Love and help from service dogs

SALISBURY — Everyone had to restrain the natural instinct to pet the dogs at the Scoville Memorial Library on Saturday morning, May 5.

Barbara Hayward and Jeanne Jones from Educated Canines Assisting with Disabilities (ECAD), a nonprofit group in Winchester, brought Honor, a golden retriever puppy (5 months old) and the more experienced black Lab Holly (6 years) to demonstrate how dogs are trained to assist people with disabilities.

It’s a lengthy process. 

Haywood said the dogs, almost from birth, receive a total of 1,500 hours of training over two years before they are ready for placement.

ECAD trains dogs for three distinct situations.

• They are trained to open doors — access doors, refrigerator doors — for people of any age with a disability that limits mobility.

• They are trained specifically to aid children with autism.

• And they are trained to help military veterans with physical and/or psychological disabilities.

Part of the training involves getting the dogs — usually goldens or Labs — to be comfortable with people and human surroundings.

Thus the Home for the Weekend program, in which people may host a trainee dog for a weekend. The only restriction is that the dogs cannot be taken to stores.

It’s fine if the dog borrower has another dog. Or a cat. Or children.

ECAD also runs a summer camp for children that teaches canine training and care.

Jones had Holly perform several functions on command: picking up a water bottle, dropped keys and a telephone.

“Reach,” she said to the imperturbable Holly. “In the basket.” Holly dropped the phone in a small wicker basket. Then she got a treat.

Then it was time for petting the dogs, who wear a sort of harness called a “cape.”

On the cape are warnings against petting the dog while it’s at work.

But once the cape is off, they are just dogs.

Honor immediately flopped on his back and allowed a group of youngsters to rub his belly. It was hard to tell who was enjoying it more.

Service dogs are not cheap. Hayward said the client is asked to come up with $25,000. 

But since the training period is two years, there is time to raise the money — and ECAD helps with that.

For more information on ECAD’s programs, go to www.ecad1.org or call 860-489-6550.

 

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