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Mush! You Huskies

December 22, 2009 by teamineka

Mush! You Huskies

By Michele Forto

Starting Saturday December 19, 2009 a new mushing radio program will launch under the Twine Group Radio banner. Mush! You Huskies is hosted by Dr. Robert Forto and his business partner, wife, handler and greatest fan, Michele. Mush! You Huskies can be heard bi-weekly on Blogtalkradio on Saturdays at 11:00 am Mountain time.

Mush! You Huskies is brought to you by Denver Dog Works, Team Ineka and Dog Works Training Centers. The host, Dr. Robert Forto is a musher training for his first Iditarod run in 2013 and is bringing this show to you for several reasons: First, to bring insight, education and awareness to dog sledding. Second, to establish a listenership to a show that is like no other Mush! You Huskies will have frequent guests, recreational to Iditarod musher interviews, reviews of dog powered sports, call-in’s, chat, live email, and video about everything dog sledding. Third, Robert is looking for corporate and individual sponsors to help get his team to Nome in a few years.

In the coming weeks on Mush! You Huskies we will discuss: dog driving dynasties such as the Reddington Family, Seppala, Butcher, Jonrowe, Buser and more. We will discuss training a dog team, sled dog psychology, training leaders and communication. We will discuss the history of the sport. Dog Sledding has such a rich history that few know about it; from the Siberian dog drivers, to the diphtheria serum run, to the Iditarod, mushing in the lower 48 (states) and all over the world. We will discuss mushing in the Olympic games and the future of the sport.

Dr. Robert Forto has been a musher since he was a teenager when he bought his first Siberian, Axl and has been involved in the sport in varying degrees for more than 20 years. In 2000, Robert wanted to go back to school so he sought out a doctorate program that would allow him to write about what he truly loved, dogs and the sport of dog sledding. In 2005, he earned his doctorate and defended his dissertation successfully, Chasing the Dream: The History of Human-Canine Communication in the Sport of Dog Sledding (2005).

Team Ineka has been duly named after our Siberian Husky, Ineka.  You can view photos of Ineka on his website www.teamineka.com.  Ineka will post short stories monthly discussing the dogs in the team that he will be in charge of and will welcome fellow lead dogs insight and suggestions.  Ineka has retired from his lead dog duties on the sled but he still manages to keep everything and everyone in check.

You can follow Team Ineka and Mush! You Huskies on Facebook, Twitter, on our weekly blog and through our website: https://teamineka.com

If you have any show suggestions or topics, would like to be on the show or know someone that we should interview please contact our studio at live@twinegroupradio.com or by phone at 303-578-9881. We would love to hear from you!

See you on the trail!

_____________________

Michele Forto is the business manager for Dog Works Training Centers and the co-host of The Dog Doctor Radio Show and Mush! You Huskies. Michele is also the lead trainer and contact for The Ineka Project in which she trains service dogs for a multitude of impairments. Michele can be reached through her website at http://www.denverdogworks.com

Filed Under: Mushing Tagged With: #dogtraining, denver dog works, dog sledding, dog training denver, dogd doctor radio, forto, ineka, ineka project, Mushing, pet training denver, robert forto, sled dogs, sport racing, team ineka

Lead Dogs and Their Role in a Winning Team

December 8, 2009 by teamineka

Lead Dogs and Their Role in a Winning Team

By Robert Forto

Their names were Yak, Zerlina, Ineka, Rutgrr and Ryche. All share having played an important role as lead dogs for their owner; they were the deciding factor on the mushers’ greatest success.

Rutgrr was Robert Forto’s prototype of a good lead dog. Forto stated, “that he had the perfect combination of speed, strength and endurance, and on top of all that a strong race instinct.” [i]  Forto knew when the stakes were high, he could inspire the team to reach top performance, and this lead dog had just that extra something needed to win races.  Good lead dogs lead the dog team and execute most of the musher’s commands.  Excellent lead dogs, according to Martin Buser also stand up to the musher for the “good of the whole team.” [ii]  Buser teaches his lead dogs to make their own decisions consciously by praising them when they do.  Jacco Ulmann who runs Siberian Huskies in Switzerland adds, “I don’t want a lead dog that takes me on to thin ice just because I told him to do so three times.  A dog is also an independent being and I want to accept that.” [iii]

For many mushers it is important that their lead dogs be reliable. They take responsibility for the entire team and competently lead it with assurance past spectators, public address [1]speakers and other distractions. Some lead dogs also give the musher himself, security and confidence.

