It
was still warm, with temperatures in the mi 50's on
Thursday morning. The forecast was a cloudy day and
rain moving in for the afternoon. (However, the day
remained partly cloudy with warm sunny spells and
temps in the 60's. The rain didn't come until after
4 p.m.)
It
was the morning after the workers party and some moved
a little slower that normal. A gourmet meal and lively
band provided an enjoyable evening for all. It is
usually a well anticipated event.
Remaining
contestants hoped for some type of weather/light/luck
change that would benefit their dogs. The test had
provided considerable separation at this time and
they had overnight to think about it.
It was estimated that
it would take two hours to complete.
The
fifth series resumed early with most work being similar.
Some had better work when the light improved. It completed
at 10:26 with dog 85. Callbacks came swiftly with
36 back. It had been a decisive series. Those dropped
were: 1, 4, 6, 8, 27, 32, 36, 38, 43, 53, 55, 58,
61, 64, 76, 82, 83, 85, 90, and 91.

Test 6 - Land Blind
A
land blind was quickly set up from the same line.
It went through the right flyer mark to the right
of the first brush lined tree to the left tip of another
patch of trees and brush about 275 yards away. It
was a hen pheasant marked by a red stick.
It
was very do-able and only a few had difficulty. It
began at 10: 40 with dog 14, took about 2 minutes
per dog and was completed by 12:15 p.m. Only one dog,
#63 was dropped leaving 35 for the 7th.
Test 6 - Water Triple with Retired Gun
A
move was then made back to the dike where the first
test had been held. It was ready when judges arrived
but had to be reorganized due to a wind shift and
would be a water triple. After some significant
trimming (including cutting small trees) on
a cattail covered point, an in line triple emerged.
The line was on top the dike, but a bit farther back
from that of the first series. It faced the same land
/water area also, but more of the irregular left shore
and water was visible. To the left, on the near side
of a cattail lined creek, a set of flyer guns shot
a flying duck which fell on the far side landing in
grassy cover about 100 yards away. A second set was
stationed on the left cattail lined shore at the base
of a peninsula protruding into the lake from the left.
They threw a dead duck angled sharply back to the
right. It arched over a small bay landing on the cattail
covered shore 115 yards out. Deep to the right, on
the distant shore of the lake a third set threw a
dead duck flat to the left that landed on the brushy
shoreline about 308 yards from line. The order was:
Far right, middle, left flyer. As the dog was sent
for the flyer, the far guns retired into the tree
line behind them.
About
1:30 Marty and Paco demonstrated that the far bird
was difficult to remember and handled. It took
about 12 minutes to complete. By 2 p.m. dog 21 initiated
the test. The first several dogs handled and one picked
up, but then the wind switched a bit and work improved.
The
left flyer falls were varied and a number of dogs
hunted the near side of the creek and/or drag back
before recovering it. The middle bird lay across a
small bay and some dogs hunted the peninsula or woods
behind it before locating it. The most challenging
mark was the long retired one. To recover it, dogs
had to swim past the larger bay to the right of the
middle guns, skim the tip of the peninsula , cross
a wide, cut cattail point then swim/lunge a good distance
to the far shore. Some dogs checked out the tip of
the peninsula, or hunted the wide point beyond where
drag back could hold them in there. As the test progressed,
dogs began to run down the left shore beyond the point
and hunt their way to the bird.
About
3:30 it became very cloudy and rain began shortly
after. Because of the dark conditions and rain , the
test was suspended after dog 69 had run. It will resume
on Friday with one test dog at 6:45; first running
dog #72 no earlier than 7:00. No partial call backs
were given.
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(L) Chris Ledford and Jim Dorobek |
Test 5 Gallery |
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(L) Linda Patterson, Dave Sniegowski and Vickie Worthington |
(L) John Morgan and Bach Doar |
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