Course Details
What do you get when you combine air movement, target odor, strategic hide placement, and setup strategy? You get a dog who understands how to search effectively!
Dogs naturally understand what odor is. However, not all odors behave the same. If you are searching for essential oil, the odor will be lofty and will form large scent cones that rapidly change with air movement. This means that your dog actually has to start to problem solve SOONER because they initially get information farther away from the hide. We can use our understanding of air flow to put the dog into searching situations that give them the primer to solving the riddles of big, buoyant odor. That is what this class is about!
It doesn’t stop there. In our human minds we like to picture scent cones as continuous things that point to source and we can negated the circular nature of air flow and how changeable conditions can be. When we forget these things our dogs get stuck in trapping odor and as handlers, we may not see our dogs trying to work through and get out of diffuse odor pools. This class deals with that too!
You will learn the science behind air flow and will take steps to learn to understand how to make it work for you. We will let our dogs work in a way that helps them to problem solve and then will understand what we need to do as handlers to keep them from spinning their wheels. This class will deal with both wind/HVAC and thermal influences.
Setup examples will be given, however this class is meant to be exploratory in nature.
Teaching Approach
Each week a series of lectures will be released (usually 3 to 5). The lectures will be a combination of supporting theory and setup examples. This class is exploratory, not prescriptive. The instruction will be written with short videos of example searches. The student will need to adapt the example to their own situation. There will be scientific information in lectures. Lecture videos may run from 1 to 4 minutes long, with the average between 1-2 minutes. The lectures are designed to help a student understand the purpose of the topic and how its application might vary by dog. Care is taken so that learners who learn by both watching and reading will be successful.
This class will have a Teaching Assistant (TA) well versed in Scent Theory and course content available in the Facebook discussion group to help the bronze and silver students! Directions for joining can be found in the classsroom after you register.
Stacy Barnett is a top nosework competitor and trainer, with many Summit Level titles in the National Association of Canine Scent Work (NACSW), (Judd SMTx3, Brava SMTx5, Powder SMTx3). She is also a Wilderness SAR K9 handler with her certified dog, K9 Prize. Stacy has been a faculty member at FDSA since 2015 (Click here for full bio and to view Stacy's upcoming courses)
Syllabus
Week 1
- Making Your Training Powerful Part 1
- Setting yourself up for success
- Getting out of your comfort zone
- How Does Air Move Part 1
- Molecule Movement Matters…. A LOT.
- “Laminar Flow only exists in Laboratories”
- Exploring Air Flow Part 1
- Observation First: The Moment of “Getting Into Odor” and what it tells you about your hide, your dog, and your odor
Week 2
- Making Your Training Powerful Part 2
- Lumping vs. Splitting
- D’s of Detection
- Reinforcement… what you think you know and what make you go hmmmm…..
- How Does Air Move Part 2
- Variability Comes Standard
- Exploring Air Flow Part 2
- Observation First: “Air is Bendy”
Week 3
- Making Your Training Powerful Part 3
- Conversation about Frustration and Resilience
- Dog Driven vs Moving Your Dog On
- How Does Air Move Part 3
- The Pressure and Temperature Power Struggle
- Odor Peculiarities Part 1
- The Myths and Truths of Aging and Know Your Odor
- Exploring Air Flow Part 3
- The Disjoined Scent Cone: Looping, Variable Wind Speed and Direction
Week 4
- Understanding Your Dog Part 1
- Your Dog’s World Based on Height
- Red Dog vs Pink Dog and the TFR
- How Does Air Move Part 4
- Thermals!
- Odor Peculiarities Part 2
- What is a Scent Pool?
- Diffuse Odor is HARD! Inaccessible vs Just a Pool? Trapped or Not?
Week 5
- Understanding Your Dog Part 2
- Cognitive Conclusions and Formula Hides
- How Does Air Move Part 5
- Building Height, Ceiling Height, Construction Types (walls and roof)
- Sun Location and those Pesky Clouds…. Predicting Variability
Week 6
- Odor Peculiarities Part 3
- Heated surfaces: Walls
- Heated surfaces: Ground Hides
- Testing YOUR Learning
- Blind Hides with a talented training partner (optional but awesome)
Prerequisites & Supplies
This class is best enjoyed by dogs who are confident working in new locations and who have a good understanding of target odor. Although some of the content can be applied to the dogs at the NW2 level (or equivalent) and below, this class is really geared to the more experienced team.
This class will encourage the use of large and complicated search areas. The student will be encouraged to work mostly away from home and to seek out different training spaces.
