[nagdu] Description of my achievement walk at Pilot
Kerri Stovall
spedangel84 at gmail.com
Tue Sep 2 11:49:17 UTC 2014
Hi there from Texas,
As I will soon be going for my third guide, but my first from pilot, this has really helped me tremendously to know what sorts of things to expect during training. I have asked as many questions to as many pilot graduates as possible, and you have help to shed a little light on the end result of your training experience. I find this comforting and very exciting. I hope to be going to Pilate around Easter. I requested a certain breed due to my husband's dog allergy, so that's why the waiting time is projected so far out. But hopefully they won't take that long to find me a match
Kerri
Sent from my iPhone
> On Sep 1, 2014, at 9:15 PM, Carmella Broome via nagdu <nagdu at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
>
> For those who are interested, here is the description I wrote in a FaceBook note about my achievement walk at Pilot Dogs with Brooklyn on June 11 2014. This walk takes place a couple days before the team is scheduled to graduate so they can redo it the next day if necessary.
>
> Excerpts from my note:
> I knew we would have our achievement walk the next day so we tried to get to bed early that night. They tell us not to get nervous about these walks, but its hard to help it, of course. Successful completion of this walk means a student and their Pilot Dog will "graduate" and go home together as a new working team.
>
> I wondered which trainer would be going withus. Our regular trainer does not take us on this walk. We go out with a trainer who hasn't done any formal work with the team so they can give an objective report back to our primary trainer on what they observed. The trainers who accompanied me and my first two dogs on what used to be called the "test walk" were still there. I'd enjoyed saying hello and joking around with both of them on several occasions during my training with Brooklyn.
>
> Long-time trainer Steve G came in right at 8:00 the next morning and asked me to go ahead and harness Brooklyn up. Several classmates wished us luck and we headed for the front gate. As we were leaving, our trainer Ryan said, "Have fun!" I said, "That's the best you've got for me?" He said, "That's all you need."
>
> We were gone for over an hour. We did several crossings near the school, got a van ride downtown from another trainer, did some work there, caught a bus back to a couple blocks from Pilot Dogs, and walked back to the school. This route was similar to my previous "test walks," but I didn't have to memorize the whole route and carry it out the way I'd had to when doing my "test walks" with Poppy and Maggie. Steve gave me small pieces of the route as we went. For example, he would say, "We're going to go to the end of this block, turn right, cross the street next to us, and then walk another block." Once we completed a set of instructions, Steve would give me the next few things he wanted us to do. He would include the names of the streets, as well, since we'd done all of the crossings at least a couple times before.
>
> We didn't talk much other than that. Steve walked a few feet behind us and watched our work. Again, this was similar to previous "test walks." This wasn't the time for chatting, though we did talk some about what we were doing along the way. My job was to show that Brooklyn and I could communicate and travel together reliably when faced with traffic, obstacles, and distractions. Steve would be paying attention to how I was giving Brooklyn commands, responding to her movements and the information I was receiving through the harness, praising or correcting her as I'd been taught, making decisions about street crossings, and staying oriented to my surroundings.
>
> I liked doing the achievement walk this way much better than how the "test walk" had been done before. I'd successfully completed it the first time with Poppy and Maggie and had felt good about my ability to remember, and carry out, an entire route safely and efficiently with my new dog. This format was less distracting and less anxiety-provoking, though. Just keeping track of a piece of the route at a time freed up a lot of mental energy so I could stay much more focussed on Brooklyn and our teamwork.
>
> When we got downtown, rush hour traffic was still going. Then, at 9:00, some church bells started ringing. They kept going for what must have been 20 minutes (no exaggeration). Song after song. They were distracting, made it harder for me to hear traffic, and my ears didn't exactly find them pleasant (I like church bells, but these were a little too clangy). Every time I thought they were finally done, they'd start again! I must have said, "No way! You've got to be kidding!?!" three different times. By the time they finally stopped, I was completely annoyed. Steve said they didn't plan that into the route on purpose and that those bells had been broken for a while. He didn't even know they were working again much less that they would go on for so long.
>
> We got back before the rain started, at around 9:30. I thanked Steve and he said he would talk with Ryan about how things went. I knew Ryan would be the one to deliver the "final verdict." I took Brooklyn's harness off, and went to get her some water and give her the chance to go potty again. I wished a few things had gone a little better, but overall, I thought we'd done fine and stayed safe, which is obviously the most important thing for a guide dog team to be able to do. I'd taken my time calling the intersections and knew I'd made good decisions about when to tell Brooklyn to cross.
>
> Brooklyn had handled several things particularly well, including confidently leading me to the front door when Steve instructed me to tell her to "find out" when we were in CVS. For the most part, she had been focussed and steady. We'd shown good teamwork. I'd let her guide me and make the decisions she was supposed to make. She'd been responsive to my commands, praise, and verbal encouragement or redirection. We'd communicated and done what we'd been asked to do.
>
> I told myself that, if we had to do the walk again for whatever reason, that would just mean more practice and that would be okay. I wasn't there to impress anyone. I was there to learn and to leave feeling confident that my dog and I were a safe and solid working team. I went to my room and stayed busy on my computer instead of sitting around thinking about it. The outcome would be what it would be.
>
> We finally found out around 11:45. We passed! Wayne shook our hands and hugged us. He said congratulations and that he knew we'd worked hard. It was touching how genuinely happy for us and excited he seemed. I knew he'd seen hundreds of teams go through this process but he acted like it really mattered to him that we'd done well. Ryan said he was proud of us and reminded us how far we'd come in just over a week. It was a relief to know we'd successfully completed this final formal assessment of our ability to work together. I still wanted to make the most of my time there under trainer supervision, and we still had things to do as part of the formal training experience, but the pressure was off. Brooklyn and I would be headed back to SC on Friday.
>
> End of Excerpt
>
>
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