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Ok, i think i found the answer on the vic agility site

MANDATORY

Broad Jump

Dog Walk

Hoop

Single Hurdle

Spread Hurdle

Scramble

Table

Flexible Tunnel

Weaving poles x 12

What is a Scramble?

The website says "There is no limit to the number of times an obstacle can be used, with the exception of the contact obstacles, spread hurdle, table and weaves which are not to be used more than once"

So does this mean I can create my own course and do whatever I want but within the standards mentioned above? Im so confused :love:

Is this the same for every state?

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So does this mean I can create my own course and do whatever I want but within the standards mentioned above? Im so confused :thumbsup:

well you can...but it may not resemble what is typically a Novice course. Novice is generally a flowing course in a curve shape, generally has 1-2 changes of side, no obstacle discrimination, no tight turns or difficult entries onto contact obstacles or weaves. Minimum distance between obstacles is 4 metres.

The rules are supposed to be the same in each state, there are some local trends but the rules for number & type of obstacles will be the same.

A scramble is an Aframe.

I will PM you a link to some Novice courses you can look at

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The website says "There is no limit to the number of times an obstacle can be used, with the exception of the contact obstacles, spread hurdle, table and weaves which are not to be used more than once"

So does this mean I can create my own course and do whatever I want but within the standards mentioned above? Im so confused :(

What that means is that jumps and tunnels can be used a number of times in the course, but the contact obstacles, spread, table and weaves will only be used once. So there may be several jumps and tunnels, or you may do the same jumps and tunnels more than once. The course is numbered, and you do it sequentially. There is a penalty for taking the wrong obstacle.

:thumbsup: Vickie, I think she means running a course, not setting a course out.

Edited by Kavik
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The website says "There is no limit to the number of times an obstacle can be used, with the exception of the contact obstacles, spread hurdle, table and weaves which are not to be used more than once"

So does this mean I can create my own course and do whatever I want but within the standards mentioned above? Im so confused :(

What that means is that jumps and tunnels can be used a number of times in the course, but the contact obstacles, spread, table and weaves will only be used once. So there may be several jumps and tunnels, or you may do the same jumps and tunnels more than once. The course is numbered, and you do it sequentially. There is a penalty for taking the wrong obstacle.

:thumbsup: Vickie, I think she means running a course, not setting a course out.

Oh ok, so they will tell me what obstacles i need to do by numbering them and I just need to do them as quickly and accurately as possible. Ok that makes sense! Thanks!

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Some types of comps will let you walk the course (handlers only, no dogs, so you can see where the course goes, and know where to direct the dog) even if you don't have a dog entered, so you can see what a course generally looks like, and where it goes, and what sort of handling you need to be able to do. I know ADAC and ADAA allow this, I don't think ANKC does.

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ANKC allows walking of a course :thumbsup:

I think walking the course is almost as important as running it :(. I would be very surprised if you were not allowed to walk the course.

I usually walk the course 3-4 times.

1st time to just see how it flows

2nd time to see all the straight lines the dog should see (so I pretend I am a dog lol)

3rd time to decide where to put my front/rear crosses

4th time I run it as fast as I would with my dog :rofl:

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Thanks, wasn't sure if you could walk the course if you weren't entered (thought I read in the rules you had to be entered? but maybe I didn't read properly)

ETA: Just checked the rules and it states that you can only walk the course if you are entered in that class unless you get permission from the judge.

Edited by Kavik
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Thanks, wasn't sure if you could walk the course if you weren't entered (thought I read in the rules you had to be entered? but maybe I didn't read properly)

I think if you don't get in anybody's way you should be able to walk it :thumbsup: .

My OH walks them with me although he never competes :rofl:

My instructors always encourage me to walk harder courses just to get a feel about what's ahead of us :(

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Thanks Mntgood! Will def come down and check it out

I want to enter my first trial on the 31st May cos my club has a breed competition. Do you guys think its asking to much for the 31st May?

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Thanks Mntgood! Will def come down and check it out

I want to enter my first trial on the 31st May cos my club has a breed competition. Do you guys think its asking to much for the 31st May?

I am not sure how long you have been training for. I trained Midge for a year and Laffi for a year and a half before we entered our first comps.

Can your dog sequence now? How many obstacles in a sequence can he do?

What class are you in now?

I was told once that it's time to start competing if your dog can run much more advanced courses than the ones at beginner's level. There is a lot of truth in it. A course of 20 obstacles without rewarding during the course is hard for a dog that is used to run 3-4 obstacles. They can get discouraged easily and loose all the motivation.

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Thanks Mntgood! Will def come down and check it out

I want to enter my first trial on the 31st May cos my club has a breed competition. Do you guys think its asking to much for the 31st May?

I am not sure how long you have been training for. I trained Midge for a year and Laffi for a year and a half before we entered our first comps.

Can your dog sequence now? How many obstacles in a sequence can he do?

What class are you in now?

I was told once that it's time to start competing if your dog can run much more advanced courses than the ones at beginner's level. There is a lot of truth in it. A course of 20 obstacles without rewarding during the course is hard for a dog that is used to run 3-4 obstacles. They can get discouraged easily and loose all the motivation.

He has done 8 obstacles at once but that was back when he was 10 months old (naughty I know)....He is now 19 months old.

This can be seen here:

The only obstacles he needs to learn is the A-frame and Dog Walk. His weaves could be alot better but i would like to retrain that using the 2x2 method. That would all need to be taught in the next 3 months...

I am in beginners 2 class.... They Have Beginners, then Beginners 2 and then starters. All we have sequenced in the class is 5 jumps in a row which he aced...I am sure though he can do alot more than this and my instructor even said after being in this class for one week that I could go up a class again. Maybe I will speak to my instructor and see what she says.

Edited by Heidii
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I think the vids are great! He is fast and eager. :laugh:

I am not sure how is your club structured. I would suggest you finish a handling class before you sign up for any comp.

Since it's an ADAA club, I would suggest finishing the starters class before competing.

To be honest agility is not about knowing how to execute each obstacle (this is should be taken for granted), agility is more about handling between the obstacles.

Does he know front and rear crosses? Do you know how to execute them? On the 2nd vid you are executing a cross but it's a blind cross (you turn your back to the dog, which is not recommended).

In the class, when you said there were 5 jumps, are they in a straight line or is it a GD box?

If you are able to practice the GD then it's great and you should give it a go at least for the jumping class (without the contacts).

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