Flight A – Test 6 – Water Triple with a Double Blind
There
are 46 dogs back to this final series of Flight A. When we arrived this
morning, it was 43 degrees with both a brisk wind and water current
moving from right to left. The mat for this test is located beside a
long and fairly narrow stream that is filled with large smooth rocks and
mud flats. The mat is on a point that juts out slightly into the water.
The handler faces down the left shoreline.
Bird #1 is
directly in front of the handler. This long bird is launched to the
right from a well-brushed blind on to the next point landing 104 yards
from the line. The handler and dog must turn 90 degrees to the right for
bird #2. This bird is launched to the left, landing in brush on the far
right shore at 45 yards from the line. The dog and handler then turn
their attention back to the left-hand shore where bird #3 is launched to
the right. This bird lands just short of a shallow island of rocks in
the middle of the stream. It is approximately 25 yards in front of the
line and crosses the line to both bird #1 and the line to the water
blind.
The Land Blind is on the far left side of this
test. The line to this blind parallels the left shoreline and continues
out to the left. The dog must cross a path and find his bird on a small
mound marked with an orange ribbon at 45 yards.
The
Water Blind is straight down the stream on a line that runs between bird
#1 and bird #3. The correct line to this blind takes the dog over the
left end of the small rock island. They must navigate through other
rocks to the tip of a point that is 114 yards from the line.
We
watched 11 dogs do this test. There were six handles, one pick-up and
one break on the marks. Two or three dogs had trouble navigating the
water blind. The long bird posed the greatest challenge to the handler
in this test. Many of these handles were used by handlers who had one to
spare and wanted to make sure they picked up the last bird of the 2019
MAI.