A winning team often needs an exceptional pair of lead dogs. For the entire team to truly reach it’s potential, it needs to possess the same qualities.  In this respect, DeeDee Jonrowe warns not to concentrate only on the best dogs on the team; but that it is more important to pay attention to the weakest. “It is this dog that will limit the team’s possibilities.”[iv]

No musher should have only one or two lead dogs. In every top-notch team at least half of the dogs should sometimes run in lead.  The advantage of this strategy is clear. The responsibility for the psychologically and physically demanding tasks of leadership is divided among the dogs, and this allows them time to recover, particularly during long races.  Forto tries to train every dog on his team to run in lead. However he clearly states, “For an important race, I always have my favorites.”[v] A musher who depends on just one lead dog runs the danger of suddenly standing there without it. For even the best lead dogs can drop out of a race due to injury, illness or unwillingness to take commands. Even though the performance of the entire team is always paramount, nothing works without leaders.  Their task is in fact to lead the team to the finish line and to maintain the speeds demanded by the musher.

Renowned musher/researcher Dr. Arleigh Reynolds says that many mushers, in their drive to compete and put miles on their dogs, can potentially over-train their dogs and inadvertently overlook the benefits and necessity of rest. Such oversight can work against the goal and set the team back. This can also cause burnout and stress on the leaders and they may be unable to perform.[vi]

While races generally have easily recognizable trails, dogs sometimes have a hard time finding their way on training runs and guided dog tours. Forto’s adopted Siberian Husky, Ineka, was rescued from an animal shelter in Washington State, and was “born to be a leader.”[vii]  After a plane ride, a night’s rest and a quick warm up the next day, he was leading a team of twelve on a wheeled cart designed for small teams of three or less. This dog would leave the trail on command and would even burrow in deep snow to reach a goal.  Ineka had no trouble running perfectly straight, while many dogs often pull left or right. Such an exceptional lead dog becomes very important on guided tours and training new or inexperienced dogs. They relieve the musher of some of the stress associated with the trail and ensure that he reaches his destination quickly.  A good lead dog is almost like “life insurance” on a tour.[viii]

A musher can not tell the potential of a young dog by external characteristics alone.  To find out which dogs are fit to be lead dogs, the musher should give all dogs an opportunity to run in that position.  In doing so, the most important thing is to make the run a positive experience for the dog.  This is best done on a small team that the musher can easily control.

Three-wheeled training carts and four-wheel ATV’s offer great security for fall training. It is best to hook the yearling pup up to a gentle, experienced leader for the first try.  During fall training, Forto would often hook Ineka up to Nixon on his slower teams.  This procedure not only trained the pup, but also the junior and inexperienced mushers behind the sled.[ix]

Dogs with a high pack drive have shown success when first placed in lead on the way home.  Pack drive consists of behavior associated with being part of a pack. Pack drive is stimulated by rank order in the social hierarchy. [x]  Often a dog with a high pack drive is happiest with the musher, and likes to work with him. They like to stay close to the kennel and follow the musher around.

Martin Buser will sometimes run his puppies in lead on their very first training run. However, most mushers wish to introduce their dogs to the tug slowly.  It is important to create situations for them that even an inexperienced lead dog can manage. Discipline is always a negative experience and should be avoided.

Buser also lets his pups run ahead of the team. Those that want to stay ahead and do not leave the trail are his favorites.[xi] Mushers who want teams with a high proportion of leaders cannot avoid paying attention to this trait when breeding. A musher will find more potential lead dogs among pups of a leader than other litters.  This is a strategy that veteran musher Egil Ellis has been following for years.[xii]

Each training session should be leader training. The constant use of the same commands teaches all the dogs what to do and what is expected of them.  Swing dogs must learn directional commands particularly well, so it is a good idea for a musher to regularly run potential leaders in this position.

