Monday, December 04, 2006
Winter Post
Quite a lot of people wish to start up some form or other of riding for the disabled here in Spain - and they often find their way to my telephone - there are still, unfortunately, not many people I can re-direct them to.
So - from The New Year - I'll put energy into both this blog and all the different forms of animal assisted therapies available in Spain...
Until then
'¡animo!'
Friday, October 13, 2006
Raising Our Puppy
We brought home a Briard puppy for our anniversary and my birthday in July. He wasn’t quite six weeks old. At home we have an old dog, 20 in fact that is more like a cat than a dog because it is impossible to train her. We love her more than anything but she is a very bad influence on our new puppy. My son also has a 2-year-old Greyhound-Labrador cross. She is more greyhound than Lab but has those wonderful qualities of a lab. She loves water and will fetch anything and bring it back in one piece. She did not need much training it just came naturally. She never leaves home but pines when our son leaves. Her name is Charlie and we are so lucky to have her. She is a model example for our puppy who is called Chico. Everyday she play-fights while teaching him balance, coordination, how to survive in the world while at the same time improving his muscle tone and energy level. He is still quite uncoordinated but improving every day. I think we will have the fastest Briard in the world and he can turn on a dime. All of these things are helping me to train him. He is very bright, learns quickly and is adorable. Chico also helps me feed all of the other animals where he is very calm and easygoing with them. I know he is too young to start real training but he is getting a good head start thanks to Charlie. My last two dogs were a Briard and then a Bearded Collie, so I have had one before. They were both wonderful and trained to be service dogs. The Bearded Collie even got to go on TV and do an advert for the telephone co. Chico is much more in tune to sounds and his surroundings than the other two, so I hope when he is older he might be a demonstration dog to help promote Animal Assisted Therapy. In my last entry I mentioned two new types of service dogs, I have now seen a documentary on ‘Diabetic-Dogs’, which are very successful and growing to be known all over. They have even been proven to be more accurate than the blood-test kit that diabetics have to do many times a day.
Notes on Riding Therapy
Monday, August 28, 2006
The Friendly Wild Boar
This is a picture of Theodore, our wild boar, and a Doberman that came to class for the first time. You can tell by the look in her eyes the terror she felt being kissed by a wild boar. Theodore was a main attraction at our farm school because he was bottle fed and lived in our house until he was too big, playing, sleeping and eating with the dogs and cats. As he grew bigger he moved into the larger animal pen where he lived with sheep, ducks and the like. He always liked to sleep on our patio with the other animals. By the time he was full-grown, in fact ‘enormous’, he moved in with the horses and donkeys where he had a large area to roam and against all rules of nature he was loved by all of the animals. He used to come on walks with us and participate in riding lessons. All the school children could pet him even though he got to be about 200 kilos and had huge tusks. Due to his friendly nature and because he was basically free to go where he wanted, he frightened many walkers and workmen so he finally had to be put in with the other wild boar. He always remained friendly and had a companion called Rachel who in turn had many babies. He was a wonderful father and adjusted fine to a less affectionate environment, we still always let him out loose and to play with the other animals or come walking with us in the country.
My father always said that my animals had identity crises from being raised in the house on a bottle and associating with so many types of animals. Most of them were given to me by farmers who could not raise them or were just thrown in my driveway. As a result they were all a valuable part of our Animal Assisted Therapy program called ANIMO. I have many more wonderful stories and for those of you interested the technical part is at the bottom of the page.
Tuesday, June 13, 2006
Two New Jobs for Assistance Dogs
I was watching a documentary on T.V. the other day and the topic was about dogs, assistance dogs in particular. In one case dogs were trained to help children with learning disabilities and reading disorders to learn and enjoy reading. It was amazing. First the children were introduced to their new teacher-friend, then the dog would sit next to the child and listen while the child read, if the child had trouble with a word or grew tired of reading the dog would put its paw on the page or start to pull the book with its mouth very gently - this made the child tune in and continue or ask for help. I don’t know how they got the dogs to realise when the child had stopped and that it should help out but it has turned out to be a very successful program and the children couldn’t wait to get to reading class and to please their new teacher-friend.
