Alert! Scent Work

Judith Guthrie | The Judging Framework That Makes You a Better Competitor

50 min · 6. apr. 2026
episode Judith Guthrie | The Judging Framework That Makes You a Better Competitor cover

Beskrivelse

When I started out in scent work, I thought it was simple: place a hide, dog finds the hide, call alert. Judith Guthrie started pulling that apart the first time I sat down near her at a trial. What she was saying about odor behavior and how handlers were impacting their dogs blew my mind. Judith brings together a deep understanding of odor theory, dog psychology, and handling strategy all in one place. I didn't even know they were three separate things. In this conversation, she shares her 100 rule — a framework for balancing environment, airflow, hide complexity, and time to create level-appropriate challenges. Understanding it makes you a smarter competitor and a better trainer. She also talks about independence and hunt drive — what to do when your dog isn't in odor right away and how to train for it. And we talk about why not every search should be run the same, and why getting out of your local bubble and showing under judges you've never seen is one of the fastest ways to grow. What we talk about: * Judith's origin story — SAR dogs, retired police dogs, horses, protection sports, and how Buddha brought it all into focus * Why scent work was such a powerful tool for a genetically reactive dog — and the important caveat that goes with that * What made Buddha and Judith such an effective team — and how she built that foundation from five weeks old * Ron Gaunt's thumbs up / thumbs down feedback method — frustrating and brilliant at the same time * The 100 rule — Judith's judging framework for creating level-appropriate challenges, and how competitors can use it to better understand what's going on in a search * How time pressure fits into the 100 rule — and why a short time limit isn't what you think it is * Independence — the number one lesson from professional detection work, and why it matters in sport too * How to build hunt drive in a dog that goes flat when there's no odor at the start line * Regional trends in scent work — why you should be putting yourself in front of judges from outside your area * The names judges give to odor puzzles — and how closeness and inaccessibility work as modifiers * Why two hides of the same odor close together is not the problem your human brain thinks it is * Shrimp, demo dogs, and why training a dog to show you the whole odor picture can become a competition problem * Seven questions with Judith — including what it means to honor the dog, her signature distractor, and why her dog would call her annoying Find Judith: Facebook: Nose Dogs Detection Services Scent Work University: scentworku.com — search Judith Guthrie for classes and webinars Alert! Scent Work is a podcast for competitors — the parking lot conversations you'd never get to have at a trial, with the judges and community members you wish you had more time with. Listen to the podcast and find everything here: https://www.AlertScentWork.com [https://www.AlertScentWork.com] Follow along: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AlertScentWork [https://www.facebook.com/AlertScentWork] Subscribe to the newsletter: https://www.alertscentwork.com/newsletter/ [https://www.alertscentwork.com/newsletter/]

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24 episoder

episode Dianna Santos | Odor Will Humble You cover

Dianna Santos | Odor Will Humble You

Dianna Santos came to scent work through a dog-aggressive Doberman who needed a reason to be a dog. Zeus couldn't go for walks. He couldn't be around other dogs. His world was shrinking, and so was hers. What happened when he started searching changed him. It also changed how she thinks about this activity: who it's for, what it can do, and why she believes every dog with a nose deserves to play it. She went on to build Scent Work University and produce over 140 episodes of the All About Scent Work podcast. When I asked her to distill all of those conversations down to some themes that keep coming up, she landed on odor will humble you and focus on the dog. What she said about the first one felt like she'd been following me around with a notebook. The second is a good paradigm for all of us to remember. We also get into something many competitors wrestle with: how much involvement the handler should have, and what that balance actually looks like in a search. And if you have a reactive or dog-aggressive dog, Dianna has a lot worth hearing that might help you. What we talk about: * The two themes Dianna keeps hearing from the best in the sport and what they mean for the rest of us * The universal handler journey, why it looks the same for almost everyone, and why understanding it helps you push through the hard parts * What focus on the dog really means when something is going wrong in a search * How much involvement should a handler have, and what finding that equilibrium actually looks like * Zeus, a dog-aggressive Doberman, and what scent work gave him that nothing else could * The choice point, what it means for any dog to choose the work over whatever else is pulling at them * What scent work surfaces about your dog during training and how to address it outside of a search so it stops costing you in the ring * Dogs with challenges, reactive, fearful, dog aggressive, and what perspectives and approaches can actually help * How closed off a handler's life can become around a difficult dog, and what starts to open up * Scent work as the activity, not just the sport, and why Dianna will go to her grave defending every dog's right to play it * Seven questions with Dianna, including what still delights her, the most rewarding thing someone has ever said to her, and the piece of advice that stuck Find Dianna: scentworku.com All About Scent Work podcast Alert! Scent Work is a podcast for competitors, the parking lot conversations you'd never get to have at a trial, with the judges and community members you wish you had more time with. Listen to the podcast and find everything here: https://www.AlertScentWork.com [https://www.AlertScentWork.com] Follow along: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AlertScentWork [https://www.facebook.com/AlertScentWork] Subscribe to the newsletter: https://www.alertscentwork.com/newsletter/ [https://www.alertscentwork.com/newsletter/]

