Instructor: Stacy Barnett
Course Details
This is the second in a series focused on Skill Building by working through a set of challenges each week. We will stretch our skills and comfort zones using drills and exercises geared towards improving the Nosework team. Each Nosework Challenges class is standalone so don't fret if you missed an earlier one! I basically just have more ideas than I know what to do with.
The challenges we will play with will give your dog specific puzzles to help build their natural capabilities. Our dogs come to us as college grads in Olfaction... through puzzles and challenges we help to turn them into Olfaction Rocket Scientists.
Although this is a Series, please remember that the classes DO NOT need to be taken in order. I hope you can join me!!
The theme of Nosework Challenges Series 2 is CONVERGING ODOR!! We will go deep into converging odor... the ins and outs and how to teach it.
Registration
There are no scheduled sessions for this class at this time. We update our schedule frequently, so please subscribe to our mailing list for notifications.
Registration will begin at 11:00 AM Pacific Time.
Enrollment limits: Gold: 12 students, Silver: 25 students, Bronze: unlimited.
Gold Level includes access to all course materials and the ability to post questions and videos to the course forums. Students will receive instructor feedback on written and video assignments.
Silver Level includes access to all course materials and the ability to participate in the discussion forum. Students may ask GENERAL questions about course materials and may submit two, one-minute videos for instructor feedback. Any questions specific to your dog MUST be accompanied by a video.
Bronze Level includes access to all course materials and the ability to read all questions and answers posted in the class forums. Students will not post questions or submit written or video assignments.
For more details, refund policies, and answers to commonly asked questions see our FAQ page.
Syllabus
Week 1: Basic Scent Theory
- What is a Scent Cone?
- What is converging odor?
- Impacts of aging
- Impacts of air flow and wind
- Impacts of structure and pooling
- How our dogs search directionally
- Different search styles of dogs for converging odor
Week 2: Preliminary Skills
- Working a single scent cone
- Accessible
- Inaccessibe
- Elevated
- Not returning to a rewarded hide
- “Find Another”
- Working multiple hides when scent cones don’t overlap
Week 3: Starting Converging Odor
- Starting overlapping scent cones with accessible hides
- Two hides in a room
- How do you know when there are more scent cones?
- Three hides in a room
Week 4: Introducing Inaccessibles
- Overlapping scent cones with an inaccessible hide
- Accessible and Inaccessible Converged Odor
- Three hides in a room
- More than one inaccessible converging with each other
Week 5: Introducing Elevation
- The way elevation works
- Elevated hides with converging odor
- Elevated hides with inaccessible converging odor
Week 6: Advanced Puzzles
- High / Low Combination
- Mirrored hides
- Converging odor at a threshold
- Heavy converging odor – close proximity
- Lots ‘o hides!
Prerequisites & Supplies
This course is suitable for all teams prepping for NW2 or NW3. Dogs must be able to find single hides and ready to take the next step!
Sample Lecture
How Dogs Scent Directionally
Dogs have an amazing anatomy. Not only do they have structures in their noses that allow them to sample the air at roughly 5 sniffs/second but they also have the ability to house the samples and analyze them without breathing them out. Additionally, they are able to tell which nostril has picked up the odor. That’s right, dogs sniff bidirectionally!
Think about it this way… when you are listening, you can tell if a sound comes from the right or the left. Dogs can do this with their NOSES! It’s utterly fascinating.
The way they can do this is that something called the “aerodynamic reach” of each nostril which is less than the distance between their nostrils. The “reach” of the nostril is based on a spatial area of a small hemispherical inset region of the nostril.
Image attribution: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/nature/dogs-sense-of-smell.html
Additionally, when the dog exhales, he exhales through the side slits of each nostril. This means that each sample of air does not combine with the exhaled air.
What this means is that dogs are able to tell which direction scent is coming from. This allows them to work a scent cone quickly. Honestly it boggles the mind!
I have seen dogs on the start line zero in on a hide from some distance away. It’s almost as if the canine nose has “depth perception”.
So from a converging odor perspective, this anatomy is the reason why dogs are able to work converging scent cones.
From a cognitive perspective, the olfactory area of the dog’s brain encompasses roughly 12% of the total brain. Like humans, dog’s get more educated over time. By setting out careful puzzles, we can help to support the dog’s overall scent education.
Keep in mind that dogs come to us with a Harvard Education already in sniffing. Through these puzzles that we set, we help them to graduate as rocket scientists.
Think of it this way… when you were younger, spelling was difficult. You knew your letters but may have had to sound out the word. As you learned to read, your brain responsible for language was able to stretch and develop so that you can read much more quickly. Your brain started to learn patterns and it’s these patterns that help us to recognize written language. You can even recognize a word as coming from your own language without even knowing the meaning!
So when we first start working with a Nosework dog, they are learning to spell. They come pre-fitted knowing their alphabet. That part is inborn. With more and more puzzles, their cognition increases and they are able to solve more and more complex problems more and more quickly.
Because of this cognitive development I follow two rules in training:
(1) I let the dog figure out the scent puzzle himself and (2) I don’t try to alter the dog’s “style” of searching.
Testimonials & Reviews
A sampling of what prior students have said about this course ...
It was such a thrill to watch my dog source three converging hides for the first time. I know that there is no way I would have got here there without Stacy's excellent instruction. We learned so much! Thanks.
I have done 9 courses all at bronze I love how your skills are taught in such layered style it just flows naturally!
Excellent lecture material and well though out set of steps to build on and achieve goals set.
Thanks again! Great class - well planned & executed! Terrific progression from an easy skill to more difficult ones.
The class was great not only in information content but how to best set up training exercises that helped build the dog's skill in working scent.
Very impressed with the range of knowledge and the positive presentation. Jill K.