Pages

Monday 31 December 2018

December 2018

Saturday 6th January 2018, we took a rough and ready (and extremely cute) nearly 7 month old Tibetan Spaniel puppy to the Taunton Open show. We had decided that it might be nice to take him to a few shows during the year. He pranced around the ring and didn't do very well at all. A couple of months before that I had started this blog, wondering what news I would have to fill it, thinking it may get a bit boring. Well I needn't have worried, as many of you will know, there was in fact quite a lot to fill the blog with over the coming months. 

In the end we went to 13 Championship shows and 27 Open shows with Finlay during 2018, a total of 40 shows!! As I've said before, we only intended to go to a few shows.....it reminds me of the Michael Caine quote "you were only supposed to blow the bloody doors off".
Finlay won a total of 58 Rosettes, as shown on the new 'Finlay wall' in our dining room. Of course as well as many different coloured Rosettes quite a few of them were red and one very special award was his RCC at Richmond Champ show, a very special day. He and Deb also won a few Special Beginners classes and awards too. He now has his stud book number and is qualified for Crufts for life.


We were ably supported by many of our fellow Tibetan Spaniel dog showing friends. Having read much in the dog press about falling numbers of exhibitors at dog shows, it makes sense that we were encouraged to show Finlay and help to stem the dwindling numbers. We'd like to thank everyone for their support and practical help during the year that helped us whip our little devil into shape.....well, kind of. He still has a wonderful character which is just what you'd want in a pet dog, not always what you want in a show dog, but we wouldn't have him any other way. In a room full of still and posing dogs, there will always be one who wags his little bum off and doing his best to get the judges attention, well anyone's attention. He just screams "me, me, ME!". 

Of course, as well as the exhibitors, Finlay made 'friends' with quite a few dogs during the course of the year. Jinpa, Darcy, Willow, Heidi, Rio, Angie, Deva and many more (maybe even Taggart!) Whether a dog wants to be friends or not, Finlay will give it his best shot whether inside the ring or out. Oh and judges, many a judge has got a kiss and a wag. 

So we finish 2018 very much on a high, so much fun was had although sometimes it can be a bit stressful getting to a venue on time, working out where you are supposed to go, where your ring is, what ring you're supposed to be in when.....and sometimes that long drive home in the dark at the end of a long day. I'm sure we are always much more tired than Finlay.

In 2019 we will not be doing as many shows, and no doubt you will be quoting me on that in the months to come, but we will continue to show Finlay that's for sure. I mean really, who wouldn't!!

For sure, there will be more Finlay 'dog blog' this coming year and maybe 2019 will bring some more 'something in my eye' moments.

The Finlay wall of fame


So many rosettes, and a Reserve CC

Merry Christmas from Finlay

This video from his greatest triumph (so far) at Richmond. You can see he was doing his best trying to woo judge Evelyn Moore Hurley.



This taken at his first show in Taunton


Standing a bit close Mum, but I'm still learning!
This sums up Finlay's year really....and long may it continue


Waggin'

Monday 26 November 2018

26 November 2018

Finlay is nearly 18 months old!

Tick-tock
Owning a Tibetan Spaniel, in fact probably any dog or any pet, means you own a canine clock. Somehow you train them in the rigours of time management and then they remorselessly hold you to that as time goes by.

Hooman - it is time you fed my breakfast
Hooman - it is time for my walk
Hooman - it is time for your lunch, at which point you will feed me a small piece
Hooman.......etc.

How does this all start, well it is a good point, you don't really notice. Then one day it happens, the dog has come to fetch you....."what do you want" is the polite question. The reply comes in many forms, quite often The Stare™. You've had that 'stare', I know you have. Initially you pretend you don't know what the stare means, but it always comes at a relevant time, the time for one of the above items. This stare is very hard to ignore but if you manage to ignore it, there will come a time for your Tibbie to ramp up from the stare. It might involve standing up at you, bringing you a toy, maybe even a little nagging noise of some sort, a whine or a woof.....but not the usual "there is someone at the door" woof, oh no, this is a very different woof entirely.

It is safe to say that Finlay has reached the advanced level of time management. He knows when he is 'due' to receive all his daily allotment of items, and he knows how to keep us on our toes and provide what he feels he needs. 

The nose
Of course canine noses are way better than a human nose, we know that. But our previous Tibbies haven't had such a good nose as Finlay. If you dare to leave something on the kitchen side that he thinks is either his, or should be his, then he finds it and stand or jumps up at the side. Currently he can't get onto the kitchen worktop, but he does give it a good go. Turning the nose to good use, to keep him occupied we hide treats in the living room and tell him to "find it", off he will go sniffing out the treats pretty much without fail. Of course this training does loop back on us too, I refer you to the first paragraph 'tick tock'. This nose would also lead him into mischief, so it is imperative we don't leave anything his nose would find, that he shouldn't have, that he CAN get to.