4. juni 202649 min
episode Kristi Murdock | The Smellevangelist Behind WeSmellBetter.com cover

Kristi Murdock | The Smellevangelist Behind WeSmellBetter.com

Kristi Murdock might be the most appreciated person in AKC Scent Work. She built wesmellbetter.com, a free site that tracks every qualifying score, title, placement, and fastest-in-trial result in the sport. I talk to Kristi about the site's origin, what she thinks is the coolest feature more people need to know about, and how people use the site to increase their enjoyment of scent work. But this episode is also about Kristi as a competitor. We talk about why, at first, her dog didn't seem to like nosework, what she's learned about being a better handler, and why she considers herself a smellevangelist. What we talk about: * The origin of wesmellbetter.com — holiday complaining, a visiting brother who knew how to scrape websites, and Doug deciding to learn Python * What other competitors say about the site. * The alerts feature — Kristi's current infatuation and why you probably want to sign up for them * The Trial Finder, the achievement section, and the NQ tracking most people don't know about * How the site changed the way Scot thinks about titles, and why Kristi blames herself for his new spending habits * The story of Kristi's first nose work dog — and what she figured out years later that explains everything * Nose work as rehabilitation — how it became the right tool at exactly the right moment * Handler challenges — living in the moment and what Kristi calls odor goggles * What coaching finally taught her about her job as a handler * Stress management for dog sports — Hélène Lawler's curriculum and what it actually addresses * Seven questions with Kristi — including her dog's favorite reward, what her dog would say about her as a handler, a very specific strategy she had for dealing with a very unique distractor in a Detective search. Find Kristi: wesmellbetter.com [https://wesmellbetter.com/] — sign up for a free account and the alerts feature Facebook: We Smell Better Alert! Scent Work is a podcast for competitors — the parking lot conversations you'd never get to have at a trial, with the judges and community members you wish you had more time with. Listen to the podcast and find everything here: https://www.AlertScentWork.com [https://www.AlertScentWork.com] Follow along: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AlertScentWork [https://www.facebook.com/AlertScentWork] Subscribe to the newsletter: https://www.alertscentwork.com/newsletter/ [https://www.alertscentwork.com/newsletter/]

11. maj 202644 min
episode Karen Allen | How Much We Impact Our Dogs Without Realizing It cover

Karen Allen | How Much We Impact Our Dogs Without Realizing It

I ran under Karen Allen at a detective trial and didn't Q. What stayed with me wasn't the result, it was the feeling walking away. She was rooting for us. That's who she is as a judge, and it's a big part of why I wanted to have this conversation. One of the threads running through this whole conversation is how much we impact our dogs without realizing it. Body chatter. Disappointment going down the leash. Turning away at the wrong moment. Not opening your body to give permission. A lot of us are probably in that same place. We also both got into something we're each actively working through — what happens when your dog stops searching and starts asking you questions. And inaccessibles. What makes them challenging, and she and Scot talk about how their dogs each handle them. What we talk about: Karen's origin story — a cattle dog rescue who was hard to do activities with, and how scent work became the thing that finally worked What changed in Aspen after scent work Newton, who is deaf in one ear and very sound sensitive — and Larkin, who can shut down easily How Karen plans a search — the Cirrus tool, the yes zone, and videoing search areas before trial day Sniff and dismiss — and why patience matters more than most competitors realize Collection, false alerts, and nerves — why it's more complicated than it looks What Karen loves to see in a team when she's judging — and what she admits she's still working on herself How much we impact our dogs without realizing it — what Karen sees as a judge and what Scot admitted about Murphy What counts as a win when you don't get the Q The boundaries — what newer competitors get wrong about them When your dog stops searching and starts asking you questions Inaccessibles — why they're hard to call and why we don't practice them enough Escential Nosework ABCs — Karen's new business and what it focuses on Seven questions with Karen Find Karen: AKC Judges Directory — search Karen Allen Escential Nosework ABC: noseworkabcs.com Alert! Scent Work is a podcast for competitors — the parking lot conversations you'd never get to have at a trial, with the judges and community members you wish you had more time with. Listen to the podcast and find everything here: https://www.AlertScentWork.com [https://www.AlertScentWork.com] Follow along: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AlertScentWork [https://www.facebook.com/AlertScentWork] Subscribe to the newsletter: https://www.alertscentwork.com/newsletter/ [https://www.alertscentwork.com/newsletter/]

27. apr. 202626 min
episode Judith Guthrie | The Judging Framework That Makes You a Better Competitor cover

