14 9 6 11 7 13 8 17 12 3 THIS! By Greg Derrett This course, shown in Figure 1, was a really good course to run due to the mix of speed and technical challenges it presented. As well as the obvious challenges there was an array of subtle traps that caught out many dogs. When we are analyzing a course the first thing is to establish the behaviors between each piece of equipment so we can decide the correct cues. The dog should be set at the start to create a straight line from #1 to #2 as shown in Figure 2. The path from #2 to #3 is a right turn and then there is a left turn from #3 to #4. From #4 to #5 the dog must turn left again and then turn right into the tunnel. There is a left turn in the tunnel and another left on exit. The line from #6 through #9 could vary and I will discuss this later in the article, but the perfect-turning dog should have a left turn from #6 to #7 and then be able to drive a straight line from #7 through #9. 16 1 2 12 10 12 10 13 11 8 14 4 15 17 7 3 6 18 16 9 13 11 8 14 4 5 3 6 17 7 9 15 5 16 18 19 19 2 2 1 20 1 20 UKA Masters Series Final, Jumping Section United Kingdom December 4, 2001 Judge: Chris Symons Clean Run | March 12