and his new doggy friends. It's so much fun to see a room full of happy dogs.
Photo by Kaylee & Roscoe P's human

Marley & Roscoe - Photo by Kaylee & Roscoe P's human

Sunny in action - Photo by Kaylee & Roscoe P's human

Sydnee - Photo by Kaylee & Roscoe P's human

Koz slowing down - Photo by Kaylee & Roscoe P's human 

 In 50 short minutes Kozmo ran and played so much that he actually got tired. He didn't want to fetch any longer. He wanted to take a tennis ball, lay down, and start removing all the fuzzy stuff from the tennis ball. He was really having fun. I don't want him to be destructive but Kaylee and Roscoe P's human made me feel much better. She told me to let him have fun. I think one of the lessons I need to learn in dog socialization is not to worry so much about Koz, he's a dog.

It was awesome to see Kozzy tired. We all know that a tired dog is a good dog. Here he is at the end of the class.

A tired dog is a good dog!





I've been looking forward to starting agility classes again. I thought for sure that with dog socialization on Wednesday Kozmo would be a good boy for agility class Thursday. I made sure I was home in time to give him a 2 mile walk before class.  We even practiced jumping on our walk. A road is closed in the park where we walk. I treat the chain across the road as a jump and make Koz practice every day.

This new session of agility class is a combination of beginning and intermediate. We have 5 dogs in class and 3 are brand new to agility. Kozmo and one other dog have some agility experience. In my naive mind I thought I did all of the right things for Kozmo to walk into this class and show the new dogs how it's done.

Remember, Kozmo's sole purpose in life seems to be to keep me humble. So we approach the jump. I sit my dog. I send him over the jump. He decides to grab his leash and start his stupid antics of showing off, playing tug with the leash and growling. How could this be? I thought we were prepared for class. Back to our seats we went to try to get Koz calm and wait for his next turn. After class, our trainer laughed at me for thinking Koz wasn't going to be wound up. He has had a month off from formal classes and he was meeting 4 brand new dogs and lots of new humans. "But he should know this," I protested. "He does" replied the all knowing trainer.

We got a second chance to redeem ourselves. The trainer asked us to start at the weave poles. We had some trouble because Koz isn't ready to be off leash. He's starting to wrap his neck around the poles. If his horrible human would break down and get a set of poles and practice at home he could do much better. We moved on to the tunnel, which is a piece of cake for Koz. This is where we identified more of my human mistakes. I was so nervous sending Koz through the tunnel off leash that as soon as he came through I was bending over to grab him before he ran around the room like a nut.

Once again, in doggy body language I'm doing the wrong thing. We already know Koz hates his neck being touched and gets a little jumpy when you try to grab him. I'm making this worse by bending over as he approaches me. So we had to do the tunnel several more times. Not because Koz doesn't know the tunnel but so I could practice standing up straight. Koz came to my hand every time.

We did the jump again. Koz knows how to jump. He did the jump and came back to me. I was happy. We ended with the table. It's just a table on the agility course and you have to tell your dog to jump on the table and sit or down. Koz knows this. We practice with a big rock and benches in the park. He ended class very well. He knows agility. Now the hard work is teaching his human the right body language, patience, and recall. We both need to master this recall thing.

It's going to take a lot more work but some day I will have an agility dog. For now I have an awesome dog who makes me smile every day.


2 comments:

  1. Well it looks like you'll have another faithful reader besides your mom :) I love this! I can see why you adopted Kozmo - he was an ADORABLE pup. And now he's such a handsome dog. Like you I'm at my job which takes soooo much time away from dog related activities. So I will be back over the weekend to read more. See ya!
    Sunny's Human

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  2. I second that - here is another faithful reader! As another human learning agility (my dog knows agility........I need to be calm and remember to tell her what to do in her language). Interactions with other dogs and their humans is great for the dogs and for us/let's not forget about our socialization!
    Kaylee & Roscoe's human

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