Sample Lecture
Partial Lecture Excerpt from Week 1:
Setting up yourself up for success is all about making sure that you are picking the right search area for the objective that you are trying to achieve. A lot of times, we get very tempted to just go anywhere and look at a "cool" search area and just start setting hides. That could be a whole lot of fun but it comes down to really just practice versus training.
Practice is repetition. Repetition is not always a good thing! When you have repetition, you create reinforcement history. And… One of the most important things to remember is that you get what you reinforce. So if we continue to practice in a random way, the best we can do is get random results. Picture this… Let's say you are trying to get good at archery. But instead of actually aiming at the bull's-eye, you just point your bow in the general direction of the target. How often do you think you will actually hit the bull's-eye? You may occasionally… But it would be sheer luck. That's kind of what we're doing when we go to a search area and just set out “cool” hides. In this course, you will start to think about your search areas in a new and different way so that you can start to set hides in a way that will help you to achieve your training objective. We are going to learn all about airflow and how air bends and moves within the environment. That understanding will help us to become better trainers…. Not just “practicers”.
One of the first things you need to pay attention to is wind direction. A lot of times we can use things like flagging tape or even just look at the direction our hair is blowing in the wind. In the moment, that's not actually a bad idea! When I was setting hides down in Florida over the winter, I would look at the Spanish moss to see what direction the wind was blowing. If we have a specific objective however we may want to do some more advance planning.
Something that we will get into a little bit more in other parts of this class is the concept of the difference between macro and micro weather and air movement. Both matter! Our macro weather has to do with the prevailing wind. Prevailing wind is the general direction in which the air will move (big picture). We need to understand this information so that we can predict what the air movement will look like as it wraps around buildings and structures within the search area. Once we have that macro view we can start to take a closer look and start to understand what the airflow is doing in our specific search area or at the actual hide itself. But more about that later.
Before we get started, we want to make sure that we can predict the direction of the prevailing wind. If we have this information, it can help us to figure out exactly where we want to set our search area. Once we understand the prevailing wind, we can get a general understanding of what the odor will do depending upon the time of day, amount of sun, and other weather parameters so that we can make a good decision about selecting a search area.
There are a couple of apps that you may want to look into to help to predict wind direction on a daily or even hour by hour basis. A couple of apps that you might want to look into is MyRadar, WindCompass, or Windometer. Availability might vary depending on your operating system. MyRadar has the ability to predict the prevailing wind on an hour by hour basis but only on the Android platform. Those of us who use Apple, have to be happy with the forecast for the day! However, it’s pretty accurate! I have also used the WindCompass app because it will tell me what the wind is doing at that moment.
If you have an idea of where you might want to search, you can use Google Earth to start to plan your training session. When you determine which direction is North, you can get a pretty good idea of what the air flow might be in your given search area. I even did this at a recent trial!
To give an example, I used MyRadar to assess the prevailing wind direction for the first day of my most recent Summit trial. MyRadar told me that the wind would be coming from the North East direction. Then I went to Google Earth to get a satellite picture of the area where we would be trialing. Yes, you can do this the night before! With this information, I had a pretty good understanding of what the airflow might actually do in the search area while I was searching the next day. We will be talking a lot later about how airflow moves around buildings so that you can get pretty good at making some assumptions about airflow. Very interestingly, I was absolutely correct and was able to use this information to put in a very successful search. This screenshot is from my actual trial prep. The bank and barber shop doors were open and part of the search. Because of this analysis, I didn't get trapped in the bank in swirling odor because I knew that it was likely coming from another location!
Although you don't always have to use apps or Google Earth when planning your training, you might want to give it a try! In fact, I would like you to give it a shot this week. Here's an example…
On April 1, 2023, the prevailing wind for Washington New Jersey is forecasted to be coming from the southwest direction. It also looks like it's going to be quite gusty! Here's a screenshot from the MyRadar app from my phone. I am using this as a example because we can use Google Earth to get our next piece of information (and I know the area!)
Here is a Google Earth image of the Meadow Breeze Park in Washington New Jersey. The parking lot is south west of the baseball fields. You can see the compass in the bottom right that shows the red arrow that points north. With that compass and the information from MyRadar we can assume that the direction of the wind will follow (in general) the direction of the yellow arrow. We can start to use this information to think about what we might want to do during a training session. Now of course you might be thinking that this is a whole lot of work… But even if you don't do it all the time, it is really good practice to get you into the mindset of planning. You might also find that your training sessions become way more powerful!