An example with directional commands shows how dogs can learn. Shortly before an intersection a musher could give a command like “Haw!” If the lead dog does not respond, or responds incorrectly, the musher should say “Whoa! Stop!” and stop the team and repeat the command. If the dog then pulls in the correct direction, the musher should release the brake and praise it for a job well done. After three failed attempts Forto sets the snow-hook and goes up front to correct the leader.[xiii] The musher should gently pull the team on to the appropriate side of the trail before running back to the sled and pulling the snow-hook. Most mushers walk up to the right side of the team for a “Gee” command and up the left for “Haw”.  In time, many dogs will learn which direction the musher wants to go by the side along which the musher is moving. In the end, the voice command is enough, though for a time the musher might still need to use a hand signal or a jingler. Jinglers also work particularly well in training the whole team to respond to commands.  A jingler is a stick with some noise making attachments.  (See Figure 5)

Clacker

Jingler
Clacker

 

Figure 5: Directional Command Training Aides

In training, the jingler is jingled on the appropriate side simultaneously with the vocal commands “Gee” or “Haw”.  Much like a clicker used in canine obedience training, the dogs are first interested in the sound, a phenomenon referred to as an orientated response.  The canine then instinctively turns their head in that direction in order to investigate this curious sound.  Where the head goes the body tends to follow.  With a correct response the dogs are positively reinforced with enthusiastic praise.  After a number of correct responses the jingler or clacker announces that the praise is forthcoming.  The jingler has now become a conditioned reinforcer; in essence it announces to the dog that the musher owes the canine some praise.

This conditioning could also be accomplished with the phenomena known as sensatory preconditioning which involves the pairing of two neutral stimuli (the jingler and the command) prior to pairing either the command or jingler with the primary reinforcer, ultimately accomplishing the conditioning of both previously neutral stimuli.  This type of conditioning was discussed in-depth in chapter four.  It would however be much easier, and vastly more effective to make the jingler or clacker a conditioned reinforcer by pairing it with a primary reinforcer, whether it is a treat or a simple pat on the head.  The conditioning would be undertaken prior to training in the harnesses attached to a sled or cart.  The jingler would then announce the eminent arrival of whatever primary reinforcer was used to condition it.

If the canine hears the jingler or clacker and expects a nice, tasty treat, most assuredly the dog is going to go in that direction.  Forto has used a jingler and clacker stick for years and has found that the dogs “respond particularly well to this type of command.”[xiv]  Forto thought that this innovation was uniquely his, until he came across it while doing the research for this dissertation. Some of the mushing greats like Roland Lombard and Dick Mackey had used similar devices for years. It is important to note that from time to time the canine must actually receive the primary reinforcer in order to stave off occurrence of a phenomenon known as extinction.  Again, all of these conditioning principles were discussed in-depth in chapter four.

A lot of mushers train the most promising dogs individually in front of a bicycle, while skijoring or on roller-blades, if they dare be so brave. The musher’s contact with the dog is much more direct than when the potential leader is in front of a sled and the musher is driving from behind.  This method can quickly lead to success, especially in directional command training.

Before being given the responsibility in a big race for the first time, a lead dog must have the opportunity to gather experience in smaller races. A dog’s first race in particular needs to be positive and lots of fun. It is practically impossible, even with a lot of money, to buy super-leaders like Egil Ellis’s lead dog Mike. The breeder has invested incredible amounts of time and work in a leader; furthermore, the leader is genetically very valuable.[xv]

Martin Buser is another musher that does not sell lead dogs.  He speaks of dogs with leader potential in high regard and feels it is essential for every musher to train and develop their own dogs. “A lead dog can’t be bought. Why should he perform for me?” Buser states further, “If you sell good leaders, people believe the dog will do all of the work. But the team, all the dogs and the musher, must do the work, not just the leader.”[xvi] Forto shrewdly added, “If I were to sell my good leaders that would be unfair to the competition. I wouldn’t ever have the chance to win!”[xvii]

__________________________

[i] Forto, R., Interview by James Myers 16 May 2005.  Interview 1.

[ii] Buser, M., Web Document http://www.buserdog.com

[iii] Ulman, J., Web Document http://www.huskytrail.ch.

[iv][iv] Freedman, L., Iditarod Dreams: A Year in the Life of Alaskan Sled Dog Racer, DeeDee Jonrowe. Epicenter Press, 1995. Pg. 78.

[v] Forto, R., Interview by James Myers 16 May 2005.  Interview 1.

[vi] Hoener, T., “The Research of Arleigh Reynolds,” Mushing, May/Jun. 2005. No. 104 Pg. 17.

[vii] Forto, R., Interview by James Myers 16 May 2005.  Interview 1.

[viii] TR001. Male Tour Mushing Operator. Interviewed by. Robert Forto. 27 April 2005. Interview 11. Bayfield, WI.

