 sit or plaits in motion or down in motion. That's the exercise in the routine for Shutsun IGP obedience and so today I want to show you how I start training for this and obviously the requirement that the dog needs already needs to know how to foos, how to heal with you and the dog knows commands sit and command down. In my case it's plaits and also if the dog knows commands stay and so that's how we start. It's fairly easy if the dog knows all those commands. It's fairly easy to put together but I'll show you how we do it and I'll explain what's done. So let me start. So I start with very short distance and first exercise is to actually understand, help understand the dog understand that he needs to stay if you continue going away. So what I do is that we say heal we heal then he sits in the basic position then I tell him to sit and I also say stay and the stay command will eventually fade out and he will understand when I say sit it means he needs to stay. So it's in a way sit stay and then eventually it becomes sit and I walk a couple of steps and then I come back and reward him when I'm in the basic position. And what I also do that's what I'll show you next is that I reward him at a different point of time. Sometimes I reward when I'm walking away. The reason being is that the dog needs to be attentive to you not to relax and think that it's like his break time when he's sitting in motion. So he does not you don't want him to be distracted you want him to be still focused on you even if you're walking away. And if you remember the rules for the IGP Shutsun exercise for bloods command for the down-and-motion command it's a 30 steps away from the dog. So the dogs tend to kind of start looking around, scoot over or something you don't want this to happen. So for that I always randomly reward the dog. And I'll show you now how I do this. Come on, sit, push, push, push, sit, push, push, push, push, push, push, push. The options were how I reward the dog. One other thing you need to know I never reward the dog when I'm walking towards him. Reason being is that in a trial you don't want the dog to anticipate that reward might be coming now and start moving or actually stand up or run towards you. So you don't want this. So that's the only direction that I don't reward when I'm walking towards the dog but I'm rewarding when I'm walking away, when I'm standing there in a stand position. So as you could see he was very attentive because we've done this a couple of times so now he knows. Though we have we're in the public park and there are dogs everywhere and people and he's actually looking at the front door right now but that's a very good exercise and you do exactly the same with plots. Let me show you the plots. Hey! Yes, very good. So with the plots command with down command out of healing and the dogs they tend to be very crooked with the front. I only reward when the dog is straight and if this dog is straight going down I reward it right away just to show him that's what I want and if he's crooked I correct him as you just saw and the rest is pretty much exactly the same if he's straight I walk away I reward walking away or reward when I'm standing there but I never recall the dog because the in motion exercises require recalling and I never do that together. The recall command is separate exercise for me always in training it's only before the trial I might do it once together so the dog would run to me because I don't want the dog to anticipate running up to me and being and see a little bit and break the position. So for that reason in motion exercise are only about the dog staying in place and you walking away in different distances and rewarding the dog at different point of time so the dog is always attentive so that's for me is in motion exercise training. Happy training!