Obedience
Despite his waggy and puppy-like behaviour, Finlay is very quick on the uptake when it comes to training. As well as ringcraft and all that is required of him there, Finlay has been gradually learning the other staples of fun dog obedience, such as "paw". We want to go through Bronze Good Citizen dog with Finlay and we think that it should be fairly easy. Well, I say fairly easy......when Finlay is in the mood he is very obedient, but of course when distracted this is not necessarily the case. 

When out of walks he is becoming more reliable, as I have said before, 'more reliable' is not at all a guarantee of him coming when called, so we are still very careful about where we let him off. Of late, he has come away from other dogs when called and been good from a distance particularly to a whistle. It is great to be able to let him off-lead because he loves to run. At only 18 months old he is in peak physical condition to being able to run and he would walk for miles too.

The challenge
Finlay is an absolute joy to own, but his desire to get his own way is never far from the surface. The opportunity to get away with just that little bit more than you were prepared to allow is constant. He can be a little devil at times and will try your patience if it means he gets his own way. Make no mistake about it, the humans do have to assert their dominance on a frequent basis, but the ease with which Finlay shrugs this off is alarming. This is of course a Tibbie trait, they love to be in charge. 

Despite our protestations to the contrary, is any human really in charge of a Tibbie I wonder.......

Some recent pictures/videos

The boy likes to make himself comfortable, what self-respecting Tibbie doesn't!


Mum's chair, she's gone so I must keep it warm

Finlay met a puppy. He is so outgoing and exuberant normally you'd worry that he would overpower a puppy. But he totally changed, and was ever so gentle with this little one. I love this picture, not one I took myself though.



I posted this video on Facebook. You would have thought it was a setup but it really wasn't. Finlay has discovered toilet rolls in true 'Andrex puppy' style. What a devil.



Monday 29 October 2018

29 October 2018

Finlay is 16 months old, not far from being 17 months old, how the time has flown.

The showing - two championship dog shows in two weeks. The TSA Champ show last week where he got 3rd in Junior and 3rd in Post Graduate and then Midland Counties Champ show this weekend where again he got 3rd in both Junior and Post Grad - very consistent.

Finlay got to see lots of his Scottish family on Sunday at the show and I think he enjoyed that. We are constantly told by everyone we meet what a lovely friendly boy he is, he is a cheeky little dog who charms everyone he meets. He's even befriended a dog behaviourist who adores him, so that must be saying something. The video below shows him trying to win over Liz Cartledge at Midland Counties on Sunday, which appeared to be working, but not enough to make her shortlist unfortunately.

The friends - I think Jinpa (another Tibetan Spaniel) is Finlay's absolute number one best friend. But it has to be said Finlay makes canine friends quite easily. He loves to play and is very good at doggy-language and seems to know when it is appropriate to go in for a play and when perhaps being more submissive and rolling over would be a better idea. This mostly works. He does seem to be a big hit with the ladies though, lots of kisses and smiles.....although his mind does inevitably turn to more serious pastimes, which of course we discourage. But boys will (try to) be boys. As for making human friends, well that isn't difficult for a wagger like Finlay.

The hotels - if a show is over a certain travelling distance or it is both distant and early judging we stay away in a hotel. Makes a nice weekend of it. The first couple of times Finlay took this in his stride, but the last couple of visits have not been so good. Last weekend he did a lot of woofing, as it was pointed out to me he is in fact doing exactly what he was bred to do, alert his owners of strange noises. Which in this case was people thumping down the hotel corridors and banging doors. But he did somewhat overdo the alerting and we didn't want to wake the entire hotel! Then this weekend, he was at it again. More woofing, but he was very unsettled, licking a lot and being restless. To be fair, the hotel was VERY noisy, people banging and shouting at 2am and 3am, so we would have had a disturbed night dog or no dog. More practice is required I think!

Training - although Tibbies aren't known for their unflinching obedience, Finlay is learning. He does a good 'heel' now, his waiting is almost faultless and he learns really quickly. This is of course mixed in with typical adorable Tibbie traits of ignoring his owners just when you think he has it sussed. We really want to get his bronze Good Citizen dog award, so are working towards that in due course. He went on a massive romp in a big field with his best friend Jinpa recently, and they were both in a the far distance, a loud whistle from me stopped him in his tracks and with a brief pause of "did you want something dad", he dutifully ran the 200 metres or so back to us. What a star, this is real progress. Not progress enough to just start letting him off the lead everywhere you understand!!

Upstairs - for quite a while after we got him Finlay was not allowed upstairs, mainly because we didn't want his young bones to be stressed too much crashing up and down the stairs. But no such worries now, although a stairgate is in place to stop him going up there when he pleases. He is occasionally allowed upstairs now though and boy does he love it. Here he is with that cheeky look on, you've seen this look before right?


The pictures/video - I really love this video. Obviously Finlay doesn't know he is being seen by a top judge like Liz Cartledge, so he takes it in his stride. Basically, if a judge looks like they are requesting a kiss, they are going to get one. If the judge gets within a certain distance, that 'kissing distance', they are going to get one. It is lovely to see a dog that loves being handled like this. I had an unusual video angle here, as I was above in the upstairs part of the Champ show.