The other story was about dogs with very strong mothering instincts and how they became mother and teacher to abandoned wild animals. The dogs cleaned, played with and taught the newborns like lions and panthers to live and grow into adults. Of course they could never be released into the wild again but they would have died if not for these wonderful working dogs. I then realised that I had had two such dogs myself. Many years ago, I found a puppy that was abandoned in our driveway and soon after found in the rubbish a box with two baby bunnies and two black kittens, all still with their eyes shut. I took them home and tried to bottle feed them but very soon the puppy started to sleep with them and stimulate them while they nursed the whole time leaving the puppy with scratches and bite marks but she never left their side and would carry them around the house. After about two weeks she had milk and was able to take over the feeding job as well. Thank you Foxy!
For twenty years now a small dog named Freetxua has lived with us. She was given to my son when he was about one and she was just a couple of weeks old. She has mothered and nurtured everything from one-day-old chicks to lambs and wild boar. She is so maternal that she will take care of any creature from the time it is born until adulthood. She is still going strong and remains an important part of our family, animal and people alike. This is a picture of Freetxua with Lucia. Lucia was bottle-fed and now is about 80 kilos and comes everywhere with us. She still plays with Freetxua. The name Freetxua comes from “free to a good home” and we just dropped the “good home” bit (although it is) and call her Freetxua.
Sunday, April 30, 2006
Miguel Rios Lends a Helping Hand
Miguel Rios, one of Spain’s most popular rock musicians and famous personalities, lent a helping hand, literally, to ANIMO a few years ago. During the time of Franco, sign language was forbidden, so it is only recently becoming acceptable for deaf people to use it. ANIMO, along with its Animal Assisted Therapy, also gave classes in sign language, to both the deaf and the hearing. Miguel Rios is a kind and agreeable friend who regularly visits Mojácar on his time off. He showed great interest in ANIMO and its techniques in therapy. He enthusiastically agreed to help raise funds by doing a concert supported by a sign language chorus, the first of its kind in Spain. Despite being rather ill with the flu on ‘the night’, he sang two of his biggest songs, ‘Himno de la Alegria’ (that Bach thing) and Santa Lucía. He was accompanied by Pepe Grano de Haro from Los Puntos, some session musicians, our daughter and around forty people including deaf, physically handicapped and some children from the local community who came to ANIMO every day to learn how to sing in sign language. To watch them all signing along to the songs was quite inspirational. All the T.V. stations were there and they played to a packed house. It was so beautiful to see that you couldn’t help but be moved emotionally. There is nothing like bringing the disabled into mainstream life! Thanks Miguel!
Sunday, March 26, 2006
Equinoterápia en Santander
The speakers are Fernando Alivés, Dra Isabel Goirigolzarri, Juan Gómez Irurutegoyena, and from the FRDI, Mercedes Jiménez Horwitz. Information and prices from Inagropec on telephone 976 662 817
For information on what's happening in Mojácar - go to www.theentertaineronline.com
Tuesday, March 14, 2006
Algo en castellano
Para leer algo sobre la hipoterápia ya en español, y muchas otras cosas interesantes, os dirigo al AAAEPD.
La Asociación Argentina De Actividades Ecuestres Para Discapacitados tienen una página muy interesante y tratan de la A.A.T. en todos sus aspectos. Merece la pena leerles aún que reconozco que son un poco retirados para subir en el coche y pegarles una visita.
Su página está en www.aaaepad.org
Monday, March 13, 2006
Some examples of AAT
Taking cats and dogs to retirement homes has also been a success. The patients cuddle and stroke the animals, those that are able to can take them for walks (and get exercise too) and it is something for them to look forward to. Stroking an animal, especially with long hair, has proven to help arthritis and other pain from bone and muscle difficulties. They also get to make new friends with the animal handlers.
Some prisons now take on dog training and horse training both as therapy for the inmates and also preparing the animals to go out in the world and help others. In some prisons the animals are trained for certain tasks, like a Seeing Eye Dog’s first year before it starts its official training, others take dogs from the pound and train them to be suitable for adoption. Most of the horses are run down; poor diet, overworked etc. The prisoners bring them back to a healthy usable state. This program helps both the inmate and the animal, not to mention the person who receives the animal.
A pet for a child can achieve many things. First the child has to want an animal, then the type of animal depends on your living conditions, if you live in the city a small animal is best, in the country anything goes. The child must take care of the animal in order to learn responsibility and caring for others. It is also a good way to teach hygiene. If you are dirty then no one wants to be around you just as if an animal is dirty you don’t want to be around it. Because the animal has no prejudice and hold no grudge it makes a perfect counsellor and companion.
