Dog thread!šŸ¾

Brew is ridiculous. We were sitting outside together earlier but then we came in after about 20-30 minutes and I made myself lunch, etc. Well, I thought heā€™d want some more time outside since itā€™s sunny and nice out so I brought the long line back out and looped it around a deck post and brought him back out and I came back in.* Well, about 30 seconds to 1 minute later, he is at my door wanting to come in already. šŸ™„ little spoiled baby did NOT want to be outside alone I guess or else he was cold or something? IDK. But yeah. šŸ™„šŸ¤¦ā€ā™€ļøšŸ¤£šŸ¤£šŸ¤£šŸ¤£


*I can see him through my door and he was safe out there and couldnā€™t get into any trouble or else I wouldnā€™t have plus it was going to be for a very short period anyway even before his stunt.
šŸ˜…

Thats Denver and Tucker to. I have to be outside with themšŸ˜‚
Invisible fence with long tie out are not even used
 
Showmanship is conformation, correct?
Conformation judges the dog, looking at how close the dog is to the breed standard.
Showmanship actually judges handler. They want to see how the handler interacts with the dog or whatever other animal they're showing.

Some of the things a Showmanship judge looks for are:
  • Is the animal well-groomed?
  • Is it set-up (positioned) properly, to show off its' strengths and minimize its' weaknesses?
  • How well do the animal and handler interact and move together?
  • Does the handler always keep the animal between themselves and the judge?
  • Do the pair look neat and clean?
  • A good youth judge will often ask the handler questions about how to show properly and what they do to best show their animal.
A good handler can make even the commonest dog show like a champ. A not-so-good one can lose with the best looking dog at the meet. That's why Showmanship classes are so tough!
 
Conformation judges the dog, looking at how close the dog is to the breed standard.
Showmanship actually judges handler. They want to see how the handler interacts with the dog or whatever other animal they're showing.

Some of the things a Showmanship judge looks for are:
  • Is the animal well-groomed?
  • Is it set-up (positioned) properly, to show off its' strengths and minimize its' weaknesses?
  • How well do the animal and handler interact and move together?
  • Does the handler always keep the animal between themselves and the judge?
  • Do the pair look neat and clean?
  • A good youth judge will often ask the handler questions about how to show properly and what they do to best show their animal.
A good handler can make even the commonest dog show like a champ. A not-so-good one can lose with the best looking dog at the meet. That's why Showmanship classes are so tough!
I never knew all this! Thanks!
 

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