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Re: Guide Dogs

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In a message dated 10/7/2004 1:28:35 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

tahoetreefort@... writes:

How do you go about getting a guide dog? At what age does a deaf

person qualify for one?

It varies from school to school.. i do not think there is any minuium age

of deaf person. I have heard of 4 y.o. having one even though the dog was

home-taught.

Lee

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In a message dated 10/7/2004 1:52:45 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

lisak70@... writes:

guide dogs and hearing dogs perform very different tasks.

,,, some area DO call hearing dog as guide dog,, WA state is one of

them, if you look at the state law, it actually do quote " guide dog for the

vision and/or hearing impaired " ,,, so both names are politically correct.

Lee

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In a message dated 10/7/2004 3:27:17 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

dkl.pearson@... writes:

In our area they are called " Working Dogs " wheather they are seeing eye dog

hearing dog, companion dog, or any other types

funny you said that,, when someone confront me,, i tend to say " my dog is

working " .. and that is often all it take. There is no Political Correct ways

of saying it,, it all in the locatons.

" hearing dog " for some people, do and can sound offensive,, when was last

time we hear " seeing dog " ,, i havent for years, same true for " hearing dog "

which it is appearently to be fading away.

Lee

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In a message dated 10/7/2004 5:16:56 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

dkl.pearson@... writes:

I guess the dog is guiding them to the noise?

from Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary

1 a : one that leads or directs another's way b : a person who exhibits and

explains points of interest c : something that provides a person with guiding

information d : SIGNPOST 1 e : a person who directs another's conduct or

course of life

Yes, hearing dog DO GUIDE the deaf toward or away from sounds. Meaning is

correct.

Lee

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>>How do you go about getting a guide dog? At what age does a deaf

person qualify for one?<<

I think you mean a hearing dog, am I correct? Just wanted to clarify since

guide dogs and hearing dogs perform very different tasks.

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> >>How do you go about getting a guide dog? At what age does a deaf

> person qualify for one?<<

>

> I think you mean a hearing dog, am I correct? Just wanted to

clarify since

> guide dogs and hearing dogs perform very different tasks.

>

>

Yes, a hearing dog. Thanks.

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No problem! <smile> I will leave it up to someone else to answer your

question. If you like, I'd be happy to locate the websites of schools who

provide this training.

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In a message dated 10/7/2004 6:55:16 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

lisak70@... writes:

What kind of alert/hearing dog do you have? Is it a large breed?

mine is a crossbred dingo/german sheppard.

Lee

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In our area they are called " Working Dogs " wheather they are seeing eye dog

hearing dog, companion dog, or any other types

-- Re: Guide Dogs

In a message dated 10/7/2004 1:52:45 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

lisak70@... writes:

guide dogs and hearing dogs perform very different tasks.

,,, some area DO call hearing dog as guide dog,, WA state is one of

them, if you look at the state law, it actually do quote " guide dog for the

vision and/or hearing impaired " ,,, so both names are politically correct.

Lee

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,

I have a new puppy. Are there schools that would help me to train her to

help me hear better??

With the CI and with HA I've almost be run over in parking lot many times.

Localization is so hard. Please be careful. Everyone is always in a hurry.

Hehe You such ask your Dr to install a solar polar to run the CI. Gee we

could be like " Uncle " with his antennas. Imagine what would be saved

on batteries.LOL

Wishes of health and happiness to you and your family.

D

_____

From: Kozlik [mailto:lisak70@...]

Sent: Thursday, October 07, 2004 5:38 PM

Subject: Re: Re: Guide Dogs

No problem! <smile> I will leave it up to someone else to answer your

question. If you like, I'd be happy to locate the websites of schools who

provide this training.

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In a message dated 10/7/2004 7:29:57 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

lisak70@... writes:

Are they using larger breeds for alert dogs now?

it depends,,, Tanner is dual purpose, one for hearing, another for balance

when i lose my balance due to spinal injuires i recieve few years ago.

Lee

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,,, some area DO call hearing dog as guide dog,, WA state is one of

them, if you look at the state law, it actually do quote " guide dog for the

vision and/or hearing impaired " ,,, so both names are politically correct.

Lee,

Wow, I didn't know that! This is the first time I've ever heard of both

terms being used interchangeably. Thanks for correcting me. <smile>

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In a message dated 10/7/2004 7:37:43 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

lisak70@... writes:

It's amazing how much these wonderful animals can learn and how much

oh Tanner is wonderful,,, when i starts to stray (lose balance),, he stay

put and make sure i don't fall.

