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The Nose Knows: Put Your Dog’s Amazing Sense of Smell to Work in a New AKC Sport
A high school stadium, three sets of bleachers, and one Q-tip dipped in the scent of birch.
Finding that tiny swab, planted somewhere in the arena, seemed an impossible task to Suzanne LeRoy, as she and her
“It was a huge area to search,” the California resident said.
But a few minutes later, Rain easily found the Q-tip under the bleachers, and LeRoy discovered the power of the canine nose.
“Now I was really impressed!” she said.
LeRoy is an
“I loved that I was training my dog to do what he was born to do: use his nose. I was also training myself to observe my dog. Scent work is all about reading your dog’s body language, and in this you connect with your dog. You are a team,” she said. “And I love that it’s all reward-based training. The dogs find the source of the odor — they get a treat!”
Dogs love to use their noses, and dog sports that put their sniffers to the test are popular, including tracking and nose work. The AKC obedience class of utility includes the scent articles exercise, in which a dog finds an item touched by its owner among a pile of similar items.
Soon dogs can earn titles in the new sport of
“I was thrilled when I learned that AKC was adding it as an event. I plan to pursue all levels of AKC Scent Work titles,” LeRoy said. “I’m a member of a specialty club, and we’ve signed up to hold trials, and I hope there are many.”
Any dog of any
“I felt that agility and herding were getting too hard on his bones. Okay, admittedly maybe too hard on my bones, too. I wanted a sport that wouldn’t be hard on him physically.”
AKC Breeders of Merit Tom and Chris Levy have produced champion
They strive to add titles to both ends of their dogs’ names and were intrigued when a puppy buyer told them about a sport her Pumi enjoyed called nose work. They decided to try it and now have several nose work titled dogs, including one that has earned the top level K9 Nose Work-3 Elite designation.
“The part I like best is, it’s a true partnership with your dog. You are giving them the boundaries of where to search; they’re doing the work and communicating to you what they know,” said Chris Levy. “They gain a level of confidence because, for the most part, they’re in charge, not just taking orders, and you’re interpreting on their behalf.”
Dogs can learn scent work at any age. LeRoy starts her Border Collies while they are still in the whelping box.
“You can start puppies as soon as they are born. Because puppies are born blind and deaf, they rely on smell. You can introduce them to different scents, and you can actually see them react to both good smells and the bad,” she said. “As they get older, you can hide treats for the puppies and have them find them.”
As the dogs mature, trainers progress to pairing the food with the odor that they want them to find. Eventually, they remove the food from the odor and then reward with food when the dog finds the odor.
“When I started my second nose work dog, I decided to train the dog that was my food thief, figuring that she’d already had several years of self-training, and she learned nose work exceptionally fast,” Chris Levy said.
AKC Scent Work is open to all dogs, including those enrolled in
Competitions will offer four levels for each element — novice, advanced, excellent, and master — and will vary factors with the level of difficulty, such as the size of the search area, the number of hides, whether the number of hides is known or unknown to the handler, and the maximum height of the hides. The most accomplished dogs will also be eligible for the detective class, which contains many hides in a variety of environments.
“AKC Scent Work is a modern-day performance event in which bred-for traits such as working drive, concentration, and response to distractions are redeployed into roles relevant for the 21st century,” said Doug Ljungren, AKC vice president of sports and events. “While the sport of scent work will not prepare your dog to be a working detection dog, we hope it serves to demonstrate to the public the value that these purpose-bred dogs can provide to the security of our nation.”
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