Here is Finlay and Jinpa, who are the bestest of mates. They first met when Finlay was very young and I think they bonded from the start. They both bark furiously when they first sense the other is near and are sad to depart at the end of their walks. It really melts my heart seeing them both together having such obvious fun.



Sunday 14 October 2018

14 October 2018

We went to a dog show, we didn't win any classes, and that's ok.

Since January 2018, we have done 27 dog shows of all kinds - small open shows, larger open shows, breed shows and full on multi-day championship shows. We haven't won classes at all of them, which when you are only just starting out is exactly what you'd expect. Deb and Finlay have learned so much this year and every time we go to a show we learn a little bit more.

What I don't want to do is end up only posting on Facebook for those times we win a class, a fancy rosette or generally do well because that isn't realistic. There are those days when for whatever reason you don't do so well purely in terms of 'scores on the board'. But that doesn't mean it was a wasted day, or a total write-off, it just means today it wasn't our day. If a judge has (say) 4 dogs in front of them, they haven't got any massive faults, they are all within the breed standard on most things then it is going to come down to what that judge believes is the best Tibetan Spaniel in that particular class on that day. Depending on what the judge likes in a dog, that decision may not always fall the same way, we are all human beings - if you worried about it too much you wouldn't go to any dog shows.

You still get to meet up with loads of people that love dogs, be in a venue full of dogs, meet our favourite breed in the whole world, Tibetan Spaniels, have a yarn about the terrible weather (today at least) and drink some slightly dodgy tasting beverage from the on-site facilities. In that respect, totally not a waste of a day, great fun. And on top of that we even got to see a Tibetan Spaniel win 'Best In Show', how awesome is that!

Ok-ok, yes saying all that it doesn't mean we don't think our fido is the best ever, no matter what anyone says, we all love our dogs and they mean the world to us. But as I think I have said before, this is a competition and there will be winners and losers. You can celebrate losing, that's not a crime - I defy anyone who met Finlay today not to have smiled, people gave him their treats and in return he gave them sloppy wet kisses, what's not to like! Our appreciation for Finlay is pretty partisan, but I've smiled and ahhh'd at quite a few other dogs today.....and I wouldn't have done that if I concentrated on the fact that we "lost" in our classes.

Quite a few of you reading this blog have been showing dogs for years, so you'll already know all of this.....for everyone else, perhaps this helps you understand why we've done so many dog shows this year. Yes, we're a bit mad and we've joined a crowd of mad dog showing people!!

Just to clarify, here is what we got:
- Second in Tibetan Spaniel Junior (out of 2 entries)
- VHC (or 5th) in Tibetan Spaniel Post Graduate (out of 5 entries)
- Unplaced in a large class of 16 in Special Beginners Stakes
- Unplaced (although got through to the shortlist of 6) in a class of 11 in Junior Stakes



Finlay doing his thing, he didn't put a paw wrong today, at least not in a big way.







Sunday 30 September 2018

30 September 2018

Here's a thing, September is whizzing past and Finlay is heading towards being 16 months old! For those of you still tuning in we today gained another Junior Warrant point, putting us on 19 points - tantalisingly close to the magic 25 points.

Preparing for shows - we can hardly claim to be experts having only recently started showing, but we have something that works for us. Finlay would get regular brushes whether he was being shown or not, Deb enjoys grooming our dogs and does Finlay 2 or 3 times a week.....not a massively long brush, just enough to keep him tidy and check him out for any ticks or any other issues that you'd spot when grooming your dog. Obviously, Finlay is going to get a brush before he goes to a show. However, he will often get one of Deb's patented cleaning routines, which we call the Underwash™.

What exactly is an 'underwash'?! Well, as you Tibbie owners know, Tibbies may well get dirty when out walking but they don't stay dirty for long - not unless they've been somewhere extremely filthy anyway. The standard muck you'd pick up on a walk through the woods or wet footpath just drops out as the dog dries out. So actually Finlay doesn't get THAT dirty from show to show. But underneath does look better after a quick wash and blow dry and brush out - again nothing that strenuous, 20 mins max, but it makes a difference.

Food time - Finlay is still on raw food, and currently loving it. He does get fussy every now and then, and nothing will be guaranteed to go down when he is in one of those moods. He's a funny dog really, because like now when he is feeding well you think you've cracked it, but suddenly he looks at his most favourite food in the whole world and turns his nose up at it, the little devil. So we go a couple of weeks where you struggle, maybe change flavours or brand of raw food and he's off again. But raw does seem to suit him, at least for now.

Mood - he is a happy dog, there's no doubt about it. He has many girlfriends and even a few boy friends who he absolutely adores. He seems to bring out the best in dogs. That is not to say he isn't beyond a grumble at some dogs, he is a young male dog so to be expected.....but something to keep an eye on to make sure it doesn't develop. Most of the time he just wants to play, today at a Tibbie breed show in Ampthill he once again made more friends. He is a joy to own, he is a mischief too which I think is the puppy still within him but also there is a certain Tibbie mischief along with it, I'm a sucker for it.

