- The dog has to chill out while people come up to you and shake your hand.
- The dog has to stay in a 'sit' or a 'down' while people come up to them and pet them.
- The dog has to stay in a 'sit' or a 'stand' while people come up to them and brush them, and then the owner has to show the dog's paws, ears, and teeth.
- The dog stays in a 'down' while the owner walks across the room and back.
- A different person takes the dog from the room and I guess the dog has to not freak out that they're away from their owner.
- The dog has to walk in a 'heel' around a little obstacle course.
- 'Defensive walking,' ie you basically walk your dog around while someone else walks their dog around and you have to make sure that your dog doesn't freak out.
- Apparently also a part of the defensive walking is something where you have to shake hands with the person walking the other dog, and your dog can't show more than a 'casual interest' in the other dog.
- The dog has to come when called, and then 'sit' and not jump up on its owner.
- Your dog has to chill out while people run around and make noise.
But the biggest issue we have is the simple matter that Tia is noisy. Unpredictably so. It's the worst with the grooming, but sometimes she just gets going at random times, and for no apparent reason. And the advice that Lisa gave me was to try to quell it before she builds on it...but I thought I already did that! She's just a nut-job!
So tonight, 5 out of the 9 dogs passed the test. Apparently this is way more than usual, but that doesn't make it any better. So for the rest of the class, the dogs who have passed--all the calm dogs--will be on one side of the room learning Rally O (doggy PSEO). All the nut jobs will be on the other side, with my crazy nut job. You put a reactive dog with a bunch of even more reactive dogs, and guess what you get?! Lisa and the 'helpers' have faith that Tia will pass...but Tjett and I aren't so sure. We might have to repeat high school.
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