I have been a participant of dog agility for six years (my dog is seven – I missed the first year) and am amazed at how it transforms dogs. In fact, I am so impressed that I created a dog agility arena at my house and every Saturday a group gets together (with our trainer, Ina) and we run our dogs through the paces. The dogs all know when it is “agility Saturday” and Lola (my miniature fox terrier) gets very excited when I put her special blue agility leash on as we head out to the course. There are several jumps, two tunnels, a long balance beam, a steep A-frame, a teeter-totter, weave poles, and a large tire jump.  We continually mix up the order so the dogs are always challenged. 

The outcome is amazing – shy trembling dogs with their tails and ears down turn into superstars quickly as they run through the course. Their chests puff out, their tails and ears go up as the dogs achieve success on the course. And it is designed in such a way that all dogs will be successful, even if they only do one or two obstacles. For more advanced dogs, they are constantly being challenged – as they come off one obstacle, there will be two new obstacles in front of them and they have to go to the one we either point to or call out. The dogs and the handlers have to pay attention. In fact, the most important thing I have learned in dog agility is – it’s all about the handler – when I get confused, mess up commands or fail to point in a timely fashion, the dog gets confused and doesn’t know what to do. So it is really not about the dog – I think dogs have a natural inkling to agility – it’s the handlers that slow them down. Sort of like raising kids – the importance of clear direction.

Dog Agility Events Calendar

Posted By: Edward Reiners