[nagdu] Wild GDB rumor?

Juanita Herrera juanitaherrera1991 at gmail.com
Wed Jul 25 13:28:52 UTC 2012


Tracy, that is totally a wild rumor. I just graduated from GDB six
months ago, and not unless things have changed since then, we are not
to walk ahead of our dogs at any time. The dog is called a guide dog
for a reason, to guide. Also, we may give leash Q's, but only if we
have an idea of where we are. Not if we are absolutely unsure of our
surroundings. GDB is actually going to be having a presentation at my
job on Friday. I can ask if things have changed if you'd like me to.
Juanita and Anise

On 7/25/12, Tracy Carcione <carcione at access.net> wrote:
> The other day, a friend shared with me the things she heard about at the
> ACB convention.  One thing that shocked us both was that GDB is teaching
> people, when there is a narrow path, to step *ahead* of the dog!  Say
> what!!!  I've done that, and lived to tell the tale and learn from my
> mistake, but it's a darned good way to get hurt or killed.  Is this just a
> wild rumor, or is it an example of trainers being out of touch with
> reality?  Or has GDB become Guide Dogs for the High Partials?  Well, high
> partials who never go out at night, because it would be too dangerous and
> scary.
> Surely this isn't actually what GDB is teaching?
> Another thing my friend heard is that, if the dog is unsure of how to go
> around an obstacle, the person is supposed to direct the dog using the
> leash--give a leash cue.  Great, if you can tell where to go.  Me, I
> usually can't, being, you know, blind!
>
> Anyhow, any recent GDB graduate want to confirm or deny this rumor?
>
> I have been pondering a new theory:  guide dogs used to be trained as if
> their partners would be totally blind, and now they're being trained as if
> their partners will have some usable vision.  I've occasionally thought
> that Ben might have done better sooner if he had a person who could tell
> faster when he was getting ready to cop a sniff, for instance.  And our
> trainer seemed to think I should know when bushes were coming up, though
> just how I would know that beats me.  But then, how do these guide dogs
> for the visually impaired pass the blindfold test?  So maybe my theory is
> full of holes, but it doesn't seem like training is as rigorous as it used
> to be, if one can believe books.
> Tracy
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> nagdu mailing list
> nagdu at nfbnet.org
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nagdu_nfbnet.org
> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for
> nagdu:
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/nagdu_nfbnet.org/juanitaherrera1991%40gmail.com
>




More information about the NAGDU mailing list