NW385 Ambitious Drills for Analyzing Skills

This is the third class in my popular Drills and Skills series. With all training we need to maintain skills, progress skills, and then be a little more ambitious to try something more difficult! Our dogs are amazing and are usually up for the challenge! They are capable of more than we think! This class will push you more out of your comfort level so make sure your dog will be up for it too!

Course Details

This is the third class in my popular Drills and Skills series. With all training we need to maintain skills, progress skills, and then be a little more ambitious to try something more difficult! Our dogs are amazing and are usually up for the challenge! They are capable of more than we think! This class will push you more out of your comfort level so make sure your dog will be up for it too!

This is a perfect class to get new ideas for setting up your training. The focus will be on hide placement challenges and easy to setup drills that can mostly be done inside or in small spaces. Some drills will require larger spaces. Handling review and suggestions will be included in feedback as well.

Details will be provided for each drill - purpose (why), how to set up, what to expect and some boundaries/rules for each search! Since setups will be more challenging, there will also be some less demanding but fun and different setups! Training new and different setups will help our dogs work through different scent puzzles and challenges.

Teaching Approach

My fundamental approach in teaching is to keep things simple. Peel it away and then push a little more. We should always be working on closing gaps, maintaining skills and achieving fluency and growth. I will assess your handling and mechanics where applicable to see if it's helping or hindering the search.

Lecture content is written with video examples. They are designed to be watched and to follow the ideas presented in the lecture. Lecture videos may run from 30s to 3 minutes long. The lectures are designed to help a student understand the purpose of the drill and how it might vary by dog. Care is taken to keep lectures short. Each week 3 drills are rolled out at the start of the week. Gold students will be allowed 6:00 of video time per week and will be expected to keep track of their time usage in their threads. This class will work best for students who learn by reading text lectures, watching videos and who like having structured lesson plans.

This class will have a Teacher's Assistant (TA) available in the Facebook study group to help the Bronze and Silver students! Directions for joining will be in the classroom after you register.

Syllabus

Syllabus is subject to change:

Week 1:

  • Search stamina
  • Junction in the road - olfactory vs. sight
  • Stacked hides

Week 2:

  • Close inaccessibles
  • Same odor drills
  • Speed bump

Week 3:

  • Wind challenges
  • Container challenge
  • Context of Transitions

Week 4:

  • Tree hides
  • Low odor threshold
  • Suspended hide with a twist

Week 5:

  • Double blind!
  • Walls and Hallways
  • Crack the crack hides
  • Bonus: Time pressure

Week 6:

  • X marks the spot!
  • Easy 6 foot hides!
  • Largest area!

Prerequisites & Supplies

The target audience for this class are teams trialing or training at the NW3/Elite/Detective levels and who are looking to set more challenging setups for their dogs.

Supplies include normal nosework supplies/containers.

Sample Lecture

Drill: Analyzing your inaccessible hide skills and challenging your dog with close inaccessible hides.

We’ve worked inaccessible hides in training and encountered them at trials. And we’ve all encountered or should be training for close hides. We can up the challenge with setting up close inaccessible hides!

There are 3 kinds of inaccessible hides. Each kind will have varying degrees of being inaccessible - meaning that some will be less or more inaccessible:

  • Contained (in a drawer, cabinet)
  • Deep (in a stack of chairs, deep behind a barrier of objects)
  • Elevated (above the dogs nose up to ~10 feet)

One of the challenges is that dogs are not always as proficient on inaccessibles or handlers not as confident to read/call them. Early on, dogs may leave when trying to solve an inaccessible to search for something easier. What search hasn't had at least one easy accessible hide?

Before setting up 2 close inaccessibles, ensure or analyze your dogs skill set for a single inaccessible hide of each of the 3 types listed above.

Once you are confident that your dog can solve the varying types of inaccessible hides, set up some close inaccessibles and let's see how your dog does! Ideally you should age your hides at least 20 minutes. Make sure you are using 2 different odors for these setups.

Below are 3 scenarios:

  • 2 Contained close hides
  • 1 Deep and 1 Contained hide
  • 1 Elevated and 1 Contained hide (2 examples)

*Warning that any close hide near an Elevated hide will be a more challenging setup since it would be easy for the dog to believe solving one is solving the whole scent picture.

When placing your hides, consider how the odor will move or be contained so that the 2 odors couldn't be honestly solved as one inaccessible. Plan for hides about 5-15 feet apart. Contained hides can be placed closer as well as closer in combination with an elevated hide. Two elevated hides should be placed farther apart so they can each be worked individually.

2 Contained Close Hides

Here is an example of 2 contained close hides. Hides were not aged. The heat was running from the vent on that back wall between the 2 hides. This was pretty straight forward for my dogs. I would consider these as lower degree inaccessibles as the hides were near the door of the cabinets and the one on the left had an opening on the back. What I loved about this search is that Drac jumped on the couch! He is not one to climb/jump up on things in a search so it was great to see. The heater was surely blowing the odor onto the couch.

2 min video example:

1 Deep and 1 Contained Close Hides

Here's an example taking it on the road using an exterior patio. Hides were aged for one hour. One hide is in a metal drawer (pretty solid unit!) and one deep in the right corner. I try to wait as long as I might in a blind to see if they'll stick with it or leave.

