Just having fun!
Getting a bit bored on our break from agility and trials, waiting for To's puppies to finally arrive so I don't need to worry about her belly exploding... - so meantime, here is a recent interview for http://thatsmysuperdog.com
Q - Ms. Trkman, when did you begin training and competing in agility ?
A – I started training in 1992 and competing in 1994.
Q - How did you come to developing www.lolabuland.com?
A – The first format of the website was mostly just to be able to publish photos of my dogs and some stories… But as people had questions, I started adding articles, then training DVDs and finally on line classes, on request of my friends who were very sad when I decided to not do seminars abroad anymore. I was teaching seminars all around the world for 10 years prior to that, but got too tired of constant travelling at one point.
Q - What challenges have you faced along the way that may surprise people?
A – Oh, the biggest challenge was getting my parents allow me a dog. Training my first dog, a Samoyed, was not easy either, given I was 11, had no help from my parents (not dog people) - or dog trainers as at that time, training with punishment was all that was known and taught in dog schools… And obviously, this was before an era of internet, so I was really completely on my own. Go out, observe and try was how I learned everything. - And what made everything that followed a piece of cake.
Q - When did you start teaching and how did that come about?
A – I was just 14 or 15 years old, but since agility was just starting in my country and there weren’t many people who knew more as I did, I was a kind of pushed into it. And after I won first World Championships, constant requests for seminars started to come... I was still in University at that time, so I never searched for work in my life. Work always finds me – I always have had more requests as I have time!
Q - As a coach, what do you find most rewarding about teaching? alternately, most challenging?
A – I find it super rewarding when people start to see how easy and fun agility really is when following my methods. You can see so many lights go on and so many happy dog faces. The downside was standing in snow, rain and mud in wet shoes – but ever since I teach on line only, that part is a past 🙂 I love my on line classes!
Q - When you achieved certain accomplishments (Having all your dogs qualify for World Championship, winning European Open with four, winning World Champ with two) were these specific goal you set for yourself?
A – No. I never set goals. I've seen way too many people stressed and under pressure to achieve their fancy goals. I don’t want to be under pressure, it’s just a stupid dog sport, so nothing to be stressing about. We do it just for fun, so we go out and have fun and play and we sometimes win and sometimes we learn, but we ALWAYS have fun.
Q - What do you think was the primary influencing factor for those achievements?
A – Right before I won my first World Championships, one of the spectators said to me: “All those people here are really good, because they really want to win and worked hard for it. But I think YOU will win, just because you don’t care and just play.” I think winning is much easier without winning in mind.
Q- What do you typically think about when you are at a big event? Both during walk-through and when you and your dog run the course?
A – During walk through, I think about how to give my dog best possible line - and when we run, I’m trying to focus on just the course and my cues. If the course is too easy, I do sometimes start analyzing that or another turn or contact or whatever while I run... - but that's never good for my focus!
Q - Do you have a routine you practice for yourself to maintain mental focus?
A – No, not really, I just repeat the course in my head many times.
Q - Do you still get nervous at competitions and how do you handle those feelings?
A – No, not really. I do try to make myself somewhat nervous though, it helps me keep focused. On less important trials or on too easy courses, I’m sometimes not that focused and don’t support the dog enough on the course. That’s why I love big trials and difficult courses. It helps me focus.
Q - How do you feel the sport of dog agility has changed through the years? For the good and worse?
A – It keeps getting faster, smoother, more precise and detailed. In short: it keeps getting more interesting. All changes I see are positive.
Q - What do you think is the difference between European and American agility?
A – European agility is way more fun 🙂 - it lets the skills shine so much more! If I see a pinwheel in a course, that judge gets a big minus in my book – doesn’t get any more boring as standing there waiting for the dog to do that stupid pinwheel. I LOVE challenges and always prefer to go off course on a challenging course over going clean on a boring one. Also, I prefer to have fastest run with one bar down as a clean run and 10th place. - Because best time with one bar down means that I can win next time. And 10th time means I probably can’t if there wasn’t a big loop where I lost all that time of course. I think that's very different in USA where the system promotes running clean even at expense of speed. We Q much less in Europe - but on much more fun courses 🙂
Q - What do you feel differentiates your training from most others?
