mcastar Farming, Saturday, June 30,1984 Seeing-eye dogs take a ride on the Strasburg Railroad BY SUZANNE KEENE STRASBURG The train lurched, the whistle shrieked and the rain poured, but the seven Labradors and golden retrievers riding the train at the Strasburg Railroad last Sunday were un- Steven and Michele Dubois, pose wii ir, a seei dog they will be caring for during the next several months Yellow Labrador Fax seems to be enji ng .... train at Strasburg Railroad, while his guardian, 4-H’er Jennifer Carrigan, keeps a close eye on him. concerned about the unfamiliar environment around them. The dogs, which will eventually become seeing-eye dogs, were accompanied by their temporary guardians, members of the Lively Leaders 4-H Seeing Eye Puppy Club from Wenonah, New Jersey. The group makes an annual trip to the railroad to expose the dogs to a new sitation, club leader Lorraine Hudson said. Club members receive the puppies when they are about eight weeks old, raise them for 12 to 14 months, then say good-bye to their friends when they leave for formal training in Morristown. During those months, the 4-H’ers teach the dogs four basic com mands - Come, Sit, Down, and Rest - and how to sit and rest at the end of a lead. However, “The main thing is to teach them to respond to love,” Lorraine said. The idea, she continued, is not to beat the dogs into submission or to be harsh. When correction is necessary, a quick jerk on the choke collar usually does the job. The Seeing Eye school in Morristown could raise all the dogs they need in the kennels, Lorriane explained, but added, “that doesn’t make the best dogs. ” Dogs raised in a family at mosphere, she continued, become accustomed to people and noise, and don’t spook easily. The dogs also receive more individual at tention in homes than they would in kennels. Sollenberger Silos Corp Box N, Chambersburg, PA 17201 ! J City I - —— -p~— ——.—• —— ——J Name Address Club members Steven and Michele Dubois are working with their second seeing-eye dog, Poker, who took his train ride all in stride. He sat between his guradians, apparently undisturbed by his environment. Poker began his stay with the Dubois family in October, helping to relieve the gap that opened when the family’s first dog, a black Laborador, left for school. Michele and Steven’s parents, John and Barbara, take an active interest in the dog’s as well. John said Poker moved in with the family about one month before thier first dog, Dega, left, helping to make the transition easier. Even so, saying goodbye was difficult. “It was hard, but you knew it was going for a good cause,” Steven said, explaining his feelings about Dega’s leaving. “I was'the basket case,” their monther, Barbara, confessed. “I had a rough night the night before.” John, a Methodist minister, said that Dega became a member of both the family and the congregation. Dega attended church every Sunday, napping under a pew during the service. “He would go to sleep for the State Zip sermon and wake up for the benediction,” John joked. At first, John said, he was skeptical about how the congregation would react to having a dog in church. But to his delight “they really took to it. Now they expect to see the dog,” he continued. Sometimes, a dog isn’t able to progress in the program because of nealth or temperament problems. For example, Tony Kaminski said his family was able to keep two-year-old Wicki, a golden retriever they raised for the customary year but which did not pass the physical because of cataracts. “After a year of training, we’d certainly like to have any of them back, ” he explained. When the dogs have finished their training at the school, the 4- H’ers are permitted to observe them working with the trainers from a distance, but are not per mitted to greet the dog. “When you see the dog with the trainers, there’s no way in the world you would really want to take it back,” Barbara said. Lancaster County is forming its own seeing-eye dog program this summer. Anyone between the ages of 8 and 19 interested in raising a seeing-eye dog is invited to attend an organizational meeting to be held at the Farm and Home Center on July 3at 7:30 p.m. Please send information on PI I. Upright Bunker Silos □ 2 Manure Pits PI 3. Feed Bunk HU Cattleguards Q 5 Monolithic Concrete Silos