Judith Guthrie | The Judging Framework That Makes You a Better Competitor

When I started out in scent work, I thought it was simple: place a hide, dog finds the hide, call alert. Judith Guthrie started pulling that apart the first time I sat down near her at a trial. What she was saying about odor behavior and how handlers were impacting their dogs blew my mind. Judith brings together a deep understanding of odor theory, dog psychology, and handling strategy all in one place. I didn't even know they were three separate things. In this conversation, she shares her 100 rule — a framework for balancing environment, airflow, hide complexity, and time to create level-appropriate challenges. Understanding it makes you a smarter competitor and a better trainer. She also talks about independence and hunt drive — what to do when your dog isn't in odor right away and how to train for it. And we talk about why not every search should be run the same, and why getting out of your local bubble and showing under judges you've never seen is one of the fastest ways to grow. What we talk about: * Judith's origin story — SAR dogs, retired police dogs, horses, protection sports, and how Buddha brought it all into focus * Why scent work was such a powerful tool for a genetically reactive dog — and the important caveat that goes with that * What made Buddha and Judith such an effective team — and how she built that foundation from five weeks old * Ron Gaunt's thumbs up / thumbs down feedback method — frustrating and brilliant at the same time * The 100 rule — Judith's judging framework for creating level-appropriate challenges, and how competitors can use it to better understand what's going on in a search * How time pressure fits into the 100 rule — and why a short time limit isn't what you think it is * Independence — the number one lesson from professional detection work, and why it matters in sport too * How to build hunt drive in a dog that goes flat when there's no odor at the start line * Regional trends in scent work — why you should be putting yourself in front of judges from outside your area * The names judges give to odor puzzles — and how closeness and inaccessibility work as modifiers * Why two hides of the same odor close together is not the problem your human brain thinks it is * Shrimp, demo dogs, and why training a dog to show you the whole odor picture can become a competition problem * Seven questions with Judith — including what it means to honor the dog, her signature distractor, and why her dog would call her annoying Find Judith: Facebook: Nose Dogs Detection Services Scent Work University: scentworku.com — search Judith Guthrie for classes and webinars Alert! Scent Work is a podcast for competitors — the parking lot conversations you'd never get to have at a trial, with the judges and community members you wish you had more time with. Listen to the podcast and find everything here: https://www.AlertScentWork.com [https://www.AlertScentWork.com] Follow along: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AlertScentWork [https://www.facebook.com/AlertScentWork] Subscribe to the newsletter: https://www.alertscentwork.com/newsletter/ [https://www.alertscentwork.com/newsletter/]

6. apr. 202650 min
episode Penny Scott-Fox | Pressure in Scent Work — How It's Affecting Everyone and What We Can Do cover

Penny Scott-Fox | Pressure in Scent Work — How It's Affecting Everyone and What We Can Do

In scent work, we talk a lot about odor theory, training, and handling technique. But there's something else affecting your performance, your dog's performance, and your experience of the sport that doesn't get nearly enough attention — pressure. Penny Scott-Fox has been watching what it does to competitors, dogs, clubs, and judges, and she wanted to talk about it. Before we get to the main topic, we start with her recent 2 minute and 14 second detective run. I had to ask how that was even possible. What followed was a conversation about how to better train for detective, how to build a dog that drives to odor, and two very different handling philosophies based on the dogs we each have. I think a lot of people will see themselves in this conversation. Then we get into the main topic, pressure in scent work. Through the conversation, we uncovered ideas that will help competitors, trial committees, and judges alike succeed and enjoy the sport more fully. What we talk about: 1. The 2:14 detective run — what made it possible, and what it reveals about foundation training and building a dog that drives to odor 2. Why dogs that have sailed through the lower levels sometimes hit a wall in detective — and what to do about it in training 3. Two different handling philosophies for detective — Penny's and mine — and why the dog you have shapes everything 4. Penny's 40th detective Q — and the bronze, silver, and gold detective titles her club awards that AKC doesn't recognize 5. Pressure on the dog and how it impacts your partner in scent work 6. Pressure on the handler and what both of us do to take the edge off, including Penny's ritual to reduce pressure in obedience (works for scent work too) 7. Why pressure on the handler almost pushed me out of the sport, and the two rules that made it fun again 8. Pressure on clubs. What the growth of scent work is doing to trial quality, and how clubs can best serve competitors 9. Pressure on judges, why the push to be the judge that sets sexy hides isn't always good for dogs or competitors, and a conversation about what really makes the sport fun for competitors Find Penny at scott-foxdogtraining.com Alert! Scent Work is a podcast for competitors — the parking lot conversations you'd never get to have at a trial, with the judges and community members you wish you had more time with. Listen to the podcast and find everything here: https://www.AlertScentWork.com [https://www.AlertScentWork.com] Follow along: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AlertScentWork [https://www.facebook.com/AlertScentWork] Subscribe to the newsletter: https://www.alertscentwork.com/newsletter/ [https://www.alertscentwork.com/newsletter/]

23. mar. 202640 min