Dogs also help find missing people, drugs and explosives. Each job takes a special kind of dog and a very knowledgeable handler. I was always told that the drug dogs were made addicts to make them find the drugs. But this is not the case. When I went through my dog training and got my degree I was able to observe dogs being trained for all of these tasks including attack. I do not know about other places but the drug dogs have a toy which is usually a towel with a knot in it. Playing with it was their reward for their work. In the beginning the knot had some smell of the drug in it so they associated the smell with the play and reward. Later the drug smell was removed and the reward for finding drugs in suitcases and such was a good session of tug and war and other games with the towel. It was the toy they wanted; they just learned it had a special smell. No dogs were ever given drugs. Search dogs must have a very keen sense of smell. They start by smelling an object of the persons; in the beginning it is the handler. Then they start a game of hide and seek. The handler hides in many places leaving his scent around and then he hides in a hard to find place. Another handler lets the dog smell the object and then tells him to find.
These, then, are just a few examples of how useful animals can be in human society.
They now have dogs for diabetics and to help teach reading to children with learning disorders. These dogs should not be given food as a reward they should always have affection or play time. One of the scent tests that most of these dogs have to pass is the hot dog test. That is where hot dogs are put in the path of the object or person they are looking for. The dog must not even stop to smell the hot dos it must continue looking for its objective. Guide dogs must also pass a type of hot dog test because they may never stray from their work. Depending on the type of work that the dogs due makes the difference in how the dogs are chosen. Some groups like to breed and raise their own breed of dog, possibly having it stay in a foster home for the first year to help save on the cost of raising the animals. These foster dogs must attend a weekly training course and their progress is constantly monitored. Dogs like hearing dogs are all dogs under the age of two from dog pounds. This serves a double purpose; it helps find great homes for stray and abandoned pets while at the same time they become the ears of a deaf person. The dogs are selected then taken to the center. Once there, they go through basic obedience training, if they pass they go on to phase two, if they don’t they go back to the pound but at least they were given a chance. Other dogs that most people don’t think of are pure bred dogs that aren’t show quality. I have been donated some of them in the past and have one now and they have been fantastic also giving them a chance to have a happy useful life.
Updated: November 2010
Sunday, March 12, 2006
A Course in Cazorla
Find more details on http://www.laisladelosdelfines.com
Ami will be glad to explain everything in English if there is interest from English-only speakers.
Curso de hippoterápia de hípica terapeútica impartido por Amber Napier, experta en caballos y colaboradora con la Asociación ANIMO
6 y 7 de Mayo
El objetivo de este curso es conocer cuales son las terapias en las que el caballo es el elemento fundamental para su desarrollo. Terapia ecuestre, equitación terapéutica, hipoterapia, equinoterapia, son términos generales que se refieren a conceptos similares pero diferentes y que dan lugar a confusión.
Durante el curso se definirán los conceptos básicos de la hípica terapeutica e hipoterapia. Se aprenderán las características fundamentales de un caballo, para conocer el por qué de los beneficios aportados a través de la monta de este animal. Se explicarán cuales son las características y necesidades de este tipo de terapias, cuales son los beneficios que pueden aportar a los participantes, a quién van dirigidas y como deben desarrollarse.
Se complementará el curso con una visita a un centro ecuestre donde los participantes podrán ver in situ cual es el manejo adecuado del caballo, y mediante un simulacro como se desarrolla una sesión de terapia.
Para participar en el curso es necesario realizar una preinscripción rellenando y enviando el formulario que encontrarás en la dirección www.laisladelosdelfines.com
Tuesday, February 28, 2006
Charity Matters
Another centre that I deeply respect is called Sac Xiroi, in Barcelona. It has been running for some twenty years as a family-run operation. It is directed by Miguel and Trini Gallardo, who have to be the greatest people I have ever met. They take street kids and delinquents to a home and work with them giving meaning to their lives. They use AAT but in a different way to how ANIMO did. ANIMO was strictly physically oriented and Sac Xiroi is psychologically oriented and animals are also used as a reward for good behavior. They were the first in Spain to explore the inclusion of animals in their therapy. They travelled the world and attended seminars, at their own expense. They both worked two jobs just to put food on the table. Their success has been remarkable and now we hear that they have been made to shut down due to government cuts. They have helped everyone who came to them and are true humanitarians. They now stand to lose everything and I think it is criminal.
