The dog agility craze is sweeping across the country. Perhaps it has happened to you.
As you are flipping through the TV channels something catches your eye. Animal Planet is
showing an agility trial. You watch as dogs run, jump, and weave through poles being directed
on a course by human navigators running at their side. You poke the fur ball sleeping by your
side and say, "Hey, do you think we could do that?" The answer is probably "yes". Almost any
dog in relatively good health can perform agility at some level. Bearded Collies are very
adept at agility and each year the number of Bearded Collie agility champions multiplies.
Agility is a sport in which a handler directs a dog through an obstacle course in a race for
both time and accuracy. In competition, dogs must run off leash with no food or toys as incentives.
The handler can’t touch the dog or the obstacles.The handler must direct the dog using voice
commands, movement, and various body signals.
Dog agility started about thirty years ago as something to entertain the spectators between
main events at the Crufts Dog Show in England. John Varley, a member of the show committee,
who had previous experience with horse jumping competition, thought something similar for
dogs might appeal to the crowd. He staged the first dog agility demonstration at Crufts in
February 1978. The spectators loved seeing the dogs run, jump, climb and go through tunnels.
The activity was so popular that within a short time agility competitions began to spring
up around England. After observing agility in England, Kenneth Tatsch, an American returned
to Texas and founded the United States Dog Agility Association (USDAA) in 1986. Today there
are five organizations that sanction agility trials that are open to Bearded Collies in the
United States– USDAA, American Kennel Club (AKC), North American Dog Agility Council (NADAC),
Canine Performance Events (CPE), and United Kennel Club (UKC). Each organization puts its own
spin on agility so the rules, regulations and games vary from organization to organization
offering competitors a range of agility experiences.
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