In the car - from the moment we got him he has been a good traveller, until recently. The last couple of long drives he has been less happy and looking a bit car sick. He hasn't drooled or actually been sick, but nonetheless he hasn't looked happy for some reason. So today we tried some Zylkene and a spot-on calming solution and the drive up was much better and he slept most of the way of a 2-hour drive. Going home is normally fine because he is tired after a dog show. A success I think, but we'll see how we go, maybe it is just a phase.

The ball - oh boy, is this dog ball obsessed.....balls with squeakers anyway. We had to buy him a new one because he destroyed one of his others. He will play with it for ages as well as actually fetch it, we haven't had a Tibbie fetch a ball before. He even whines for his ball when it has been put away from the day before.

A few photo's to finish. This one was taken on the Hamble river, on the ferry from Warsash to Hamble villages. Finlay loved looking at the water and yachts going past and of course loved the fuss from the assistant ferryman.


Messin' about on the river

Finlay does love the ladies, this is Angie, one of Theresa and Hailey's Tibbies. Finlay really fell in love this day and it seems he made an impression. Not often a boy will sneak in a kiss on a first date!!


Love ya babe!

Monday 10 September 2018

9 September 2018

Today Finlay was exactly 15 months old, and what a day it was at Richmond Championship Dog Show at Loseley Park, just outside Guildford.

To think we only started dog showing in earnest, and dog showing with Finlay in January 2018. The first couple of shows at Taunton and Chichester this year were a world apart from where we are now, Finlay was an unruly puppy and such a handful, almost a little monster (a cute adorable monster, but still).

Deb then knuckled down training Finlay and set out to achieve......what exactly? She obviously wanted him to behave a bit better and to have a bit of fun showing him. We both felt it would be nice if maybe Finlay went on to win the odd class. So as the year flew past, it turns out we are now into show number 22. We didn't set out to win lots of classes, qualify Finlay for Crufts or for him to win a RDCC (Reserve Dog Challenge Certificate). But that is exactly what has happened. When you work so hard towards improving your performance, it seems a surprise to suddenly achieve something so momentous. It really shouldn't be a surprise, because it has been hard work, but crucially it has been fun and we've made loads of new friends.

One of the things I'd never considered before dog showing was the commitment you need. You get up early (or travel and stay overnight), you travel long distances and for all that you may not get placings. We've been fairly lucky with the weather so far, but it's been cold, raining, boiling hot, windy....sometimes all on the same day! But something drives you to want to do it nonetheless, so it seems we have caught the dog showing bug, whatever that is. The other thing that occurs to me is just how difficult it can be to come second....let me explain that for my non-dog showing friends.

At a Championship show the dogs and bitches are judged separately. There are typically around 8 classes in both dog and bitch - the winners of each dog class (and bitch class) will then line up in a "Challenge" (all 'unbeaten' dogs). The Challenge Certificate is then awarded to the best dog and bitch on the day, as decided by the judge. In each class there could be only 1 dog/bitch, or there could be many, a dozen or more....although in our limited experience, not that many in the dog classes. So you have to win your class, if you entered more than one class you have to have won them all. If there were 30 dogs entered, then you are aiming to be the best of 30 on the day. What Finlay won today was the 'Reserve' (Dog) Challenge Certificate (or RDCC), so in simplistic terms, second place in the dogs. So saying "we came second" really only tells a fraction of the story, because in reality we beat all the other dogs bar the CC winner. It isn't something that happens very often for any dog exhibitor, so we'll treasure this moment for a very long time.....

Finally, in order to become 'Best of Breed' on the day, the Dog CC winner and Bitch CC winner go head to head to decide the overall BOB winner. Doing that any more than once is quite some achievement, because it means multiple judges over a period of time will have judged a dog/bitch to be closest match to the breed standard of those competing on the day. That is no mean feat.

Here is a rundown of what Deb and Finlay actually did today - thanks to breed judge Evelyn Moore Hurley and Special Beginners Utility Group judge Sandra Marshall:
- Tibetan Spaniel Junior Dog - 1st
- Tibetan Spaniel Special Beginner Dog - 1st
- Tibetan Spaniel RDCC
- Best Tibetan Spaniel Special Beginner (he beat the Bitch Special Beginner)
- Special Beginners Utility Group - Group 4/Reserve
- Utility/Gundog Special Beginners Stakes class (20+ entries) - unplaced

It did turn out to be quite an emotional day, yes so I'm a bloke, but I don't mind admitting it really hit me seeing Deb and Finlay win the RDCC. Deb looked so shocked seeing the judge walk towards her. As for Finlay, he lapped up the applause.....he loves applause whether it is for him or not.

Another thing I've been proud of are our Special Beginner achievements. It is an opportunity to get the Tibetan Spaniels in front of more judges and more people sat around a ring noticing the breed. We've only recently started showing Tibbies, but we've been in love with Tibbies since the late 1990's, having owned two before. We're constantly bumping into people whilst out walking asking what breed Finlay is (same when we owned Louie and Nemo before) and saying how lovely they are. So getting the breed noticed and appreciated is something that we are both passionate about. Who wouldn't want to love a Tibbie!!

