Are you interested in dock diving and want to give your dog a great foundation before you even hit the pool? Or perhaps you’ve been to the pool with your dog and things didn’t go as well as you expected. OR maybe you are already hooked on the sport and want to make some progress during the offseason or up your dog’s game between pool rentals? Whatever your situation, this course is here to help you and your dog find joy and success in dock diving by focusing on the groundwork fundamentals.
Dock diving as a sport is very beginner friendly and a popular way for dogs to have fun and enjoy summer. It’s also a sport that offers a LOT of room for advanced training that can help your dog’s jumps improve, build their confidence overall, and allow you to really feel the teamwork involved with perfect timing and precision!
Most dogs will have the best chance at having a good first impression of dock diving, enjoying this sport long term, and jumping to their full potential if they have a proper foundation of skills to set them up and if their bodies are conditioned to handle it. This course will look at each of the main ’events’ that are most common in the various dock diving competition leagues- distance, speed type events, and the suspended toy games- and will break each of these down into their component parts, and then develop those individual skills in progression on dryland. We’ll also cover fitness and conditioning exercises that can help improve your dog’s strength, balance and stamina for safer, bigger jumps. And, we’ll look at some of the common dock diving training problems that come up and how these foundation games and exercises can improve those!
Additionally, we’ll look at how each of these individual foundation games fits into actual dock diving, what we expect it to do for your dog’s game, and how they can be used or adapted during your pool time to help transfer your dryland skills to the dock.
Gold students will be able to do the majority of the exercises in a small space, indoors, with a no-slip flooring surface. If you have access to more space we can make use of it and students who have access to a pool may choose to post their dog’s past or current dock diving videos for feedback or analysis as they fit into the weekly material. However, the course is intended to be a dryland training course, so no current or previous pool access is necessary to complete it and you’ll find that there is very little that can’t be done in the average sized living room or smaller backyard. There will be some bending, tugging and play required as homework in several lessons.
Teaching Approach
Each week will contain several subtopics with lectures containing written descriptions of each exercise and brief video examples. Many of the video examples will show both a dog in the learning stages as well as a more advanced dog in order that students can see how skills progress. Some lectures will also include analysis of actual dock diving in order jumps to better show how foundation skills fit in. Some lectures are more conceptual in nature but most will contain short homework assignments. Homework for each week is progressive.. Record keeping for both the foundation skills and fitness exercises is encouraged with templates provided. Some bonus reference lectures are included to help students transfer dryland skills to the dock when weather/access permits and will not require homework.
Bonus: Transferring Speed Event Dryland Skills to the Pool
Week 4 Distance Event Skills
The anatomy of a safe and effective jump
Tracking vs Catching
Calm Stays for Excited Dogs
Balance
Mini Grabs Meet Surface Changes
Week 5- Suspended Toy Games
Look up! Game
Hop Up Game
Striding and Collection
Flexibility
Bonus: Transferring Skills to the Pool
Week 6- Progressing and Problem Solving
Fast Fetch Training Game
Your turn- throws!
Stamina Building
Foundations, fluctuations and Fixes – Which dryland game and when?
Bonus: Strategies for Pool Progressions
Prerequisites & Supplies
Pre-requisite skills- A dog who is interested in retrieving toys is highly recommended. Lessons can be adapted for dogs of all ages but for youngsters you'll have the most success if they already understand working for reinforcement.
Supplies & Equipment-
A platform- stable, and long enough for your dog to fully sit on. Something like a Cato board works great but anything of similar shape and sturdiness works. (Foam exercise mats cut, stacked and taped are a super option.)
Stable, grippy front foot target, about the same height as your dog's wrist ie- rubber food bowl turned upside down, small stool, phonebook with piece of yoga mat taped on.
Two toys that your dog is enthusiastic about, can retrieve and tug. Use what your dog already likes! If they are not fussy or you are not sure, a foam Dokken Double Roper Super Dummy is appealing to many dogs.
A couple pieces of sturdy string (paracord type style) - about 3 feet worth total
Pair of Clothespins or similar style clips, which have a hole or option for attaching your strings
Broomstick or similar dowel shaped object
Traffic cone or plunger
Sample Lecture
Week 3.1
The speed events offer many opportunities to practice parts of the sequence in dryland training, and teach them the game well from scratch or make BIG improvements to your dog's time!
First let's look at what a speed game looks like.
The dog starts at a designated place on the dock.