2 min video example:

1 Elevated and 1 Contained Close Hides

This example was complicated by the contained hide (in a drawer) being a bit deep into the corner with a big roll of mats in the way. It would be easy for the dog to believe solving one is solving the whole scent picture. The hides were placed by a student in one of my local classes. The hides were aged about 20 minutes.

One hide is about 7 feet high near the top of the door. The other hide is 3 feet away in a closed drawer about 3.5 feet lower than the elevated hide! The view is a little hard to see on these videos with the weave poles in the way and angle of the video. The most interesting difference between running both dogs is my handling with one being blind and the other when I know where the hides are.

I show the known hide placement run first. I do "keep" her there after finding the first hide, but I DO generally handle that way - not influencing and letting my dog pick where to go next. With Drac (2nd video clip), I am running blind. Starting at 1:17 Drac is showing inaccessible behavior. He never oriented up but looking back it could also look like he is caught between 2 hides. I don't even consider that my student would place another hide there in that corner. I’m being timed and rushed the exit off that hide by influencing him to move to another area. Whether he would have solved the other one, I don’t know. The important take away is that we can't appear to help them find 2 close hides, but instead handle the same. Note: only the teams that knew there were 2 hides got them both which shows how easily we can influence our dogs to find hides!

2 min video example:

I also set this same scenario on vehicles. Hides were aged for one hour. I did set them a bit further apart about 18 feet apart. What I love about this video is that Moxie, who can be worried about tight spaces, climbed under the trailer hitch to get to the hide! What is also nice about the video is that the snow flurries show the wind direction. Steadliy blowing to the right. When Drac ran it, the snow was swirling more and changing directions. It took him a minute longer to find both hides (video not shown).

2:50 min video example:


Instructors

Julie Symons (she/her) has been involved in dog sports for over 30 years. Starting with her mix, Dreyfus, in flyball, she went on to train and compete in conformation, agility, obedience, herding and tracking with her first Belgian tervuren, Rival. Rival was the first CH OTCH MACH Belgian...

Read more

Registration

Choose the plan that fits your goals and start learning at your own pace.

Gold

$260

Enrollment limit: 12

  • Access to all lectures and homework forums discussion
  • Read all posted questions and answers
  • Watch all posted videos
  • Post general questions to discussion forum
  • Submit written assignments
  • Post dog specific questions
  • Post videos (unlimited)
  • Receive instructor feedback

Registration dates:

November 22, 2025 - December 15, 2025

Enroll

Silver

$130

Enrollment limit: 25

  • Access to all lectures and homework forums discussion
  • Read all posted questions and answers
  • Watch all posted videos
  • Post general questions to discussion forum
  • Post dog specific questions (video only)
  • Post videos (up to 2)
  • Receive instructor feedback

Registration dates:

November 22, 2025 - December 15, 2025

Enroll

Bronze

$65

Enrollment limit: Unlimited

  • Access to all lectures and homework forums discussion
  • Read all posted questions and answers
  • Watch all posted videos

Registration dates:

November 22, 2025 - December 15, 2025

Enroll

Scholarship available! Apply here

Why choose us?

We offer a variety of online training solutions designed to help you and your furry friend achieve success

World Class Trainers

Learn from professionals with years of experience in canine behavior

Read more

Proven methods

Science-backed positive reinforcement techniques that actually work

Read more

Personalized approach

Programs tailored to your dog’s unique needs and personality

Read more

Engaging lessons

Keep training exciting with interactive exercises and games

Read more

FAQ

Explore the questions we get asked most often and find out everything you need for a smooth experience with us.

Our testimonials

Don't just take our word for it — see what our clients say about their experience working with us.

I am continually amazed at how much I learn with each class. Watching both the teacher's video's and the student's videos gives me lots of opportunity to think through the elements and break it down for myself and my dog.

Read all testimonials

I have struggled to find a trainer in my area that would consistently work with my reactive dog. We often got dumped in the summer, classes cancelled, or was told that we weren't part of the trainers focus. I thought that I would never be able to improve my training beyond reading and watching DVDs. I thought that I would never get personal feedback. I felt discouraged and excluded from the dog training community. I thought that I would always have mediocre training and a mediocre relationship with my dog. A friend recommended FDSA and I enrolled in "It's All Tricks" with Deborah Jones at Gold level. In 6 weeks my dog has become more confident than I've ever seen her. She is more motivated and eager to learn. Furthermore, my confidence as a trainer has improved. I finally feel like I have a resource that I can rely on. At FDSA it doesn't matter that my dog is reactive, we can finally work on exercises that would have been completely inaccessible before. Deb has been absolutely wonderful to work with. She provides kind, encouraging and constructive feedback with meaningful critique. This experience has been the epitome of what I have always dreamt that training my dog would be. I cannot be thankful enough to have discovered FDSA. It has given my dog and I a second chance at having a successful, meaningful relationship. I cannot wait to enroll in more classes. I wasn't so certain that online classes would be REALLY useful - I am blown away by how much one can learn and implement through the online system - certainly makes it possible to participate in novel learning experiences that would not otherwise be available!

Read all testimonials

If you live in an area where finding an appropriate positive based class is a struggle then I strongly urge one to sign up with the Fenzi Dog Sport Academy. The on line instructors I have had thus far have been outstanding. Their dedication to their students shines thru and the learning one achieves surpasses many classes that I have taken in other schools. I recommend and prefer the gold level however I have also taken a bronze level course and was satisfied with what I learnt.

Read all testimonials