UKI Agility Title Tracking

What Moose’s First UKI Agility Titles Taught Me About Title Tracking

Moose’s first UKI titles made UKI title progression feel fun, exciting, and worth tracking before the points get messy.

Published July 9, 2026

I had tried UKI agility once before with Tucker, and I remembered really enjoying it.

The courses felt different from AKC. More open, more spread out, and in some ways more challenging. It still felt like agility, of course, but it had its own rhythm. So when I had the chance to try UKI with Moose, I was excited.

Moose is the kind of dog who makes trying new things fun. He wants to work, he likes having a job, and he is usually very happy to play whatever agility game we are playing that day.

And UKI gave us a really fun start.

We went to two UKI trials, and by the end of the second one, Moose had earned his first two UKI agility titles: Speedstakes Beginner (SSB) and Beginner International Dog (BID). His official UKI title certificates list him as Wild Moose On The Run BID SSB.

That was exciting.

It was also a good reminder that every agility organization has its own way of tracking progress. UKI title progression has its own rhythm, and learning how the points fit together was part of the fun.

UKI Speedstakes Beginner title certificate for Wild Moose On The Run SSB
Moose’s Speedstakes Beginner (SSB) title.
UKI Beginner International Dog title certificate for Wild Moose On The Run BID
Moose’s Beginner International Dog (BID) title.

UKI Felt Familiar and Different at the Same Time

Coming from AKC, UKI did not feel completely foreign. It was still agility. There were still courses, handling choices, bars, turns, and all the normal things that make you rethink your training plans on the drive home.

But it also felt different.

The courses felt more wide open. Moose could really move. I especially loved running Speedstakes with him because he was fast and happy and seemed to really enjoy the flow of it.

Moose running UKI Speedstakes

One of my favorite runs from those trials was a Speedstakes run where Moose was just flying. That kind of run is exactly why I like trying different agility venues. Different organizations can bring out different pieces of your dog, and it is fun to see what they enjoy.

For Moose, UKI seemed to suit him.

The First UKI Titles Were Easy Enough to Follow

For Beginner titles, the points were not too hard to track.

Moose earned both titles on the same day, and I knew at that second trial that we had enough points. For Speedstakes Beginner, he needed points from Speedstakes. For Beginner International Dog, the progress came from the UKI International Program, which included points from Agility and other games.

For BID, the way I was tracking it was:

8 points from Agility
4 points from other UKI games

That made sense once I understood what I was looking for, but it was still a different style of tracking than AKC.

With AKC agility, I am often thinking about Qs, points, QQs, MACH progress, or AKC Agility Nationals qualification. With UKI, I had to think more about which points belonged to which UKI program and how different games worked together toward a title.

At the Beginner level, that felt manageable.

But I can already see how it gets more complicated as Moose moves up.

Adding the UKI Points to Moose’s Tracker

For the screen recording, I want to show the process of adding Moose’s UKI points and how they show up in his profile.

This is the part that makes tracking feel less like a guessing game.

Instead of keeping UKI in a note somewhere, I can add the points, keep Speedstakes and International progress separate, and see the titles in Moose’s profile.

The tracker shows both titles in his record, and UKI stays in its own section instead of getting mixed into AKC or ASCA.

That matters because Moose is not doing only one agility organization. He is currently doing AKC, UKI, and ASCA, and I want to try more. Each one is fun for different reasons, but each one also gives me another set of titles and points to keep straight.

UKI title tracker screen recording showing points and titles in Moose’s profile.

Why UKI Title Progression Will Matter More as We Move Up

Beginner points were not too hard to follow.

But I can already tell that the next levels will be more complicated.

That is usually how agility title tracking works. At first, it seems easy enough. Then your dog moves up, adds more classes, adds more programs, and suddenly the title path has more pieces than you want to keep in your head.

UKI title progression is especially interesting because points from different games can work together toward titles. That is fun, but it also means you need to know what type of point you are adding, which program it belongs to, and where it moves your dog next.

For me, that is the value of tracking this now, before it gets messy.

I would rather keep the record clean from the start than try to rebuild it later.

What Moose’s First UKI Titles Reminded Me

Moose earning SSB and BID reminded me of something I keep learning in agility:

Trying new venues is fun.

Tracking new venues is where things can get messy.

I love that UKI felt different. I loved watching Moose open up in Speedstakes. I loved earning those first titles. And I love having those titles in his profile now, because they are part of his agility story.

But I also know myself.

If I do not add the points and titles while they are fresh, future me is going to be staring at results later thinking, “Wait, what did this count toward again?”

And future me has enough to deal with.

Why This Is Different From Just Saving the Certificate

The title certificate is the celebration.

The tracker is the part that helps you understand how you got there and what comes next.

I love having Moose’s UKI certificates. They are official, they are fun to look at, and they mark a real accomplishment. But the certificate does not help me track the next level, the next program, or the next set of points.

That is where title tracking becomes useful.

It is not about replacing the official record. It is about keeping the working record close enough that you can actually use it after trials. If the idea of tracking titles is new, this guide explains what tracking titles means in dog sports.

The Simple Version

UKI agility was a lot of fun with Moose.

He earned Speedstakes Beginner and Beginner International Dog, and those first titles were exciting because they showed how much he enjoyed the venue.

But they also showed why title tracking matters.

Different agility organizations have different title paths. UKI uses points in ways that may be different from AKC, ASCA, or other venues. As your dog moves up, it becomes more important to keep those points connected to the right program and title.

For Moose, tracking UKI separately helps me enjoy trying something new without losing track of where we stand.

Want to Track UKI Agility Titles Too?

Happy Dog League Title Tracker can help keep UKI agility titles, points, and title progression easier to follow in your dog’s profile, separate from AKC, ASCA, and other agility organizations.

Add your dog’s UKI progress, keep Speedstakes and International title paths easier to follow, and see your dog’s titles as part of their bigger agility journey.

Quick Disclaimer

Happy Dog League Title Tracker is an independent tracking tool and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, or officially connected to UKI or any other dog sport organization.

UKI titles, points, awards, eligibility, and official records should always be verified directly with UKI.

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