Here’s what they say:
‘Por otro lado, a los tres días de no tener niños, los caballos, las cabras y los tocinos se negaron a comer, ya que les faltaban las caricias y besos de los niños y los hemos tenido que regalar, para evitar que se murieran...’
Another charity that started with nothing but good will, I will mention in brief at the moment and go into further detail at a later time, is Mensajeros de la Paz, started and run by Padre Angel, Whom I found very similar to Mother Teresa. He started taking in street kids and now has a world wide operation helping everyone from the elderly to young girls giving them training and jobs to get them out of drugs, neglect, abuse and prostitution. His charity is enormous and covers the globe, as does he. He never stops and is always on the go checking that his work is being carried out.
HACHICO is a centre to train dogs for the physically disabled and is run in Belgium by a fantastic girl named Caroline. Not only is she fantastic at her job, she came to help ANIMO get started on its dog program and came to give demonstrations in Spain with two of her dogs. She even did a demonstration on the Aeroplane to the delight of the passengers and crew. She had a very hard beginning but is now doing very well and has a very good reputation - I owe her a debt of gratitude for all the help she gave me and the great work she is doing.
I would also like to thank Francisco Limonche from Telefonica in Spain. It was under strange circumstances that we met, in a trade fair, but he never gave up trying to help me and give me contacts in Spain. I would like to thank him for all he did for me and what he is doing around the world to help the disabled.
Thursday, February 16, 2006
Back-Riding
In some cases a helmet is worn but this is not required in back-riding. In Spain a helmet is not required for any riding, however all our students wore helmets unless there was a medical reason not to. For example a shunt that would be damaged by the helmet or pressure on part of the brain so that the Doctor advised not to use one. The boy in this picture has no control of his head and upper torso so the back-rider maintains the proper position and helps him follow the instructions of the physiotherapist gaining maximum benefit from his sessions.
This student was with us for about five years. In this time, his muscle-tone improved greatly as did the working of his digestive system, allowing him to take fewer drugs. His sheer joy while on the horse was well worth it, plus usually after class, we took him on a short ride in the country. At the end of each session, we turned him on his stomach over the horse and walked around for about three minutes to help remove the fluid from his lungs. Depending on the student’s abilities, the lessons can begin with just five minutes and increase as the student develops more stamina and flexibility. Most lessons will last about 45 minutes.
Running a Charity
WHAT IS ANIMO?
ANIMO IS A NATIONAL NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION THAT IS DEDICATED TO PRESENTING ALL TYPES OF ANIMAL ASSISTED THERAPY TO THE DISABLED. ANIMO started almost twenty years ago as an idea I had having worked in this field since I was five years old in Maryland USA, teaching riding and horse-care to the mentally disabled. It was not a new thing at that time, but was nowhere as developed as it is now. ANIMO started here in Mojácar, Spain in 1988. ANIMO and its farm school were also available to the local school children at no charge. Everyone at ANIMO worked for free including the paediatrician and the physiotherapist. ANIMO was operated on my own property with my own animals and my own funding. The reward was in the improvement and happiness in the students. Since all the animals were bottle-fed and raised in my home, we could put many animals together, such as wild boar, pigs, sheep, donkeys etc.. We had a small pen where the animals could be turned loose so that groups of people such as the blind could touch them, smell them, feed them etc.. We had groups come from all over Spain, Germany, France and many others. Almost all of our students were young and very severely physically disabled. We followed the international standards even though they are not required in Spain. I had many people calling for information to start a project similar with no experience of any kind and no knowledge of different disabilities and the contradictions, benefits and dangers. In the geographical area that ANIMO worked, most disabled were not even registered and had no therapy of any kind, in fact, most were just left in the home never to go out. They were (and are) usually cared for by a family member such as the grandmother or aunt. It was very courageous of our students’ parents to try this unheard of method that we were offering. ANIMO consisted of about forty volunteers and as many students. I was lucky that many of my volunteers came from England and had worked with RDA Riding for the Disabled, which has over 700 centres in the UK. One main problem I found with using only volunteers is that it seems to serve a double purpose. Most were elderly, lonely or with problems of their own. I had a real need for young strong volunteers with a basic knowledge of either disabilities, or of animals or preferably both, but there were none. That is where my children and a few of their friends came in. I couldn’t have done it without them, because the horses needed to be trained and exercised we had nine, and we needed good leaders and side-walkers. Every month we had training sessions for the volunteers when they would take turns riding or side-walking and we would introduce any toys or objects that were going to be used in the sessions until it became second nature to the horse, it also let the volunteers get a feel of what the student was feeling and how it helped each specific problem.