The bumper is already suspended at the far end of the pool
Typically the handler is restraining the dog. The dog should be visually 'locked on' to the bumper.
In some leagues, the dog must be released at a certain signal, and in others, they start on their own.
The time starts at a designated point (either a predetermined signal, when the dog crosses a certain plane on the dock or leaves the dock, depending on the league)
The dog jumps into the water- it is advantageous to jump as far as possible since speed through the air is faster than speed through the water.
The dog swims to the suspended bumper.
Dog removes bumper from the clip or magnet rigging -In some leagues the time is stopped at this point
Turn back towards the dock
Swim (fast!) towards the ramp
Time stops at some designated point in the water
Exit pool
Get rewarded (toy/play)
This is an example of a speed game in the Xtreme Air Dogs league. The dog must start somewhere behind the 20 foot mark on the dock. The time starts on the final high-pitched beep noise and no part of the dog can cross the 20 foot mark before that beep sounds. So the goal is to have good handler timing on the release- have a dog that definitely knows where the bumper is and hustles towards it, grabs it and turns back quickly, and then hustles back to the dock. This particular dock setup is not ideal as the dog had to be physically captured as soon as they made it up onto the ramp and there isn't a lot of space for reward play, but you get the general idea. At the end of the clip, you hear the judge say 'that was awfully close to a false start' (which means it was a really good start!)
In the video above Pickle has a very respectable run! To make improvements on his time, I focused on his startline behavior (did you notice how he was anticipating the start and lunging a bit?) and the moment where he grabs the bumper and turns, to tighten that up.
Below is Hydrodash- the NADD speed game. The big difference is that the dog must start in front of the 10 foot line on the dock (or ahead of the 7 foot line for small dogs), the time starts when they leave the dock, and the handler can choose to start whenever they like- there is no pre-determined start signal. On the training end of things, it's very similar!
In the next video, you'll see a dog with similar athletic ability to Pickle but who is really solid on his startline behavior and has a really snappy turn. Isolating those skills in dryland training has paid off!
Here is a hydrodash scene that isn't uncommon with new dogs. They don't see or don't understand where the bumper is, and circle around expecting to see it in the water. Watch her body language as she jumps as it is clear even from that point that she isn't focused on the bumper:
Ideally we want to prevent this, by training the dog to look out for the bumper on cue and visually lock on to it. And make sure that she is actually seeing it before releasing her for her jump.
Here is the same dog when she is locked on and actually ready!
Much smoother! Now she needs some work on her bumper grab- she could easily improve by about a second by making a snappier turn at that point.
Below is a video of "Dueling Dogs'- a Dock Dogs event where two dogs compete in their speed retrieve event at the same time and the fastest dog wins. in this game, the time starts on a light signal, just like in flyball racing- and the time ends when the dog grabs the bumper completely off of it's rig, so there is no incentive to have a fast return from a scoring perspective (I would still train it though, so that your dog was well prepped for entering speed games in other venues). There is a whole new level potential for distraction with two dogs jumping at once! Riesen, the lab in the far lane, gives a picture perfect performance from how she is locked onto the bumper on the startline, gets a very clean and efficient start, great jump, fast swim and then a crisp yank on the bumper to stop the clock!
Grabbing the bumper reinforces the big jump and quick swim. By the nature of the game, most dogs do these things fairly efficiently once they understand the basic gist of it. We can help make that happen better by working on the pieces.
Rewarding the dog on the dock reinforces everything that happens after the bumper grab. This is the part where most dogs have the biggest room for improvement because it is often not trained (with the exception of dogs who have been trained for flyball and are already used to pretty much this exact pattern!)
This week we are going to focus on breaking this pattern down and teaching the individual components that we can work on in a dryland capacity. If your dog is new to this game, they will learn a lot! If your dog has some speed-game experience, you may find that working these exercises helps close gaps and improves their personal best.
We will specifically look at these key points in the speed game sequence where we can make some great progress:
The bumper grab and turn at the end of the pool
The striding for the take off
Speeding up your dog's return
We'll also look at some conditioning exercises that specifically build power in your dog's rear, since they will need that to get a big jump with few strides!
And then finally, I've got some tips on how you can take what your dog has learned in dryland training, and transition it to the pool, in a step by step way so that you can give your dog the best chance at learning this game without issues like circling or confusion!
Testimonials
A sampling of what prior students have said about this course ...
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