[NAGDU] collar question

Jody Ianuzzi thunderwalker321 at gmail.com
Sat May 14 17:07:24 UTC 2016


I do the same thing. Walker's tags are on a nylon collar with his name on it. His training collar is on his leash which I slip over his head when we go for a walk.  That way he has his tags on him all the time.  And I don't have to worry about the training collar getting caught on anything

JODY 🐺
thunderwalker321 at gmail.com

"There's no point in being grown up if you can't be childish sometimes."  DOCTOR WHO (Tom Baker)



> On May 14, 2016, at 12:03 PM, Sonja O via NAGDU <nagdu at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> 
> Would you consider a light and thin tag collar?
> My boy chief has a nice leather one and it carries his tag. The leash and collar I'm using are separate.
> The benefit is that whenever I take the collar off, the tag collar just stays on.
> 
> Ella's Lead (Facebook and webpage) has really cute ones and you can pick the width.
> 
> The one I have is from Paco Collars and less than half and inch.
> I love it :)
> 
> Hope that helps, sonja and chief 
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
>> On May 14, 2016, at 8:20 AM, Emily K. Michael via NAGDU <nagdu at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>> 
>> Good morning, guide dog users! 
>> 
>> I have a question about tags and collars. My pup wears a training collar (choke chain) and his ID tag and rabies tag are on a keyring attached to the dead ring of the collar. However, it seems that every so often, the keyring starts to separate and then it gets caught up in the training collar’s links, which speeds up the pulling apart of the keyring. Is there a better way to attach the ID tags to a training collar? A more durable keyring perhaps? Or is this just one of the drawbacks of the keyring mechanism? 
>> 
>> Thanks,
>> Emily, with York
>>>> Emily K. Michael
>> emily.k.michael at gmail.com
>> http://areyouseeingthis.wordpress.com/
>> www.facebook.com/authoremilykmichael/
>> 
>> "What poetry is made of is so old, so familiar, that it’s easy to forget that it’s not just the words, but polyrhythmic sounds, speech in its first endeavors (every poem breaks a silence that had to be overcome), prismatic meanings lit by each others’ light, stained by each others’ shadows. In the wash of poetry the old, beaten, worn stones of language take on colors that disappear when you sieve them up out of the streambed and try to sort them out.”
>> -Adrienne Rich, “Someone is Writing a Poem” (1993)
>> 
>> 
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