Full Racing Set Color
$605.00
The colored racing set meets all NAFA rules and regulations. Made of 100% Sintra® and even more durable than the standard racing set due to the thicker uprights.
Lattice Wing Jump
$119.00
Pole colors available are: red, blue, green, yellow, orange, violet or black. Wings are available in white only.
5' Panel Jump
$139.95
Panels are composite material and ready for stenciling or appliqué's.
Open Tunnel
$215.00
All Tunnel fabric has been treated to be UV Resistant, Anti-Fade & Anti-Microbial.
Flyball Box
$200.00
Unpainted $200. Painted $250.
PVC Tire Jump
$130.00
Select 2 colors for tape used to wrap the tire: red, blue, green, yellow, orange, purple, black or white.
Viaduct Jump
$295.00
Thinking about trying out for the world team or entering the International classes just for fun ?
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DOG TRAINING TIPS & ARTICLES
I know a man who delights in pointing his finger at his sparky little
Jack Russell and exclaiming “Bang!” whereupon the terrier lies down and does a
complete rollover. It is extremely cute and always gets a charmed laugh from
onlookers, but what exactly is going on in that little Jack Russell brain? What
connections is he making? Is he making any connections at all?
Trained dogs can easily distinguish dozens of different words of human
speech. It is always a temptation to believe that they actually understand
what these words mean, yet given the nature of their own communication system,
the odds seem strongly against it. Dogs have come to associate certain sounds
with certain actions, but those associations are often extremely dependent
upon other contextual cues that we may not be aware of. One way to show this
is to try giving a dog a familiar command over an intercom. Even a command
that the dog is highly motivated to carry out is often ignored unless it is
accompanied by some additional cues in our body language.
Indeed, for all of the many congruences that connect human and nonhuman
animals, one of the great differences is the way we use language. Human
infants, almost as soon as they begin to learn the names of things, take a
manifest pleasure in using the name for its own sake. They will point to an
object and say what it is - not because they want it, but for no other reason
than to share the pleasure of calling the attention of another human mind to
it.
Even language-trained animals, such as chimpanzees, that have been
taught to create "sentences" with computer symbols or sign language expend
something very close to 100 percent of their utterances on demands for food,
toys, or attention. There is no evidence that they have an independent notion
of the symbols as standing for concepts. They have, rather, learned to
manipulate a series of symbols to get results.
Our dogs have certainly learned to look at us, or come, when we speak
their name, but there is not a scrap of evidence that they grasp the notion
that their name is their name, in the sense that it stands for or represents
them. Given all that, however, it certainly seems odd that dogs can
distinguish words in human language. Studies by Russian speech scientists
found that dogs can readily be trained to distinguish the vowels a and i
produced by an audio synthesizer; even when the base pitch of the vowels was
changed, the dogs had no trouble telling the two apart.
Dogs may often be confused by substitutions of one consonant for another
- try saying "Fly clown" instead of "Lie down," and your dog will probably
react exactly the same. But the ability to distinguish vowels depends on
rather precise analysis of the higher-pitched resonances that accompany their
base pitch.
Dogs do not utter vowels themselves; why should they be able to tell
them apart when we say them? The simple and general explanation for this happy
circumstance is that ears are older than speech. Mammalian ears have been
around for tens of millions of years, and the ears of all mammals have much in
common. Human speech, however, has been around for only 100,000 years or so,
and the human vocal tract is a unique and late development. Only humans
possess the vocal apparatus needed to generate the sounds of speech.
We can believe that we control the dog’s conduct and behavior with
commands which the dog has learned to understand, but the truth is, the
non-verbal component of our communication carries more weight. Simple
cause-and-effect basic training will instill in the dog certain behaviors like
heel, sit and stay, etc., because the dog comes to understand not the words
per se, but the owner’s desire that he comply with a particular response. The
deep connections and long-lasting relationships which we create with our dogs
are essentially symbiotic. We provide creature comforts and share our
resources with the dog, while his innate intelligence tells him there’s great
benefit to be had from continuing to interpret and fulfill our desires.

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