![]() ![]() The weather forecast was foreboding,Ĭalling for a beautiful day with a chance of "isolated thunderstorms" to coincide with the late afternoon early evening rush hour. Very serious gathering of the Hard Corps of the Big Apple. ![]() The May 18th All*Star Thursday Command Performance featuring Left Coast Shredmeister Dave Schiller was a This is how we teach people to build sequences and become a more competent handler.The All*Thursday Chronicles - Special Chillman Edition Here’s the complete lesson for more info:ĭone well, the Art of Linking Tricks creates a stable and patient dog who knows his or her job and is poised to spring into action. It’s just a wait between each trick in the sequence. It might sound fancy, but it’s not really. A cued to create new disc dog sequences and other drive based behavior chains. Freestyle sequences are long behavior chains. We use a technique called the Art of Linking Tricks The Art of Linking Tricks is a sequence building methodology developed at Pawsitive Vybe leading to rapid development and deployment of disc dog freestyle sequences. That will be a routine worth investing time and training into and will allow you to showcase what you and your dog can really do. The competition field might not see too much waiting going on as everything is supposed to be happening in flow, on the routine until you have core competence and some feeling of what kind of player and team you want to be (and are capable of being). Wait Waiting on cue and situationally is extremely important for disc dog freestyle training. Try as many variations of things you CAN DO as you can. Why Sequences and not Routines?įor the player that is not yet super competitive or threatening to win major contests, building and deploying sequences instead of routines is my suggestion. Given the speed of learning and deployment, literally, draw 5 cards, use 3-5 reps with a wait and take it live speed - a sequence in 5 minutes - it’s a no brainer for us as instructors and as players. These lessons, a few key trick to trick combinations, and an occasional sequence or two find their way into the chosen sequences and become your routine. It’s a great way to gain the experience, moves, and training chops of a freestyle veteran in rapid fashion. So the flash jam idea, essentially using flashcards for randomizing your moves™, creates learning opportunities and sometimes creates cool sequences. The dog leaves the ground for the target, for instance - The random nature of the draw does a great job of breaking standard and habitual patterns: random is to creative as pattern is to habit. A Vault is a leaping catch from the handler’s body. The dog leaps to catch the disc and then you catch to Reverse Back Vault The dog uses the player´s body as a launching pad to jump for a disc. #FREESTYLER MAKE SEQUENCE FROM CUE HOW TO#We’re working with the Disc Dog Flash Jams to create novel and interesting sequences randomly and playing them honestly to not just get cool sequences, but to learn how to play and to be surprised and challenged by potential combinations - Dog Catch A Dog Catch is a great trick to use for hitting the crowd or for putting a strategic pause in your routine. Noobies need to learn what dog and handler are capable of and how things work before building a static routine. I think one of the biggest problems with a player’s development is attempting to nail down a routine while still a baby in terms of ability. Create sequences, explore, keep the awesome ones and leverage the lessons learned from the not so awesome ones towards better and more creative play. ![]() I really recommend this to new players as well. It’s an excellent thread that will surely only get better… Here’s my response: Think Sequences Not Routines Disc Dog veteran, Christi Campbell posted this to the Disc Dog Discussion group on Facebook:Ĭurious… how do you put together a new routine for the first time with a new dog? I have recently had the opportunity to examine my process and I realized I didn’t have time to do it the way I have always done it, so I am experimenting with a *gasp* new way! ![]()
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