[nagdu] Comparison of miniature horses and dogs as guides, was: Re: Dogs, NFB and cane travel

Peggy pshald at neb.rr.com
Sun Aug 14 15:17:12 UTC 2011


I can't get the website to come up, it says website or page not found.



-----Original Message----- 
From: cheryl echevarria
Sent: Sunday, August 14, 2011 7:43 AM
To: NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users
Subject: Re: [nagdu] Comparison of miniature horses and dogs as guides,was: 
Re: Dogs, NFB and cane travel

Dan:

http://www.guidehorse.org/<http://www.guidehorse.org/>

Leading the Way in Independent Travel!

Cheryl Echevarria
http://www.echevarriatravel.com<http://www.echevarriatravel.com/>
631-456-5394
reservations at echevarriatravel.com<mailto:reservations at echevarriatravel.com>

Affiliated as an Independent Contractor with Montrose Travel CST-1018299-10

Affiliated as an Independent Contractor with Absolute Cruise & Travel, Inc.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dan Weiner<mailto:dcwein at dcwein.cnc.net>
  To: 'NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog 
Users'<mailto:nagdu at nfbnet.org>
  Sent: Sunday, August 14, 2011 2:14 AM
  Subject: Re: [nagdu] Comparison of miniature horses and dogs as 
guides,was: Re: Dogs, NFB and cane travel


  Thanks for going over this info and your experiences with us.
  Is there any training establishment  putting out horse guides at present?

  Dan W. and the Carter Nut



  -----Original Message-----
  From: nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org<mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org> 
[mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
  Of Ann Edie
  Sent: Sunday, August 14, 2011 2:00 AM
  To: NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users
  Subject: [nagdu] Comparison of miniature horses and dogs as guides,was: 
Re:
  Dogs, NFB and cane travel

  Hi, Larry,

  Comparing is always a risky business, as it is difficult to extrapolate 
from
  individuals to species.  But I will give you a few comparisons from my own
  experience:

  In guiding ability, focus, enthusiasm for the job, accuracy,
  problem-solving, memory for routes, and ability to look ahead and plan a 
way
  around obstacles and tricky areas, I would say that my miniature horse 
guide
  is right up there with the best of guide dogs.

  I have found her pace to be more even than that of the dogs I have worked
  with, that is, she doesn't speed up in unfamiliar places or when first
  starting out, and slow down on the way home or on regular routes.

  She doesn't seem to get bored with regular routes.  But she is always up 
for
  exploring new places.  And she doesn't argue if I want to deviate from a
  habitual route the way my dog guides often did.  Panda just seems to say,
  "Oh, you want to go that way today.  Okay, let's go!"  Actually, she seems
  to be able to read my mind and turn in the direction I want to go, without
  my even giving an overt signal, even if it is a change from the way we 
have
  gone a hundred times.  I think she is picking up on subtle changes in my
  body positioning.  Or maybe she is actually reading the pictures in my 
mind.

  No, she doesn't chase squirrels, or cats, or dogs.  She will occasionally
  snatch a bite of grass as we're walking along, but she has never bolted 
away
  from me into traffic to chase after grass, or anything else, as some of my
  dogs did after other animals.

  I think, in gemeral, horses are better at paying attention to and judging
  overhead obstacles than dogs are.

  And it is my experience that Panda is better at being careful on ice and
  other slippery or uneven footing than are dogs in general.

  I also think that since horses naturally travel in groups of moving
  individuals, that they naturally understand and enjoy the process of 
moving
  among other moving beings and objects, and easily calculate tragectories 
of
  many objects simultaneously.

  You are right in saying that horses don't greet people by sniffing 
crotches.

  Horses have a greeting custom which seems to me to be more polite in a 
human
  context, that is, horses put their little noses close to their person's
  face, as if to sniff the breath, perhaps to find out what the person has
  been eating lately.  And horses don't lick people's faces either, although 
I
  do know some who do lick people's hands.

  One of the biggest differences between horses and dogs as guides is that
  horses have a much longer life span, and can, therefore, work for much
  longer than dogs can.  Panda is now ten and a half years old, yet she is
  still a very young horse, just coming into her prime.  If she were a dog, 
I
  would certainly have to be thinking of her approaching retirement by this
  point.  As it is, she is still learning and eager and very healthy, and 
will
  probably continue to be so for many more years.  Although one can never 
tell
  how long a particular individual is going to remain healthy and want to
  continue working, it is not at all unusual for miniature horses to work 
and
  remain active well into their twenties, and to live well up into their
  thirties.  In fact, one of my own riding horses, an Arabian, is 33 years 
old
  and going strong.