A – I love speed, so I put lots of emphasis on fun, fast and efficient.
Q - What do you wish your students would take away most importantly from their lessons?
A – That making it all super fun for the dog is the most important part of it all.
Q - What advice would you give people just starting to compete at agility trials?
A – Don't try to impress, don't try to be trendy or fancy. The only one you have to impress is your dog. So make sure you're super fun teammate to your dog in every trial, from first one on.
Q - What else do you hope to achieve in competition, short range and long range?
A – I hope I can keep running for many more years to come. I used to be one of the youngest participants in World Championships back in the 90s. I hope that one day, I'm the oldest one 🙂
Q - Who inspires you and why?
A – I don’t really follow anybody... I guess I’m still “go out, try and learn” type of a person. The reason I love agility so much is because there is still so much room for improvement, so I’m always on the hunt for ideas on how to make it even faster, more efficient, smoother. I guess my inspiration are failures – things that could still be better always inspire me to come up with new ideas.
Q - What lessons have you learned from different dogs you've owned/trained through the years?
A – I learned the most from my first dog, a Samoyed that I got when I was 11. I learned to never give up, I learned to think with my own head, I learned that dogs (and people) work best when they love what they do. I'm very grateful my job is my hobby, my passion, that I can do what I love most. And I make sure my dogs get to do what they love most.
Q - What has been the biggest help to you in your competition journey?
A – The fact that when I started, nobody expected anything from me, given my age and small unknown country I come from. That gave me the freedom to just run and have fun. - That made winning much easier. And now that everybody expects me to win, I know I've won enough that I don’t need to win anything anymore - so it’s easy to keep winning 🙂 No pressure, just pure fun!
Q - What can we expect to see next from Sylvia Trkman next?
A – You can expect to keep seeing me having fun with my dogs!
7 Comments
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Thank you for sharing 🙂 I especially liked what you said about why you never set goals, and how you learned the most important lessons from Aiken 🙂
My favorite parts……..
What do you wish your students would take away most importantly from their lessons?
A – That making it all super fun for the dog is the most important part of it all.
Q -- What advice would you give people just starting to compete at agility trials?
A – Don’t try to impress, don’t try to be trendy or fancy. The only one you have to impress is your dog. So make sure you’re super fun teammate to your dog in every trial, from first one on.
Fun, fun, fun, it has to be fun!!!!! Spur says without the fun, he doesn’t run!!!! Roscoe always had fun, too, and I took him to many seminars, including yours. Spur’s first seminar was yours and he had fun, then every next one was no fun. We never did another, but lots of your online classes ………for fun!!!
I think The Mighty Bimster would run even if it wasn’t fun because he wants to work so hard. But, not much worry about me making it fun, I don’t think!!!! You taught us well!!!!!! Bim will always have fun, if I have been a good Silvia student!!!! I hope I can always be a good Silvia student and become a super fun teammate for my dogs!!!
Yes, some dogs tend to spoil us and will keep working no matter what… -- So it’s important to have those other dogs as well to keep reminding us to keep it all super fun! 🙂
” – I learned the most from my first dog, a Samoyed that I got when I was 11. I learned to never give up, I learned to think with my own head, ”
Thank you for sharing this! I feel the same way about Gypsy, who I am still running. Lots of trainers have told me what they think about Gypsy’s training and what I should and should not do. I know my dog VERY well, and I’ve had to be her advocate. I am grateful I have a coach now who knows I know what I’m doing and what I want to try with her. But there were times I had to fight to say “that is not the right thing for my dog-- let’s try this instead” over and over again. I am grateful for everything she has taught me, including how she tells me that I need to make the decisions that are right for her, even if it’s not popular among some.
Yeap, dogs like this teach us the most…
I love your attitude towards dog training. Great style of teaching and am so glad I signed up for your class. Am on the site every day. Thanks for being so responsive. You are training us humans well too! 😀
Thank you Yvonne for your nice words!!!