[guidedogchat] Re: Heyas

  • From: pam <pamyoung80@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "guidedogchat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" <guidedogchat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 7 Apr 2014 11:42:48 +0100

wow 96! 

Sent from my iPhone

> On 7 Apr 2014, at 10:40, Vincent Thacker <vince@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> 
> More young people in the UK are getting dogs now, too, which hasn't met with 
> universal approval, but I'd say circumstances alter cases, and if everyone 
> can make the handling of the dog work well, good luck to them. Some 
> surprisingly old people are also getting dogs. I did hear of a 96-year old 
> getting a new dog, which must be a new definition of optimism! On the other 
> hand, there are unacceptable delays in getting a dog for working-age people 
> very often, which is the downside.
> 
> Vince.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ========================================
> Message Received: Apr 06 2014, 09:15 PM
> From: "Nadine Lattimore" 
> To: "guidedogchat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" 
> Cc: 
> Subject: [guidedogchat] Re: Heyas
> 
> Makes much more sense now, hi Katie.
> Of course everything changes when dealing with a young dog handler,
> like you said it always seems to be playtime, never mind adding a dog
> to the equation!
> I guess attention towards the dog does not have to mean full on
> playtime. Recess I think you call it could be a great time to burn off
> some extra energy for all. Then quiet calm interaction such as gentle
> rub, maybe eye contact or good boy/girl is enough to let dog know you
> are still there during class. This is just a general idea of how I
> manage college lectures.
> It will really depend on how the handler and dog interact in general.
> How long has the unit been working together? High school would that be
> changing rooms every 45minutes?
> Here in Ireland the age has dropped recently from 18 to 16 and I am
> personally not in favour of this.
> 
> Nadine Lattimore
> 
> On 5 Apr 2014, at 23:38, Katie Moncelsi wrote:
> 
> >>
> >> A blind child with a guide dog thats attistic? Are you serious? How old is
> >> this child? My own son is blind and mildly autistic but a guide dog is the
> >> last thing I'd consider suitable for him until he matures more.
> > He's very high functioning, I'd guess you'd call him asperger's instead
> > of autistic. He's 17 years old as well. I probably should have mentioned
> > the school is a high school as well.
> >
> > Katie
> >
> 
> 

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