I attended courses and seminars all over Europe and we hosted courses twice a year with prominent teachers from all countries. All but one were held at my home and had a technical section and a practical section. The University of Almeria hosted an international conference for us out of which we wrote a book, the only one in existence in Spanish. The book is called Introducción a Hipoterapia y Hípica Adaptada en Niños con Parálisis Cerebral. Unfortunately the book sold out in record time and there is still a big demand for it. I have not been able to get the University to print more copies. We have had a large demand from South America. As soon as I can find a way to get more copies I will post it on this site.
About five years ago, the practical sessions stopped due to lack of funding and adequate volunteers. With all my children off in university and 9 horses and four donkeys to prepare each day it became impossible. It also became too expensive. We still help provide information to legitimate groups that are trying to start up and some have been very successful. My daughter and I give speeches at conferences and information by e-mail or phone. We do not accept any donations, as at this time we have no animals or expenses.
ANIMO started about 20 years before Spain was ready for it, now AAT is becoming very popular and the authorities are starting to make a few regulations however there are still only a handful of centres that know really what they are doing in all aspects of AAT especially hippotherapy. Because the family unit is so strong in Spain the idea of volunteers was a novelty especially in more uneducated areas. The family unit sticks together and it is only now that the children are going away to university or work. So now is a much better time to get started. We still have most of our small animals, such as guinea pigs, rabbits and birds etc. I am now working on a few projects that I am very excited about and I will inform you as they progress. Even though I have never felt like a ‘second rate-citizen’ here and have been well accepted, I have found that it is much harder for a non-Spaniard to get funding. A few times I have turned in projects with great enthusiasm from the authorities, given land and grants only to find a little later that someone else took the land and grants and never even started the project, especially as they had no understanding of it.
Thursday, February 09, 2006
Experience
TWO CASE STUDIES
A man with cerebral palsy came from a very poor family who had no understanding of his disorder; as a result he grew in the form of the foetal position. Had he received any sort of therapy as a child he would be able to walk and lead a fairly normal life, doubly tragic, as he is very intelligent. He was with ANIMO for about 8 years during which time he made tremendous improvement. But the interesting thing about this case is that from time to time while riding a horse named Sorca, the leader noticed that the horse would put its ears back and stiffen its muscles - and seem generally uncomfortable. We had no idea what brought over the change, after a fairly long period of time we noticed that shortly after the horse’s reaction the man would go into spasms. In time the student learned to read the horse’s signals and was able to relax and in most cases stop the spasm.
A four year old that walked on tiptoes due to short tendons was due for an operation to cut the tendons. We decided to try a new approach. We had a very short but wide and strong pony. He would ride standing up with two side walkers providing extra support, bareback and barefooted, he would ‘walk’ on the pony’s back while at the walk. After only two sessions he was able to walk with his heals on the floor. It still took more work for him to be able to walk normally but it saved him an operation.
Monday, February 06, 2006
Therapeutic Riding
In hippotherapy, unlike the other forms of therapeutic riding, the rider never learns to ride or indeed ever takes control of the horse. The horse emulates the walking movement of the human gait and sends this message to the appropriate part of the rider’s brain so it is clearly important to have a horse with a good stride and in balance. The horse must also be calm and prepared for unusual noises and movements that the disabled person is likely to make. The preparation and exercise of the horse is one of the most important parts of any therapeutic riding whether it be sport or hippotherapy. Everything that will be done during a class must be practiced by the volunteers first, and practiced many times, until the horse is used to the movements and the objects used for the class such as toys, balls, rings and cups.
Before any type of therapeutic riding begins it is important to have a Doctor’s certificate to make sure there are no contraindications. The staff must be well prepared and have regular training sessions which help to prepare the horse as well. The equipment must be clean and sterilized as most disabled people are much more prone to infection. The sessions are usually boring to the horse as it is led around in circles and figure-eights with a leader and side-walkers and will stop at a stand for long periods. Therefore a good ride in the countryside or a good work-out prior to the session is very important so that the horse is calm.
