Great story as always👍👍👍 The most important thing is to know when to stop and how many breaks to take!!! Unlike a human who can know when it's enough or too much, a dog can't tell when it's enough and when it's tired!!! It takes two to three months to build a machine and only a few seconds to destroy it👍👍👍
Mr. Richard, in my humble opinion. I think it depends on the individual dogs. I personally believe if you can’t breathe it doesn’t matter how strong you are. A naturally muscular dog would need more air work and vice verse. A good balance is optimal and hard to find sometimes. Thank you again, much respect.
Great topic i love all things conditioning , my mate made me a carpet mill a year or 2 bk its a free turning 1 for a catpet does 2-3 full turns gets em in pretty good shape with hand walks + some flirt pole , i have a slat mill also i find that particular carpet mill better , keep up the great work i look foward to your content much respect from wales 👍
@@snypes-nj7oicarpet mill is more convenient than dragging and can be just as good depending on the spin of the mill! A looser carpet mill for endurance or wind and a tighter one for strength! Most carpet mills are adjustable!
Conditioning is an art form. Many ways to go about. You have some great tools that are effective. Thanks for your comments,input and support. More on the way. Respect to you and Wales.
Your saying repeat do you thing doing workouts that works the same muscles differently that it helps keep that muscle more flexible like when we do it?
@@richardgarciaschoolboy7746 & when would you incorporate it in your keep boss? Earlier stages, gradually throughout or later stages? I'm so thrilled for your reply, gives me goosebumps, legend