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

Cindy Ray cindyray at gmail.com
Sun Aug 14 20:22:11 UTC 2011


Oh, OK on the training. It sounded like from reports that the training was much longer, but that may be just because of how the article was portrayed.


On Aug 14, 2011, at 3:16 PM, Ann Edie wrote:

> Hi, Cindy,
> 
> Horses do naturally lie down for periods of time to sleep, although they can also sleep standing up.  But some of the guide horses are trained to lie down on cue so that they can be put in a safe position during take off on a plane, for example.  (I don't know whether lying down is actually a safer position for a horse to be in for take offs and landings, or whether this is just another one of those air line myths, like the one that says all service animals are best placed in the bulkhead row.)  I know that when riding in cars or trailers, horses never lie down, but find their balance on their feet.
> 
> I pick up after Panda just as I would after a dog.
> 
> The length of the training period for a miniature horse guide depends on the circumstances of the training.  If the animal is being owner-trained or is being privately trained, the schedule is up to the individuals involved. When the Guide Horse Foundation was training guide horses, the training period for the horse was about the same as it is for guide dogs at the training programs, about 3 or 4 months.  And the training period for the team was about 3 weeks, I think.
> 
> Best,
> Ann
> 
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Cindy Ray" <cindyray at gmail.com>
> To: "NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users" <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
> Sent: Sunday, August 14, 2011 3:02 PM
> Subject: Re: [nagdu] Comparison of miniature horses and dogs as guides,was: Re: Dogs, NFB and cane travel
> 
> 
>> I think all of this is interesting, Anne. Horses don't lie down. Do they train these horses to do that, which would be quite uncharacteristic? How long is the training for the horse and then for the person procuring a dog? When you relieve the horse, or the horse relieves itself, do you use diapers or do you pick up similarly.
>> 
>> Once after I had a guide dog, I rode someone's horse. It was a very gentle one, and I am pretty sure it was following its owner, yet when I gave it some direction, it did as I told it to do. Much of that would be very similar I would guess.
>> Cindy
>> 
>> 
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