Today was a very special day!

Aileen bred us an incredibly cute, happy, handsome, healthy, adorable, feisty Tibetan Spaniel....and that was not by accident either. Only careful breeding can achieve that, I'm so pleased that we met her at Crufts in 2017 and took the plunge to travel almost the entire length of the UK to go and see Finlay. It was well worth the trip.

This is what all the fuss is about, the RDCC. This is the certificate you get on the day, apparently we will receive something further in the post directly from the Kennel Club. Never believed we'd actually get one of these....at this point, can't ever believe we'll get another!


Finlay's very first Reserve Challenge Certificate

Here is Finlay getting looked over by our judge from today, Evelyn Moore Hurley. The wag is ever present of course....



This was the Dog CC, as the judge was having her final deliberations over who to choose


Finally, this is the video Google made of the day


Monday 27 August 2018

28 August 2018

'Balgay Kitang Po' - aka Finlay - one year, one whole year!!

It seems incredible, but we picked up Finlay from Aileen on the 28th August 2017, one year ago today. 

It is always going to be an adventure owning a puppy, any size/any breed, they are all an experience that you'll want to enjoy. But owning a puppy isn't easy. Settling into a new home, house training, chewing, innoculations, tantrums....so many things. But it is all worth it.

Finlay was the easiest puppy to settle in, he slept his first night without crying or complaint and has been like that pretty much every night since. House training felt like it took forever, but in reality it was pretty straight-forward. From the moment we got him he has been such a happy-go-lucky character, happy, smiley, waggy. Whether it is within our local area, my dads care home, the local shops or the dog showing circuit, everyone knows Finlay for the happy outgoing dog that he is. He melts everyone's heart and is a pleasure to own.

Now don't get me wrong, it isn't all roses, but it is all part of owning any dog. He isn't always the most obedient and compliant dog. Partly this is his own individual character and partly this is typical Tibbie. From quite a young age, he has been asserting what he believes are his rights as a developing male dog and it has taken a pretty firm hand to guide along and make sure he knows what is acceptable and what isn't. 

In certain circumstances you can rely on him to be unreliable. He isn't too bad off lead, but on occasions there isn't a treat in the world that is going to persuade him that coming back to us is the right thing to do. So off lead time is strictly limited to the safest of places. Open the front door and he's going to be out of it, I know where he'd go as we live just around the corner from a recreation ground which he loves and our road is relatively quiet. However, it is a circumstance that we just don't allow to happen. Tibbies and road sense, I've never met one that has any!

Dog showing....that was never on the cards when we got him. We asked Aileen if it was ok to show him, on the remote off-chance we ever did, "yes of course" she said. Hahahahahaaaaaa, the remote off-chance, we never saw that one coming. Whether Finlay has taken the dog showing world by storm we'll have to wait and see. Certainly FINLAY believes he has taken the dog showing world by storm - whether he wins or loses, he wags. That is all we'd ever ask of him really. The additional benefit of owning Finlay which we hadn't expected was all the new friends we'd gain as a result of the dog showing, so hello to you all!!

The puppy period, whilst sometimes difficult, is of course a complete joy and you don't ever want it to end. At 14 months old (getting on for 15) he is still very puppy at times and it is gorgeous to see. At some point he will grow up, and it seems to happen quite suddenly. Until then, we shall continue to enjoy puppy Finlay.

Here he is with a suitably regal Tibbie look on his face.


I'm posing dad!


This is a Finlay wagging compilation video. Here he is at various dog shows doing his thing, and he simply cannot do it without a tail wag. I love the last segment of the video which was during the Windsor Breeders Competition where the judge, Liz Cartledge, goes along the line of Tibbies and gets their attention - Finlay is the only one that gets a quick stroke under the chin for his cheekiness. What a star!




Finally, the part we didn't expect, the rosettes and prize cards that Finlay has won during the 8 months or so that we've been showing him. It is quite a collection for just one dog in a short period of time.



For those of you unaware, a red card or rosette is a first place.



Sunday 19 August 2018

12 August 2018

Finlay is 14 months old now, but we still call him a puppy....because he is.

Although he is growing up and in some ways he is showing signs of maturity, he is SO very puppy at times - and I wouldn't change that for the world. When you get a puppy, the time whizzes by, and they are such happy times but before you know where you are that puppy has grown up. My advice, take it all in and savour every moment of it, and in my case take 1,000s of photos and videos to look back on. You'll be glad you did.

Rough and tumble
When you are out and about with your dog, not every other dog you meet is going to be friendly, every experienced dog owner knows that. With the 2nd of our Tibbies, he was attacked by a black lurcher-type dog when he was only about 14 weeks old and despite everything we tried he was always likely to be grumpy with larger black dogs. The experience stayed with him, not helped by Tibbies being able to bear grudges for a lifetime! So we were anxious to avoid something like this happening again, but Finlay did find himself being attacked by a Tibetan Terrier (TT). 

