[nagdu] A Mia misconception

The Pawpower Pack pawpower4me at gmail.com
Fri Oct 3 02:29:09 UTC 2014


Hi Noah, 
I can really empathize with this issue.  Although I am an owner trainer so was able to nip it right in the bud, maybe some of what I say might help. 
Soleil is my current guide, and when she first learned to pull into the harness and started going forward, she began doing this left walking thing you described.  My solution was to stop every time she started to do it, to take her back to the right and try again, wha click and treat for every step she held the line of travel on the right side of the sidewalk.  And every time she would start even slightly to go left for no reason, I'd stop and go back to square one.  Soleil is a dog who loves to be on the move, so it did not take long for her to realize that left side walking got her nowhere, while right side walking got her food and a long walk. 
Good luck! like

 Rox and the kitchen Bitches: 
Mill'E, Laveau, Soleil
Pawpower4me at gmail.com
Sent from my iPhone

> On Oct 2, 2014, at 7:43 PM, "Beckman, Noah G. via nagdu" <nagdu at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> 
> Good evening everyone,
>                I am noticing a consistent tendency in Mia's guide work that I would like to eliminate.  It seems as though her perception of her guiding window (the space both above her and to her right that she needs to keep clear of obstacles) is quite a bit wider than necessary.  In other words, I think she feels she needs to guide me as though my right arm is raised and pointing straight out to my right.  Although her efforts to make doubly sure my right shoulder doesn't collide with anything might seem touching, it has several negative symptoms.  As we walk down a sidewalk, she will tend to favor either the middle or the far left side.  If there is a building line, curb into the street, row of parking meters, etc. to my right, this tendency becomes especially pronounced.  As I attend a large university, the volume of people on the sidewalk at any one time can reach levels comparable to New York City.  This means that her love of the left often results in oncoming people either having to step off of the sidewalk or cut over to my right in order to avoid us.  Or, if we approach a group of people that is standing on the sidewalk such that there is still a little bit of room for us to pass, she will sometimes freeze or walk at a snail's pace.  The same is true for slightly narrow, but definitely navigable gaps between furniture or other objects.  When I ask her to hup right, she will (usually) but not all of the way to the boarder of the sidewalk.  Also, she will drift back to the left immediately.
>                I've tried putting the leash in my right hand and tugging slightly to the right.  I've tried scolding her and, in extreme or repeated offenses, correcting her when she pulls me to the left.  I've tried putting on a praise party on those few instances where she keeps me to the right without repeated encouragement.  None of these efforts has noticeably mitigated the issue.  I am not exactly sure how or why this started; I only became acutely aware of it in late August around the time other students started moving back to campus.
>                Other than this problem, I hardly have grounds for complaint when it comes to any aspect of Mia or her work.  I simply want to be able to walk along and have thoughts or conversations with others that are not continually interrupted by me having to remind my dog that we need to stick to the right.  Your thoughts and suggestions about how to correct this issue would be much appreciated.
> 
> Thank you,
> 
> -Noah
> 
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