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FOUR-FOOTED HELPERS GUIDE DOGS IN TRAINING MEET KIDS WHO MAY OWN THEM.


Byline: Greg Botonis Staff Writer

LANCASTER - For most volunteers, the experience of raising and training a guide dog is bittersweet bittersweet, name for two unrelated plants, belonging to different families, both fall-fruiting woody vines sometimes cultivated for their decorative scarlet berries. .

The animal goes everywhere with the volunteer - from the mall and restaurants to lying next to the shower or beside the bed.

They become friends as the volunteer provides leash training and teaches the dog the basics, including house training and socializing with people and other dogs.

After about a year and a half, the dog that has become a constant part of the volunteer's life is sent to work with a trainer and then teamed up with its visually impaired master.

``You go through all the crying and the other emotional stuff, the withdrawals, when your dog gets recalled,'' said Kay Brickner of the Antelope Valley This article is about the Los Angeles County region. For the census-designated place in Wyoming, see Antelope Valley-Crestview, Wyoming.

The Antelope Valley
 Guide Dog Club. ``But you get to go to the graduation and see the end product. Now your labor of love will give someone else happiness. It's very rewarding.''

On Saturday, the club hosted an event to socialize so·cial·ize  
v. so·cial·ized, so·cial·iz·ing, so·cial·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To place under government or group ownership or control.

2. To make fit for companionship with others; make sociable.
 puppies being trained as guide dogs with seven youngsters from the Foundation for the Junior Blind at a home in Lancaster.

More than four dozen puppy raisers from around California attended to socialize their canines with the youngsters who may be paired with a dog someday.

Nearly every guide dog starts off being raised in the home of a volunteer who trains the animal in the basics, including eating at regularly scheduled times In rallying, the Scheduled Time of any crew is the time, calculated at the beginning of the event, that they should arrive at any given control. It is different from Due Time in that Due Time is dynamic, ie it can change throughout the event as competitors drop time; whereas  and walking on a short leash to prevent it from running ahead.

After about 18 months, the animal is sent to be trained as a guide dog for five months by licensed trainers from Guide Dogs for the Blind This article is about the guide dog school in the United States. For the British charitable organization, see The Guide Dogs for the Blind Association.

Guide Dogs for the Blind
. The following month, trainers partner a visually impaired person Noun 1. visually impaired person - someone who has inferior vision
individual, mortal, person, somebody, someone, soul - a human being; "there was too much for one person to do"
 with a dog and train them to work together.

The process of pairing the team begins long before the training. The foundation tries to determine a person's activity level and match him or her to a dog with the proper temperament and activity level.

The animal is trained to walk its new master from place to place in a straight path while trying to avoid obstacles. The dogs are trained to maneuver their charges around potholes and other dangers as well as avoid low-hanging branches and other overhead dangers.

Because dogs can't read street signs and are not trained to obey traffic signals, a dog's master must listen for the flow of traffic and then give the dog a command to walk when it seems safe. But dogs are trained to disregard that command if a vehicle is approaching or other dangers are present.

Because of the decreased mobility many visually impaired or blind people experience, the guide dogs give them some confidence they don't get from walking with a cane.

``When I used my cane, I would run into things, then have to figure out what it is and how to get around it,'' said Jim Logan, who was recently paired with his dog Atticus, a yellow Labrador, after his vision deteriorated enough to require the pairing.

``Atticus guides me around those obstacles to begin with. I used to run into people at the airport when there were crowds, but Atticus takes me right through them with no problem.''

The animals selected for guide dog service are usually German shepherds, golden retrievers golden retriever, breed of large sporting dog developed primarily in Scotland in the mid-19th cent. It stands about 23 in. (58.4 cm) high at the shoulder and weighs from 60 to 75 lb (27.2–34.1 kg).  and Labradors or mixes of those dogs. More recently, poodles have been trained as guides because they are hypoallergenic hy·po·al·ler·gen·ic
adj.
Having a decreased tendency to provoke an allergic reaction.


hypoallergenic (hī´pōal´urjen´ik),
adj
 and smaller for people who don't have room for a larger dog.

Greg Botonis, (661) 267-7802

gregory.botonis(at)dailynews.com

CAPTION(S):

4 photos

Photo:

(1 -- color) Eight-month-old Prize, a yellow Lab, runs through the obstacle course obstacle course
n.
1. A training course filled with obstacles, such as ditches and walls, that must be negotiated speedily by troops undergoing training or participants in an obstacle race.

2.
 at the Antelope Valley Guide Dogs Club's training day.

(2 -- 3 -- color; 3 -- ran in AV edition only) Above, Steve Vaughn, president of the A.V. Guide Dogs Club, works with year-old Norm, a yellow lab, to navigate a set of stairs. At left, blindfolded blind·fold  
tr.v. blind·fold·ed, blind·fold·ing, blind·folds
1. To cover the eyes of with or as if with a bandage.

2. To prevent from seeing and especially from comprehending.

n.
1.
 Tiffany Haskins, 17, of Palmdale, who is considering training a dog, gets the feel of walking with one with stand-in Heidi Thrasher thrasher: see mimic thrush.
thrasher

Any of 17 species (family Mimidae) of New World songbirds that have a downcurved bill and are noted for noisily foraging on the ground in dense thickets and for loud, varied songs.
.

(4) Guide dog-in-training Bonnet, 11 months, right, gets some doggy advice from veteran Ginger, 10 1/2, during training day.

Jeff Goldwater/Staff Photographer
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Apr 3, 2005
Words:697
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