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WALKING THE COURSE DVD
by Kathy Keats (See other books by author)
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Publisher: Clean Run Productions
Edition: 2005 DVD
Run Time: N/A
ISBN: N/A Item: DTA262
Ships the next business day.
Summary: Learn how to use your walk-through time effectively and plan your agility runs. 36 Minutes.
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Expanded Description:
Learn how to use your walk-through time effectively and plan your agility runs. Walking the course effectively is one of the most important skills you can develop. Successful competitors are ones who can consistently read the course correctly and then execute their plan. Realize that memorizing the order of the obstacles is much different from analyzing the course and planning a handling strategy. By breaking down actual courses, Kathy Keats will help you learn how to recognize changes of direction and different types of challenges on a course and explain why and when you might use certain types of crosses as well as where you might place those crosses.
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| Customer Reviews |
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| Write a review for this product! |
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| Some interesting points., December 29, 2008 |
| Reviewer: E Spencer |
| I bought this DVD at a show and I have loaned to half my agility school. It gives some interesting insight into what options you have and lets you decide what may work best for your dog. I was introduced to some new ways to handle while running the course and what areas to watch for while walking it. The only downfall to the DVD I thought was it only breaks down and shows you 2 courses, neither one was a jumpers course and neither involved contacts. I wish they had showed you more courses for what I paid for the DVD, otherwise everyone I know who have seen it got something out of it. |
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| Dissapointing, August 15, 2006 |
| Reviewer: machable_RR |
Each section of Kathy's agility course is given consideration and then offered (and demonstrated) the many ways to handle it. No comment on how one might work better than the other, or why she would choose a certain route (for her dog).
I'm not sure what I expected, but it wasn't this. I need to watch it again, but I'm not sure I learned anything about 'walking the course.' |
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