My wife met this dog whilst out walking Finlay, the owner wasn't bothered but his dog was on a lead as was Finlay. Fin went up to this dog cautiously, rolled over on to his back.....so clearly sensed that the dog was dominant, so he did the right thing. A quick growl from the TT and he was attacking Finlay, he made contact and broke the skin on his ribcage. Finlay legged it and was very upset. "Is he an entire male" asked the owner, he is, "oh he can be a bit funny with entire male dogs". Well thanks very much. Following this, Finlay has been a bit cautious with other dogs and lost his confidence a bit. Nothing to worry about I think, he got a good telling off by a Tibbie recently, but he took it in his stride. He knows the difference between being put in his place (even very firmly) and plain aggression. It turns out that this TT is known in the area for being very unpredictable, shame we didn't know it sooner.....

It just goes to show that you always need to be on your guard. All we need to do now is avoid reinforcing any of Finlays anxieties, so far so good, but it isn't an easy task.

Feeding
Despite having times when he would eat and eat and eat, he can be a fussy little devil. He has been on a raw diet for around 5 months now and it really seems to suit him. He is putting on muscle and his coat is in great condition. We are on Natural Instinct complete raw food, which includes veg as well as the meat. He can be on a particular flavour, which seems like it is his favourite ever, then bam.....he stops eating it. Change flavour and he is off again. We have this cycle continually. The important thing is, he is doing well on it. 

(sorry about the next bit, but dog owners will understand) The nice thing for us about feeding raw, is what comes out of the other end. There is a) much less of it, b) it is much firmer than kibble-poo and finally c) it smells much less. 

He also enjoys raw beef bones, it keeps him occupied for ages licking out the marrow-bone. He doesn't have them very often, but they are a right treat for him. Spoiled dog, possibly!!

Rosettes
After all of the 17 dog shows we've been to this year, Finlay and Deb have amassed a rather impressive collection of Rosettes and prize cards. I put all the rosettes in a holder specially designed for the purpose and seem to have filled it completely up already. This is with just one dog in just 8 months, I hate to think how many some of our dog-showing friends have got laying around!!

As always a couple of photo's and video to finish. Fin does love a little paddle, not too deep but enough to wet his paws. He doesn't go full on swimming, yet.
Messin' around in the river....


This next one is yet another one of him waving, I already have several of this behaviour. He loves to wave, and in this case it was waving for a belly and chest rub. Well seriously, who could ignore this, I know I can't.....




Monday 6 August 2018

6 August 2018

On Sunday 5th August, we (surprise surprise) went to another dog show and had more success winning Best Special Beginner at the SWTSC Open show. This lead me to thinking, what is it about Special Beginners?

This is how the kennel club classifies it:
https://www.thekennelclub.org.uk/activities/dog-showing/already-involved-in-dog-showing/special-beginners-competition/

This is the key criteria:
"For owner, handler or exhibit not having won a Challenge Certificate or Reserve Challenge Certificate, or for those breeds not allocated Championship Status, Best of Sex or Reserve Best of Sex at a Championship Show"

What this means is that new exhibitors and their dogs get a chance to compete on a more even level with other people at a similar stage of their dog showing 'career'. Many of the people showing their Tibbies have been doing so for many years and have so much experience, it can be difficult going up against them. It is a competition after all! But where Special Beginners classes are offered, Deb and Finlay know they have a fair chance of competing and that encourages us to both go to shows (both Open and Championship) and take extra classes which also means more experience showing. Actually, some of the people we meet at SB classes (the AV ones generally) have actually been showing quite a while, so they or their dogs aren't necessarily inexperienced, they just haven't won a CC or RCC yet.

Although we're new to this showing lark, I think Special Beginners (SB) is a fantastic initiative by the Kennel Club, and for us it is working. Of course we will blow this if we ever go and win a CC or RCC with Finlay, which at the moment seems a long way off :-)

We've entered into two main types of SB classes, either breed specific or Any Variety SB Stakes, where we meet loads of different breeds. We've had very good success with the breed SB classes, in fact Deb/Finlay have yet to be beaten in a breed SB class, which is pretty amazing. The AV SB Stakes are much harder. Sometimes these are AV or AV Utility, but either way, they are often pretty large classes, a dozen or so at least. So to get a placing at one of these classes is very satisfying but isn't easy, Deb/Finlay have managed it on a couple of occasions, but they haven't won one yet. 

What I like about the big SB stakes classes is getting a Tibbie 'seen' at this level. There are certain breeds that are there every single time we are in a stakes class, but not often are Tibbies seen. So I think we are given an opportunity that would be a shame to miss, so often you go to these stakes classes and quite a few entries do not turn up, often because they are still stuck in breed classes or couldn't, for whatever reason, stay for the class. That is a shame. We've had two cracks at the SB Utility Group, one of which we came Group 4, which I gather was quite a coup. These groups are always right at the end of the show, and at 4pm after a long day with a 2 hour+ drive home, it would be easy to give up and go home, but we've been good so far!

I don't think I'd have a different view on Special Beginners if Deb/Finlay hadn't been so successful in this area! But then you always sing when you're winning..... ;-)


Friday 3 August 2018

30 July 2018

There's no business like (dog) showing business!

