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“Oh My God he’s so cute”- “Look Madge it’s a Seeing Eye Dog”-

Those are just some of the things I hear as I walk thru a public place with my Service Dog Milo.  It’s been quite an education getting used to having him with me. And some of the things I hear and see people do would fill up a book I’m sure. I have to say 85% of the time we get nothing but kindness from the public, but it saddens me when the other 15% don’t behave well.   So from a handler of  a Service Dog I thought I would try to educate the public a little.

Not all Service Dogs are “Seeing Eye Dogs”.    Service dogs  are individually trained to do work or perform tasks for people with disabilities. They come in many shapes and sizes and can be trained for many different purposes.  They can be Guide Dogs-  guiding people who are blind, alerting people who are deaf, MOBILITY ASSIST DOGS who do great work with wheelchair bound people, SEIZURE ALERT DOGS alerting and protecting a person who is having a seizure, Psychiatric Service Dogs may remind a person with mental illness to take prescribed medications,  or calming a person with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) during an anxiety attack, and there there are dogs trained to assist people who are having severe Panic Attacks|Agoraphobia help get them out of their homes and back into normal day life.  There are numerous ways a dog can be trained to Service their humans.   The work or task a dog has been trained to provide must be directly related to the person’s disability.

What is most important for the public to know is that when you see a dog with a Service Vest on, this is a highly trained animal who is doing a most important job for it’s human.  While you may want to run and hug them- the dog not the human- please don’t. ASK FIRST.  And don’t sneak up behind a person with a Service Dog where they can’t see or hear you – approach from the front.   Interact with the human first- then ask if you can pet the dog. Don’t whistle at the dog , that distracts them from the important work they are trying to do.  And please don’t let your kids go running up to them. Make it a teachable moment where you introduce your child the wonderful world of working dogs and the important role they play.  Just because someone doesn’t outwardly “look” like they need a service dog- doesn’t mean they don’t.

Our Service Dogs don’t have to wear vests that say Service Dog- but we put them on to make them easily identifiable.  Our Service Dogs are allowed to go anywhere we go. ANYWHERE and EVERYWHERE. So of you are a host in a store, hotel, restaurant, beach club, country club, movie theater, broadway theater or anywhere else welcome us in.

But most of all know that if you are in the presence of these loving caring hard working highly trained dogs- you are watching something priceless. Be kind, and let it make you smile!

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Comment by Lisa, Daisy & Dexter on January 22, 2013 at 1:03am

Thank you for the teaching moment. Milo you amaze!

Comment by pawsforpanic-Pamela Sydni n Milo on January 21, 2013 at 7:20am

Thanks Laurie Fudge &Vern.

Comment by pawsforpanic-Pamela Sydni n Milo on January 21, 2013 at 7:19am

OMGosh who is that sweet little face on your page? Thanks for enjoying my post. Watch our progress at pawsforpanic.com and on facebook too!

Comment by Laurie, Fudge, and Vern on January 21, 2013 at 6:41am

Thanks for the great blog and great reminder.

Comment by Ricki and Tara (doodle) on January 20, 2013 at 12:13pm

Thanks for the reminder. Milo looks like a cutie! We have a training facility in our community called Dogs for the Deaf. They train dogs for the hearing impaired and for autism assistance. We participate in their annual fundraiser which is a "Dog Walk". At the event we can meet and watch the service dogs in action. They always amaze me and leave me with a sense of awe at their devotion and intelligence.

Comment by pawsforpanic-Pamela Sydni n Milo on January 20, 2013 at 8:03am

HI Nancy Ned n Clancy- your doodles are soooo cute. How do you keep them groomed? It's a challenge I am having to learn to face, although milo has curl - I still just had to shave him. Ughhhhhhhhhhhhhh

Comment by Nancy, Ned, Clancy, and Charlie on January 19, 2013 at 10:59pm

Thank you for posting this.  It is good to be reminded of service dog etiquette.

Comment by DJ & Chance on January 19, 2013 at 10:06pm

Thank you for writing this!

Comment by pawsforpanic-Pamela Sydni n Milo on January 19, 2013 at 12:13pm

Well, it might be good to gain the help  of a Dog Trainer to assist you out in public. My dog had two trainers- we worked with Milo from the day he turned 8 weeks old- 3 times a week taking him everywhere out in public and getting him used to everything i could think of that i would need. You have to own your space and be confident in your abilities with the dog and from experience that came from the expert trainers working with me and from the tireless training we did and still do.

Comment by pawsforpanic-Pamela Sydni n Milo on January 19, 2013 at 12:03pm

It is amazing what my dog has done for me that drugs and therapy were never able to do.

 

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