Dakotazeb
Well-known member
Riley fortunately or unfortunately (depending how you look at it) knows when we are at a trial and will squall until his turn is up. It's annoying, I hate it, BUT he will do that until it's his turn. I've seen dogs literally shake with excitement. My own included. They have fun. I have fun. I've met so many friends through trialing, because we all have something in common, the dogs. To me, it's not about the winning, or losing. (I mean, don't get me wrong, I'm just as competitive as the next guy) It's about the whole package.
Oh how true. These dogs, especially the ones out of field trial breeding, learn that they are at a trial very fast. When I take my Brittany, Elle, out of her kennel to go and get in the blind she knows what's about to happen. She drives me nuts in the blind. Squealing, jumping on me, etc. She just gets so excited that she can't control herself. Then when we hear the words "Bring 'em out" she literally drags me to the starting line. To see that kind of enthusiasm is fantastic. And like I said before, whether she places or not is not the most important thing. I know she is doing what she loves to do and I also am having a fun time.
I realize that the cost is a factor for some. NSTRA trials are usually $40-45 per run. Most trials are a "Double, Double" which means 2 days on 2 fields. You can run once per day on each field so a weekend means 4 runs for a total cost of $160-180. However, you need not run 4 times and can run once or twice. Of course the above is if you were running just one dog.