Lee

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There are plenty of people who call Tigger a seeing-eye dog. However,

people's stereotypes and misconceptions about service dogs in general has

come a long way over the past 5-10 years. There are *always* going to be

people who don't know what the proper " politically correct " term is. I don't

mind what my dog is called. Just as long as they don't distract or pet her

in harness. <grin>

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Gotta remember, the politicians are clueless. There are a few

guide dog schools who do special training for the deafblind, Leader

Dogs in Michigan is one. A hearing dog trained for the deaf is not a

guide dog, their duties are very different. A guide dog trained for

the blind is not a hearing dog. But it is a good idea to use more

generic terms such as " working animal " or " service animal " . Most

people dont know the difference anyway.

*---* *---* *---* *---* *---*

I work 45 hours a week to be this poor.

& Gimlet (Guide Dawggie)

Portland, Oregon

N24C 3G 8/2000 Hookup

rlclark77@...

http://home.comcast.net/~rlclark77/

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,

Now I *know* you're reading my mind. Guess which school Tigger was trained

at? You're beginning to scare me. :)

What am I going to have for a midnight snack tonight? What am I going to do

tomorrow? What book am I going to read on the weekend? ? <grinning>

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That is funny... I heard that " Guide Dog " can be any dogs that guide people

... Such as dog that help the blind, HOH or Deaf and other type of disability

a person has that a dog can help assist their partner..

I guess I like " Working Dog " as it seems to cover all gound.

Pearson

-- Re: Guide Dogs

Gotta remember, the politicians are clueless. There are a few

guide dog schools who do special training for the deafblind, Leader

Dogs in Michigan is one. A hearing dog trained for the deaf is not a

guide dog, their duties are very different. A guide dog trained for

the blind is not a hearing dog. But it is a good idea to use more

generic terms such as " working animal " or " service animal " . Most

people dont know the difference anyway.

*---* *---* *---* *---* *---*

I work 45 hours a week to be this poor.

& Gimlet (Guide Dawggie)

Portland, Oregon

N24C 3G 8/2000 Hookup

rlclark77@...

http://home.comcast.net/~rlclark77/

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At the risk of splitting hairs, how does an alert/hearing dog " guide " a HoH

or Deaf individual? They may pull them out of the path of danger, but this

is not technically the act of guiding. At least to me it would seem more

appropriate to define them as working, alert, service or hearing dogs.

<ducking head to avoid tomatoes>

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I guess I'm splitting hair... Sorry..

What a " hearing dog " does it alert his/her partner/master that the phone is

ringing, door is being knock or ring, tea kettle is whistling, alarm going

off, etc. It goes to the owner and lead them where the noise is coming from

I guess the dog is guiding them to the noise?

In the outside world, they dog alert them if there is a car coming in their

way, or any other noises ... such as a person coming to them, Sirens of

police officers vehical, aid cars, or other emergency vehicle.

-- Re: Guide Dogs

At the risk of splitting hairs, how does an alert/hearing dog " guide " a HoH

or Deaf individual? They may pull them out of the path of danger, but this

is not technically the act of guiding. At least to me it would seem more

appropriate to define them as working, alert, service or hearing dogs.

<ducking head to avoid tomatoes>

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Hi Dave,

I'm sorry to be so difficult about this. I don't mean to be but I think it's

important for people to understand the difference between alerting and

guiding. Guiding is the physical act of moving from one place to another.

Alerting is the act of notifying/warning someone of danger. You're right --

a hearing dog leads their owner to a sound but he/she does not physically

guide them. This is the distinction I was trying to make. If everyone were

allowed to loosely create their own definition for what they consider to be

a " guide dog " or service animal, we would have all kinds of creatures and

critters running around the place. <grin>

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I think you are right ,

I think I will train my cat to be my notifier... mmm... how can I do that

without getting bit or scratched. LOL

-- Re: Guide Dogs

Hi Dave,

I'm sorry to be so difficult about this. I don't mean to be but I think it's

important for people to understand the difference between alerting and

guiding. Guiding is the physical act of moving from one place to another.

Alerting is the act of notifying/warning someone of danger. You're right --

a hearing dog leads their owner to a sound but he/she does not physically

guide them. This is the distinction I was trying to make. If everyone were

allowed to loosely create their own definition for what they consider to be

a " guide dog " or service animal, we would have all kinds of creatures and

critters running around the place. <grin>

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,

Your explanation better helps me understand how the term guiding applies to

alert/hearing dogs -- thanks!

I think my misunderstanding stems from the fact that I don't know anything

about their training. Can you (or others on the list) recommend any good

websites where I can learn more? (The only one I know of is Dogs for the

Deaf, Inc.)

What kind of alert/hearing dog do you have? Is it a large breed?

My previous guide dog was a 65 pound golden retriever (named Sugar), so I

*know* what it means to be guided -- or should I say pulled around. LOL!

Whenever we took a stroll around the neighborhood, everyone always asked me,

" Who's walking who? "

A *world* of difference from the 45 pound labby sitting beside me. :)

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