[ix] Forto, R., Interview by James Myers 16 May 2005.  Interview 1.

[x] Forto R., and Bowersox R., ed. 2004. Canine Science Level I course material. Pg.56

[xi] Huber, M., “Lead Dogs,” Mushing. Mar./Apr. 2003. No. 91. Pg. 26.

[xii] Ellis, E., Web Document. http://www.egilellis.com

[xiii] Forto, R., Interview by James Myers 16 May 2005.  Interview 1.

[xiv] Forto, R., Interview by James Myers 16 May 2005.  Interview 1.

[xv] Ellis, E., Web Document. http://www.egilellis.com

[xvi] Buser, M., Web Document http://www.buserdog.com

[xvii] Forto, R., Interview by James Myers 16 May 2005.  Interview 1.

________________________
Robert Forto is a professional musher and the training director for Alaska Dog Works. Robert Forto hosts a weekly radio show on Dog Works Radio. Robert Forto can be reached through his her website at www.robertforto.com

Filed Under: Mushing Tagged With: #dogs, #dogtraining, denver dog works, dog doctor radio, dog sledding, dog training denver, forto, ineka, ineka project, Mushing, pet training denver, robert forto, sled dogs, sport racing, Team Ineka

Dog Sledding 101: The Gee Haw Problem

December 1, 2009 by teamineka

Dog Sledding 101: The Gee-Haw Problem

By Robert Forto, PhD

This is a weekly series in which I explore a different topic relating to the sport of dog sledding and its impact on the social fabric of America and our canine companions.  I have been a professional musher for fifteen years and was given the privilege of writing my doctorate on the sport of dog sledding: Chasing the Dream: A Study of Human-Canine Communication in the Sport of Dog Sledding (2005). In these weekly articles I will showcase the sport, the history, how a dog team prepares for racing, and many more topics. If you have a story you would like to share about dog sledding please send me an email anytime at train@denverdogworks.com and be sure to check out our website at https://teamineka.com

The Gee—Haw Problem

Some mushers expect a leader to turn instantly on command; others give the command some yards ahead of the turn so that the dog can absorb the situation. This explains why some mushers have trouble missing turns. A dog trained to turn instantly will jump straight into deep snow even if he sees a fork ahead. Serious training is required to make a dog leave the trail. The dog must respond automatically, without thinking. A dog less strictly trained often will miss the fork if the musher waits until the team is right on it.

The musher must learn to read his dogs and watch for the communication signals given by them when the dog approaches a fork in the trail. The lead dog will lift his head when he realizes that a decision must be made. The ears will go forward (which way?) or turn backward (what does the boss think)? He might even glance backward. The leader is most receptive to the musher’s commands at this instant. He will not have sized up the situation any earlier than this exact point. A split-second later he will have already decided which way to turn. He might not be able to collect himself and the team in time to change direction.

  __________________________

Dr. Robert Forto is a professional musher and the training director for Dog Works Training Centers. Dr. Forto hosts a weekly radio program, The Dog Doctor Radio Show every Saturday morning at 9:30 am MDT. Dr. Forto can be reached through his website at http://www.denverdogworks.com

Filed Under: Mushing Tagged With: #dogs, #dogtraining, denver dog works, dog sledding, dog training denver, dogd doctor radio, forto, Mushing, pet training denver, robert forto, sled dogs, sport racing, team ineka

Sled Dog Psychology: Communicating

October 28, 2009 by teamineka

Sled Dog Psychology: Communicating

By Robert Forto, PhD

This is a weekly series in which I explore a different topic relating to the sport of dog sledding and its impact on the social fabric of America and our canine companions.  I have been a professional musher for fifteen years and was given the privilege of writing my doctorate on the sport of dog sledding: Chasing the Dream: A Study of Human-Canine Communication in the Sport of Dog Sledding (2005). In these weekly articles I will showcase the sport, the history, how a dog team prepares for racing, and many more topics. If you have a story you would like to share about dog sledding please send me an email anytime at train@denverdogworks.com and be sure to check out our new website at https://teamineka.com

Sled dog psychology is an interesting area of study. In order to be a great musher with an exceptional team you need to know everything you can about yourself, but more importantly your dogs. Any musher will tell you that you must become “one of the team” in order to be a successful dog driver. While this means different things to different people, I have found out over the years that “one of the team” has made me a better musher and a better person at that. I have literally lived with a pack of dogs for most of my adult life and that co-habitation has given me a different respect for my dogs (and them for me, I can only hope) but also made me one great dog trainer. You see, I understand how dogs think. I have literally spent thousands of hours observing them and working with them and in doing so it allowed me access into a world that few dog trainers can attain.

