I take it you are doing agility? And, you are working a serpentine on leash? I think your problem is several fold.
First, agility jump training should be done off-leash. By the time you get to working serpentines, you should be off leash and running pretty well. If you or others in your class don't have off leash control, you have no business doing serpentines. See, you can't really do a serpentine correctly (by the handler running a straight line with outs and heres) and keep your dog on leash. You are teaching your dog the incorrect way of doing a serpentine. It makes me doubt your trainer's ability, to be honest.
So, don't be doing jump work on leash. If I were a dog, i wouldn't like that either. Get off leash control BEFORE you begin jump work.
As for the focus, there are several good books at cleanrun.com on getting good focus. Check them out.
At it's core, this is actually a stress problem...your's turning into hers. If you continue to show signs of stress to your dog, you will permantly ruin her agility career. I don't mean to say this to make you MORE stressy, but to hammer home the importance of dealing with this immediately. Remember, the dogs who do agility well love it because its a GAME!! It's not training. It's not work. It's ALL play ALL the time. If you have anything in your body posture or voice other than "let's play!" you will shut your dog down.
Dogs shutting down in agility is extremely common. If your trainer is good, he/she should already have been working with you to overcome this. It's not a focus problem on the dog's part as much as it is a human problem. You need to lighten up and make it all a game. What kind of rewards are you using? Is your dog toy motivated? If so, are you using toys? If not, has your trainer talked to you about how to develop toy drive? Do you play everyday with your dog using toys?
Dogs and handlers that are good at agility are also good at playing together. The handler knows what makes their dog happy...what gets their dog going. You use this in agility. Don't worry about your dog getting TOO excited. That's OK. Not getting excited enough is a much bigger worry. Whoop it up. Make it crazy. You can get control later. You should feel silly out there training your dog!! How do you think those dogs on TV get so fast and good? Their owners act like loons in training!! The dogs love it.
Quit worrying about being perfect...about making your run lookg good. Worry most about making your dog have fun. The rest will come into line. If your dog isn't having fun, you will never have an agility career period.
Signs of stress in the agility dog are as follows: sniffing, running off, zoomies, excessive panting, dialated eyes, running slowly, avoidance, etc. If your dog is stressing, your reponse should be to UP the happy and play, NOT to get harsh with the dog. Getting angry with the dog, showing frustration or lowering your tone will cause MORE stress and MORE problems. Instead, go the opposite direction. Be energetic. Be fun. Be happy.
If your trainer hasn't already suggested these things, please look elsewhere.
As for how to keep yourself from getting stressy, that's a bit more difficult. With my sheltie, I can get nervous, but I need to make sure, inspite of my nerves, that my dog is having fun. We happy talk. We work for treats. We play. We do things the dog loves to do. I'm still nervous, but my dog is happy and playing. You need to learn to find the inner child in you who wants to come out to play with her dog.
BTW, some people suck on peppermint when going to agiity trials to help with nerves. Remember not to run with a peppermint in your mouth though. You don't want to choke!
MACH Aslan RE, MX, MXJ, EAC, EJC, OCC, Wv-N, TN-N, TG-N, R-SN, J-SN, R2-CL, CGC, TDI, FFX-AG (five year old sheltie)
Jericho OA, NAJ, R1-MCL, CGC, FFX-AP (three year old sheltie)
Laika NAJ, CGC (nine year old retired American Eskimo)
I've been defrosted.
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