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Univ. students raise dogs to be guides

BRITTANY COFER

Issue date: 10/13/08 Section: News
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Webster is one of the dogs being trained to guide. Students make a year commitment to teach pups.
Media Credit: BLAKE LIPTHRATT
Webster is one of the dogs being trained to guide. Students make a year commitment to teach pups.
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Training a guide dog on campus is no walk in the park.

Moira Gillis, a puppy walker for the Guide Dog Foundation for the Blind, has been training Maggie, a purebred guide dog, since she was a puppy.

"I became interested in [the program] because I saw other girls on campus walking the dogs around," Gillis, a senior from Richmond Hills, said.

The organization requires a one-year commitment when someone signs up to be a puppy walker.

"The number one goal is to socialize the dog," Sarah Hooper, the Athens area Guide Dog Foundation coordinator, said. "We tailor [the training] to what people are comfortable with. At the bare minimum they need to be socialized outside every day."

Hooper, a junior from Woodstock, has been raising her fifth guide dog, 10-month-old Reiger, for the past eight months. She became involved in the program in high school when she raised a guide dog for her Girl Scout Gold Awards project.

Since part of the guide dog training includes taking the puppy everywhere, Hooper encourages the Athens-area puppy walkers to explain the program to their professors at the beginning of the semester.

"[I] talk to the class on the first day about what it's like to be a dog walker," Gillis said. "I give a presentation and answer the basic questions that everybody asks, because I get asked questions everywhere I go."

As the Athens area coordinator, Hooper holds monthly meetings with area puppy-walkers. The meetings cover basic training and obedience.

Gillis teaches her dog basic obedience, placing focus on "down," "sit," "stay," "come" and "heel."

Since the dogs must return to the foundation after 12 months, the walker must be willing to give up the dog, Hooper said.

"I put boundaries in place where I don't get attached and [Maggie] doesn't get attached," Gillis said. "She is a little less attached than other dogs in the group that spend all of their time with their owners."
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Viewing Comments 1 - 7 of 7

John Nelms

posted 10/13/08 @ 12:04 PM EST

Great!! Sonny Seiler and "UGA VII" need to get behind this!

Bud Whitmire

posted 10/13/08 @ 4:06 PM EST

Labs are the best dogs, hands down. Webster is a fine looking young man!

Petzone

posted 10/13/08 @ 9:43 PM EST

Cool beans! Glad to see this program, let me know if you ever need help with training. I am a AKC Certified Canine Good Citizen instructor and personaly have a registered therapy dog. (Continued…)

petzone

Petzone

posted 10/13/08 @ 9:53 PM EST

Cool Beans! This is such a great progam and a big YOU ROCK for helping dogs help people! If you need any help with training let me know. I am a certified AKC Canine Good Citizen instructor and only use positive reinforcement training. (Continued…)

suzanne woodill

posted 10/14/08 @ 8:12 AM EST

Thanks for sharing this article with us

Lindsay

posted 10/17/08 @ 9:25 AM EST

What is the name of the organization?

aunt jody

posted 11/15/08 @ 2:55 PM EST

Great job, well done. From Ohio.

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