[nagdu] re soul searching - Question

Bertha Avila Guerrero guerrero.avila at sbcglobal.net
Wed Jul 11 03:32:02 UTC 2012


Hello Juanita and All, I have managed to stay out of this thread up until
now.
We had the same awful experience with the telephone pole canes. Honestly, I
don't think I will attend again, and leaving my Girl at home would not be an
option. 


B A Guerrero and Seeing Eye Dog Godiva
guerrero.avila at sbcglobal.net 


-----Original Message-----
From: nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
Of Juanita Herrera
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2012 9:04 PM
To: NAGDU Mailing List, the National Association of Guide Dog Users
Subject: Re: [nagdu] re soul searching - Question

Brenda,
It is ok for a cane user to locate the dog with their cane, but it is not
acceptable for them to whack the cane at the dog with greater force than
necessary. Sometimes the blows my dog received were so hard it would cause
her to jump because of the intensity of the hit.
Juanita and Anise

On 7/8/12, Brenda <bjnite at windstream.net> wrote:
> Not sure how/why it is rude for a cane user to tap/touch/"hit?"a guide 
> dog with his/her cane.  If a cane user is walking and swings his/her 
> cane to detect obstacles and encounters a guide, how is the cane user 
> to know and avoid contact??
> If the cane user said something snide after coming into contact with 
> the dog then that would be rude.
>
> I have no depth perception and my vision is blurred so I might see a 
> guide and tap him/her without meaning to just as I might touch a 
> person in a store unless I steer wway wide of the blur I see ahead of me.
>
> As for cane users being rude - I was sitting on the bus once and a 
> guide dog user nearly nailed the right side of my head where my good 
> eye is located with her purse as her guide lead her to a seat.  (The 
> driver had instructed her to go to the rear of the  small van/bus as 
> that was where there was more room, this was not a slight to her.)  I 
> could see her coming but didn't have the coordination to get out of 
> her way.  As a person with low vision I felt like I was being run over 
> and neither the driver or the guide dog user cared - the priority was 
> the handler and knowing she hit me, the handler didn't even say excuse 
> me but rather acted like she was following her dog and I should
udnerstand.
>
> Everyone has their story to tell, and that is mine on this subject.
> Please give me some tips for cane travel to avoid hitting guide dog teams.
>
> Thanks
> Brenda
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