[nagdu] Trust and traffic
Daniel
daniel.sweeney1 at comcast.net
Tue Jun 4 21:33:43 UTC 2013
Hi Tami,
I do what they told me in training way back when - wait until you know it is
safe. I know Cass would like to get going sometimes, and maybe it is fine to
go, but I am the one to make the decision.
That said, I have the same problem at a lot of intersections by me.
Sometimes there is not enough traffic to know when the traffic is going my
way so to speak. The city is pretty poor when it comes to auditory signals.
At stop signs it is the usual wait for my turn, or I wait for an all clear.
Even then I really pick up the pace when crossing streets that are known to
be moderately busy with a "yoo-hoo" to the girl, which makes her go into
overdrive. People think this is pretty funny, but I don't want to take any
chances. I think I am still gun shy from being hit by that truck last year.
Daniel and Cass
Lakewood, Colorado
-----Original Message-----
From: nagdu [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Tami Jarvis
Sent: Monday, June 03, 2013 9:51 AM
To: NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users
Subject: [nagdu] Trust and traffic
Hey, all!
My city-trained dog and I have been doing more work in our small town,
adjusting to the more relaxed and, well, empty environment. All the
peace and quiet and lack of constant whizzing traffic and crowds is
totally stressing me out. /lol/
Without all that auditory feedback I'm used to, I have no clue what is
going on, what is what, or what traffic is doing besides being fairly
random. Heaven forbid the wind blows, because then I am really uncertain!
I've always tried to stick closely to the rule that I am the one to
decide when to cross the street, using my hearing, but counting on Mitzi
for traffic checks. She has never totally agreed with this approach, so
she always lets me know when she thinks it's time to cross. I did
convince her to wait until I tell her "forward" to actually go, which
took some doing. /lol/ I have noticed that she is as close to always
right as makes no never mind. Even when I decide to wait because I'm not
sure, when things sort themselves out I will realize we could have gone
safely with time to spare when she cued me.
I suddenly remembered that over the past few years, the guide dog
programs have been providing more and more dogs to folks who also have
hearing loss. Doesn't that require different means of judging traffic
and deciding with the dog when to cross the street?
I would love to hear how others handle the decision to step into the
street with their guides!
Tami
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