How many?
Those fateful words were uttered late in 2017, when we decided we'd try a few dog shows to see how we got on with it and crucially how Finlay would enjoy it. So far in 2018 we've now done 16 dog shows! Not at all the plan, but we have had a lot of fun and learned loads in the process. I've no idea how long we will keep up with this level of showing, we've certainly got several more shows already entered and an upcoming 'diary' of potential shows. 

Learning
My wife soon learned that Finlay was not going to be an easy dog to show. He was around 7 months old when she first showed him and despite going to half a dozen ringcraft sessions, he was somewhat 'wild'. Therefore the thing you learn quite quickly is that you need an obedient dog, regardless of the dog showing. No matter whether your dog is a splendid example of the breed or not, the dog needs to show the judge what it is made of, and leaping and skipping his way around the ring, ain't going to cut it! So working with Finlay over the next few months was not only a good foundation for dog showing, but generally in a dogs life, you want the dog to do what you say. In truth he was quite good at doing what we said OUTSIDE of the show ring, but not so good in the ring. Practice, practice, practice!

Finlay turned out to be a very wilful dog, who liked to get his own way. The cheeky puppy in him allowed him to get away with murder, which is fine up to a point. You never want that cheeky puppy to go away, but equally you need some level of control. The most recent show we went to at Dorset County Canine Society was where a lot of that training suddenly came together. Finlay knew what he was doing, when to turn, to not wag too much at the judge.

The jargon
I think you dog showing people forget just how much there is to learn in the dog showing world and all the seemingly weird things that happen. But we're grateful for all the advice we've received (you know who you are) and the guidance on which ring to be in, what winning this class means. 

"Are you going to enter into Puppy, or Junior or Limit"?. What?

The first time we won a Special Beginners class, "now you're not going home early, you need to stay for the group" - the what?

"Now you've won best Tibbie puppy, you've got to stay for the puppy group" - the what?

"That dog gets to come into the ring because the dog that won the CC was the only one that has beaten it" - what?

"Are you counting the points for your Junior Warrant" - the Junior what?

That is just a sample of all the things we've learned in 2018.

The future
We've got a gorgeous, cheeky, full of character, loving Tibbie - we'll always have that no matter whether we show him or not. I think you will all be nodding your head at this point. So we'll show Finlay, he'll have good days and bad days, WE will have good days and bad days, but there is the social side as well. Swapping Tibbie stories, weather stories, terrible traffic on the way home stories, is all part of the day. We've got the bug right now, that's for sure.

Here are some videos of Finlay's journey. The video below was taken at Taunton Open show in early January 2018. This was Finlay when he was really not happy on the table, with some stranger wanting to look at his teeth. It is funny looking back on it now, it probably wasn't that funny for Deb at the time :-)


Next up is another Taunton video, this time of Finlay 'walking' around the ring. Whoa up there my boy, where are you off to. Thankfully he does a bit better than this now. Someone said to us recently just how much work we'd done with Finlay to bring him into line, you don't tend to notice on a show by show basis.....but it is part of the reason why I take so many pictures and videos, it gives you good evidence of what is now and what was then.




To compare, let's look at a video from last Sunday's show at Dorset County. A dog who, although still wags at the judge, is able to stay settled on the table and walk around the ring doing exactly as he is told. No mean feat, because as anyone who shows dogs knows these equestrian centres (well, anywhere really) always have really interesting smells on the floor which are far more interesting than bumbling around a show ring.


Sunday 15 July 2018

15 July 2018

Well hello there, time for another dog blog.

When we started dog showing we said "we'll do a few shows and see how it goes", we hadn't intended to do that many. Since the start of 2018, we've done 16, which was hardly the plan. Not only that we've got several more planned in the diary already, yes we have a show diary now, oh my gawd!!

The movement....
Just to be clear, I don't really know that much about showing dogs just yet. I had an interesting conversation at the weekend about what types of dogs I liked and who did I think would win a class, and it made me think, what do I like about Tibbies. To help explain that, here is a critique of Finlay from the Bath Championship show by judge Jane Paradise:

"Quite a handful here and more training will reap rewards. Well shaped skull, wide jaw and ex bite. Carrying  a quality coat and shawl. Plume balances with head to give a correct silhouette. Nicely sprung  ribs with a level topline. He comes into his own on the move, where he showed the others how to move straight with precision"

We have now had consistent feedback from various judges that Finlay's movement is really good, and that is one of the things I like to see in Tibbie's and in Finlay. When we are out for a walk with Finlay, outside of showing, he has this movement where he just glides along without effort. He flows, he moves very fast but without effort....he is so agile. When he recreates this movement in the ring, then that is when he shines. Yes he wags and has that cheeky glint in his eye and that is massively endearing. So movement, that is what I think I like. As for the "quite a handful" comment, well he certainly is that, but he is still young and Deb is still learning how to overcome his exuberance.....