Exercises include things such as reaching for the ears, lying down either frontwards or backwards in different positions depending on the desired effect, and face down hanging over the horse, which is used at the end of almost every lesson to help clear the lungs of the fluid which accumulates in people wheelchair bound.
Therapeutic riding has been practiced since the end if the First World War when it was used to help rehabilitate amputees. Many disabled people have gone on to competitions and even the Olympics. RDA (Riding for the Disabled Association) is the most common type of therapeutic riding and is practiced all over the world and almost anyone can participate and achieve great benefits. If you are interested in RDA, the Diamond Centre in England is the main centre for training courses. For information on worldwide therapeutic riding centres the FRDI in Australia (www.frdi.net) has a complete listing of all qualified centres and NARAH in the USA offers university and private course in all of the aspects of therapeutic riding including hippotherapy. Therapeutic riding is relatively new in Spain but is becoming increasingly popular, but please check with an official association, either national or international, before participating because there are a lot of cowboys out there who can do a lot of damage.
ANIMO ran in Southern Spain for fourteen years with no charge to students and offered international conferences and courses. All staff including the doctor and physiotherapist plus 40 some odd volunteers worked free of charge. We were financed by fund-raisers and support from The Entertainer Newspaper. Animo started way before its time and has now had to stop practical operations due to lack of funding and official support, but still continues to give courses and information to groups trying to set up.
Barbara Napier, President of ANIMO
Animal Assisted Therapy. Notes on Dogs
Hearing Dogs. They go to sound and return to owner over and over, whether a fire alarm, phone, door bell, baby crying, car honking. In an emergency, they lie at your feet and don’t move to let you know you have to leave the building. They can alert you to things like the kettle boiling, the timer or the alarm clock. All Hearing Dogs are taken from the dog pound put through two weeks training; if they are suitable they continue in the course: if not they are returned to pound. Hearing Dogs are always trained in a Hearing Dog centre.
Seizure Dogs (for epileptics). Incredibly, they can tell up to 20 minutes before a seizure and they alert their companion to go inside, where they can take medication, or to put guard in their mouth, or to lie down, as appropriate. The dog stays with their companion until help comes or the seizure ends. There are two theories on this, that the dog sees an aura change or he smells a chemical imbalance. No one knows.
Hearing Dogs and Seizure Dogs are still only found in the USA.
Seeing Eye Dogs (for The Blind). The dog guides the blind, alerts them to dangers and situations, helps them navigate and is their companion. In Spain, the dogs are trained and bred on site. In USA, dogs go to a foster home for the first year. The foster parent must attend classes every week. There are many rules for the training of a Seeing Eye dog, such as they can’t chase Frisbees or balls or so on.
Assistance Dogs. These dogs understand a large vocabulary and do every thing from helping a person to walk by giving impulsion and balance, to doing the shopping. In home-care, the dogs learn to recognise alarm sounds for medical equipment and to pick up the phone (in the USA, the phones will automatically connect to the emergency services if several numbers are pushed simultaneously) and to bark until police arrive. This telephone system is not in place as yet in Spain but Telefonica is working on it. Assistance Dogs pick up things, help remove clothes, carry items – all with their mouth. A notable example being Susan Duncan’s Joey.
All working dogs wear a jacket or harness to identify the work they are doing. They soon learn, as must the public, that the dog may not be played with or distracted during this time. When the jacket is off, the dog knows it is ‘free time’.
It must always be said in any presentation about the animal - what ever it is - horse or dog - that you are ‘incorporating it in your work’ not ‘using’. The word ‘using’ might suggest ‘abusing’! In England, dogs are not allowed to pull wheelchair etc. although in other countries they are.
Animals have no prejudice. It is beneficial for a disabled person to care for a living being - instead of feeling that they are always being on the receiving end. Other benefits include the fact that you can talk to them and tell them your problems and they are not judgmental. Touching the fur of a rabbit or a cat has been proven beneficial for arthritis and other muscular disorders.
After training, all dogs must go through a ‘getting acquainted time’ to see if the pair connect and if the person can control the dog. Then, once a match has been made, they must go to a retraining course every year. The dogs must be well behaved because they go to public places and must be kept pest-free and clean.
Choosing a puppy for certain tasks. There are a series of tests all potential candidates must go through to see if they will be suitable for the job. I shall come back to this later.