This week’s article is about communicating with your dogs. I hope you enjoy it and please feel free to leave any comments and feedback. If you have any questions about the sport of dog sledding or training in general please give Denver Dog Works a call at 303-578-9881 or email at train@denverdogworks.com

Communicating

You can communicate with dogs in two ways—your way and their way.[i]  Dogs can learn a number of words, even the names of their close companions.  They also respond strongly to tone and inflection.  They pick out key words and let the rest of your sentences slide, as in “You want to go out?” or “Stay out!’ (This is why you should not say, “You cannot go out”—the dog will not understand.)  The natural human tendency to repeat short phrases helps dogs pick up words. We say, “Good boy, yes, what a good boy.”

If you also understand how dogs communicate, you have an extra edge in training them.  Body language and physical contact play a greater role here than the voice.  Drooling, panting, and shivering are natural processes, but they can also occur at other times, such as when a dog recognizes a friend that he admires (you).  A dog will also shake off a bad experience.  If you have just freed a dog from a choking tangle, and he does not shake off, suspect a possible problem, such as shock or depression.  But a musher must know the dog—not all dogs will reliably shake off even when they again feel great.

Tail wagging can indicate either friendliness or aggression, depending upon whether the tail is waived loosely like a flag or in a slow arc, taut as a wire.  Eye contact, or avoidance of it, shows full attention, dominance, subordinance, or confusion.  No musher likes a dog that constantly looks backward, but unless it has become a habit, the dog is trying to make eye contact for some reason.

Howling brings dogs together and appears to relieve stress.  Most mushers like to make their dogs howl (by intimidating a howl) during long trips; it revitalizes the teams and keeps the dogs happy and secure. Vocalizations are often the sign of a dog’s mood as well.

Physical communication on the musher’s part includes petting for a reward, or putting a dog to the ground, as punishment, or to establish your authority.  Pinning down a rebellious dog proves your authority by sheer physical control.  A dog understands this—you are talking its language.  Some experienced mushers bite a dog’s ear to punish him, and they feel that it is a natural form of communication.  While it is effective, most mushers would hesitate to inflict sudden pain with their face so close to a dog’s jaws.

When you resort to your own language, you can only expect the dogs to obey what they know.  Teaching them a few extra words helps you communicate with them better.  For example, on a long trip many dogs learn the words, “We are going to camp now.”  They will leave the trail to struggle through deep snow to the campsite if they know the reason for it.

Most lead dogs learn that “Trail!” means a broken path to follow.  If they lose the trail and we spot it, most mushers say “Gee, trail!” and the dogs watch for it on the right.  With just a trace of the trail in drifted snow or ice, the dogs may wander away, but a sharp “Trail!” command wakes them up and gets them back in line.  When breaking trail across an untrammeled field, most dogs cross animal tracks without a glance, but if the track is going the way of the team, the command “Trail!” makes the dogs stay on it.

Most mushers also say, “Let’s eat!” at feeding time.  Even if we say it at an odd time, the dogs are up and yowling.  Mushers often use this, or a similar command, to lure in runaway dogs.  Some mushers will use this command to gauge how tired the dogs are.  If a musher stops to snack, and the dogs do not respond to the words “let’s eat!”, they know that the dogs have been pushed too hard.

By communicating with your dogs, you will build a stronger rapport with them.  They will also better understand what you want.  Dogs, especially young ones, sometimes disobey simply because they do not understand what you want.

Next Week: Attitude


[i] Collins, M., and J., Dog Driver. Loveland, CO: Alpine Publications, 1991. Pg. 46

___________________________________

Dr. Robert Forto is a professional musher and is training for the Iditarod. Dr. Forto is also the training director of Denver Dog Works and The Ineka Project in Colorado. Dr. Forto is the host of a weekly radio program, The Dog Doctor Radio Show, every Saturday. Dr. Forto can be reached through his website at http://www.denverdogworks.com

Filed Under: Mushing Tagged With: denver dog works, dog doctor radio show, dog sledding, dog training denver, forto, Mushing, pet training denver, robert forto, team ineka

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