The shows....
This weekend, we planned to do two dog shows, one in Yeovil on Saturday and one in Ardingly Showground on the Sunday (Kingston canine society). We didn't think we'd make it for a moment, but we did....and I'm glad we did because both days were successful in their own way.

At Yeovil under judge Alan Carter, unfortunately he was the only entry in his Junior class, came 3rd in the AV Utility Special Yearling under judge Pauline Lock and finally was Reserve in the AV Special Beginners Stakes under judge Colin Woodward.

At Kingston show under judge Marion McArdle he was Reserve in his Special Yearling class, unplaced in the AV Junior Stakes and was a marvellous 1st in the AV Utility Special Beginners class under judge Judith Catlow. He then went through to the final group for best Special Beginner in show and managed a creditable VHC under judge Pamela Mottershaw.

It is hard to forget that both Deb and Finlay have been showing only 6 months, so every show is a new learning experience, so getting anywhere is still unexpected. But the Special Beginner successes we have had are very heartwarming as they are getting fairly regular. And as someone pointed out recently, we can't be 'Beginners' forever, so we need to make the most of it!!

The heat....
To the uninitiated, it may seem mad to take dogs to shows in the heat we've had recently. Certainly in a car without air conditioning, it would be. But Finlay has been totally cool in the car and sleeps everywhere we go. The dog owners go out of their way to keep their dogs cool, from cool coats, gazebo's (both dog sized and huge garden sized), golf umbrellas, towels soaked with cold water to lay on, gallons of water, shade, shade and more shade. The end result is that there is nothing to worry about, dogs are well catered for and in the case of our Tibbie, I think he was cooler than we were. That said, this heat is a bit extreme, and it would be more comfortable at 20 degrees rather than 30+.

Some pictures from the shows:

Another fine standing picture of Finlay, he really is getting this now. He can stand back from Debbie without being on her feet and even the lead is slack now. What a cutie!



This video is from Finlays AV Utility Special Beginners class. Up against a Tibetan Terrier, Poodle and a Frenchie, Finlay strutted his stuff and charmed the judge. This was a classic Finlay/judge interaction, he absolutely won her over. And of course there was that movement again..... :-)




Saturday 30 June 2018

29 June 2018

Another dog show blog this one.....this time at the Windsor Championship dog show.

It was to be a very hot day, so Deb had prepared well, getting lots of water for Finlay including a frozen bottle of water that would thaw throughout the day and provide some nice cool water for Fin. In fact he did very well, the show was under tents and although some were warmer than others, a through-breeze generally made the temperatures bearable and he showed no signs of overheating. The Tibbie double coat was keeping him cool.

We had entered 3 classes plus the breeders competition, but more on the latter later. His results were (breed judge Miss Adele Summers):
- 1st in Tibetan Spaniel Junior Dog
- 1st in Tibetan Spaniel Special Beginners dog/bitch
- Unplaced in the Dog CC
- Unplaced in the Utility Special Beginners Group (Judge David Roberts)
- The Balgay breeders team came 1st, along with Deb and Finlay (judge Liz Cartledge)

As I've mentioned in previous blogs we thought we might have a crack at Junior Warrant for Finlay so had begun totting up the points, but unfortunately you have to have a certain amount of dogs to be in a class to be able to count the points....and that was not to be this time. So we turned up, we had fun, we won the class....but no points today. Even in the heat of the day, Finlay was wagging from start to finish, every person and dog he saw and every judge got a wag and a smile (as would be evident if you watch the video below).

The breeders competition was something else though, not something we've ever been a part of and probably never expected to be. But Aileen McDonald asked us to be a part of the team this weekend, so we thought "why not". It was an honour to be asked and after all, Debbie and Finlay have only been showing since January this year, so novices by anyone's standard. It was certainly great fun, and half an hour beforehand the team had a practice run to sort out who was doing what under the watchful eye of Sergeant Major Bevis. She ensured that the team was strutting in the right direction at the right time....also making sure Willow and Finlay were kept apart as right now, Finlay is very much in love/lust. The trial run worked perfectly so when it was their turn the team did some synchronised showing and clearly the judge was impressed. They really were almost perfect, couldn't have asked for any better. The team was:

Willow & Pauline
Heidi & Michaella
Rio & Pam
Finlay & Debbie

It was somehow less formal and everyone was having fun. I wish I had filmed it, but the bulldog team put on quite a show, it was wonderfully all over the place as the dogs galloped up the ring. That moment when the judge pointed to the Tibbie team as the winners was very special, a great moment for the breed and there was quite a big audience there too.

That evening even Finlay was pretty whacked, a good barometer of how the day went. But first thing Saturday morning he had recharged and was raring to go.

Did I get any photo's from the day, you bet I did!

This is probably the best stand I've photo'd - what a star. He isn't pinned to Deb's legs as he often is and he is looking up. Very impressive.
I'm standing mum!
The video below was made by Google, but represents a great idea of the day. Lots of the day captured....



The breeders competition performance

Team Balgay, the winners photo
Team Balgay

24 October 2020

The headline is, we went to a dog show! The real stars are Southampton and District Canine Society, the masses of planning that must have go...