  Miniature horse guides do have some disadvantages as compared with dog
  guides.  Being grazing animals which would naturally eat almost 
continuously
  throughout the day, rather than predators who eat large, widely-spaced 
meat
  meals, miniature horses do need to eat more often than do dogs.  I feed
  Panda about 4 times per day, as compared with the once or twice a day that
  most dogs are fed.  Also, at least my miniature horse, needs to relieve
  herself more often than do most dogs, about every 2 hours during the day.

  Another difference between guide dogs and horses is that the miniature
  horses used as guides are bigger than guide dogs.  They are also less
  flexible, so don't fit under a chair or into as small a space as do dogs.
  Panda does ride on public transportation without difficulty, and rides in 
my
  family car, which happens to be a mini-van.  She has also ridden in 
smaller
  cars.  Some miniature horse guides have flown on airplanes, standing or
  lying in the bulkhead row.  But the need for additional space is certainly 
a
  consideration.  I have not had any difficulty finding places for her to be
  out of the way in restaurants or other public places.  Nowadays, if a 
place
  of public accommodation complies with the ADA and has enough space for a
  person who uses a wheelchair, then there will be no difficulty finding 
space
  for a miniature horse service animal.

  Oh, one more possible advantage of miniature horses as guides as compared
  with dogs is that some people who object to dogs on religeous or cultural
  grounds have no objection to miniature horses.  And people who are afraid 
of
  dogs because of their associations with police dogs or guard dogs, usually
  have no fear of a cute little cuddly-looking miniature horse.  (As far as
  the allergy question is concerned, I don't think there is any difference 
in
  the number of people who are truly allergic to dogs and those who are
  allergic to horses.)

  A question that people often ask is whether the bonding process between
  person and guide is the same with a miniature horse as it is with a dog
  guide, and whether miniature horses make as good companions as do dogs.  I
  would say that the bonding process and the process of learning to 
understand
  and to communicate with the partner is much the same with a miniature 
horse
  as it is with a dog.  And I would say that miniature horses definitely 
make
  wonderful companions and friends.  They have their own individual
  personalities, favorite toys, activities, places, and ways of interacting
  with their people, just as dogs do.  But they definitely do seem to come 
to
  regard us as their family or members of their close social group, and they
  enjoy participating in the activities of their human family or just 
hanging
  out close to their people, just as dogs do.

  Anyway, all of the above is my opinion, of course, based on my limited
  experience of both guide dogs and guide horses.  It is not meant in any 
way
  to denegrate guide dogs nor to influence anyone's decision as to choice of
  service animal species.

  Best,
  Ann

  ----- Original Message -----
  From: "Larry D. Keeler" <lkeeler at comcast.net<mailto:lkeeler at comcast.net>>
  To: "NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users"
  <nagdu at nfbnet.org<mailto:nagdu at nfbnet.org>>
  Sent: Saturday, August 13, 2011 5:17 PM
  Subject: [nagdu] Dogs, NFB and cane travel


  > Good points Ann!  I also get the feeling that NFB at best tolerates us a
  > the service animal users.  Our state president however always says to
  > us,"if you don't like what NFB is about, then chang it".  No, I don't 
want

  > to change what we're about entirely.  I believe that everyone should be
  > taught cane and braille skills.  Especially children who have to grow 
into

  > the responsibility of having and caring for an animal.  Also, older 
folks
  > should be taught to use the cane and probblem solve before becoming an
  > animal user.  I have met some dog users who expect there dogs to find
  > everything for them and protect them from other people as well.  holly 
did

  > learn where the coffee pot was at Pilot though!  It was the first place 
we

  > went every morning!  I also have heard that stuff about Seeing Eye and
  > them claiming to take the best of the best!  I'm not really sure about
  > that but I have read 2 books about the school and they certainly give 
that

  > impression!  I don't know if they're right or wrong but I have met folks
  > from the school who have impressed me and others who I hoped there dog
  > would would lead them to the edge of a big holw and drop them in! 
lastly,

  > you can write me off list or publish it on list but I'm really curious
  > about the differences between horse and dog guides.  I know that horses
  > and dogs are both quite intelligent but that they do different things 
with

  > that intelligence.  I don't think for example that horses are likely to
  > chase squirrels!  Nor do I suspect they are into crotch sniffing but I 
am
  > not sure about that one!
  > Intelligence is always claimed but rarely proven!
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