Let's say that my training objective is to get more experience in learning how to read my dog when my dog is an odor but far away from source. When the odor is diffuse and scent cone is wide, my dog will start to give me a in odor behavior that is different than when my dog is close to the location of the hide. If that was my objective for the training, this might be an interesting set up. For instance, if I were to set a hide in the bleachers close to the parking lot (denoted by the red X) and start my dog searching over by the trees in the top right corner of the photo, I would try to pay attention to when my dog actually got into odor. Then as my dog approached the bleachers on the top right (denoted by the blue circle), my dog may start to work that set of bleachers because my dog should be an odor at that point… in this case, my dog would be working “diffuse odor away from source”. Keep it in mind of course that when we are searching for essential oil our scent cone is quite large! Of course to do this set up, I may want to age the hide for at least an hour or two to get the full effect.
You can see how doing this helps to lay out a structured training session so that your training is not haphazard. Picture going to this park and setting the hide and letting it age while you went off to do errands or something. Then you get back to the park have a well laid plan to be able to run the search with the objective of being able to observe your dog when they encounter odor on an unproductive side of bleachers that is downwind from the hide but set in a way where the dog may not be able to make a direct line to the hide. Here you can see that the tall fencing around the baseball field would impede the dog from leaving that side of the bleachers and going directly to the hide. What an excellent exercise! Would we necessarily figure this out if we just showed up at the park and set a cool hide? Probably not!
Testimonials & Reviews
A sampling of what prior students have said about this course ...
This course was a whole lot of fun! Working through the homework assignments gave me tons of real search experience in reading my dog in various common airflow situations. I would totally take Part 2 of this!!
Stacy, I just wanted to say that I just completed reading every single student forum for your FDSA course: NW485 Air Flow: Your Training Superpower, before the forums were taken down on Friday (and thank you to those hard working students!). Words cannot express how powerful this class was for me. As some of your students mentioned, I knew of the existence of thermals and air currents, but I tended to mostly leave that aspect to my dogs to figure out. But this class just clarified everything for me and opened up my world. I have been having a ball with experimentation in hide placement and figuring out ahead of time what I think the scent will do, and then the boys come along to tell me whether I'm right or wrong. They are teaching me soooo much. I never realized I was living with a pair of 4-legged instructors. It also has turned the most mundane search areas into fantastic opportunities and I will no longer whine about my lack of great areas for searching. It truly is a Superpower class and I hope everybody will consider it next time it rolls around on the schedule. Thank you! Thank you!
This course taught me fundamentals regarding important perspectives on air flow. It was super helpfull both regarding impact of environmental conditions, hide placement, and understanding the dog's work pattern under the air flow circumstances. I estimate the practical elements very important for my learning applicating the content to real training situations. I really enjoyed both my own recording and the feedback I recieved, but I also learned a lot from peer's recordings and their feedback. Super, also to look over the shoulders and follow the recordings and feedback on gold level students.
Stacy is just great. I have learned so much from her. Thanks to her courses the little anxious Joes loves nosework again. Fun is back in our training and Joes is better than ever.
Stacy!!...what can I say?? Amazing class and so well taught and great TA to help. My tracking students and their dogs are really benefiting from this class as they are on their way to Urban tracking Trial in Canada. Thank you.
Thank you, thank you, thank you! I have been in need of this valuable information. The lectures followed by the video's provide a fantastic learning experience. I have loved all that was included in this course. I also appreciate the facebook group for my level of the course. Even though I didn't post on the group, I felt I was covered if I needed help or questions answered. I was unable to work at the class pace due to family health issues, but I kept up with all the reading and will continue to work through the homework. Thank you Stacy, Lauren and FDSA for this opportunity to learn more about the challenging subject of Air flow! Piper and I are working towards making it our superpower!!!
Registration
Next session starts: April 1, 2025Registration starts: March 22, 2025Registration ends: April 15, 2025
Registration opens at 12:00noon Pacific Time.
NW485 Subscriptions
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Silver |
Bronze |
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Tuition | $ 260.00 | $ 130.00 | $ 65.00 |
Enrollment Limits | 12 | 25 | Unlimited |
Access all course lectures and materials | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
Access to discussion and homework forums | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
Read all posted questions and answers | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
Watch all posted videos | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
Post general questions to Discussion forum | ✔ | ✔ | ✖ |
Submit written assignments | ✔ | ✖ | ✖ |
Post dog specific questions | ✔ | With video only | ✖ |
Post videos | ✔ | Up to 2 | ✖ |
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