Sunday, 7 January 2018

Finding An Assistance Dog....

Finding an Assistance Dog

I wanted to share my journey about my Assistance Dog, but how it’s different when you have an unique cat. Some of you may already know about my amazing cat who was recently in the news due to winning an award. She is able to detect my collapse episodes which she has had no training for this. Here is the link to what was written at the time - https://www.cats.org.uk/get-involved/nca/nca-special-recognition



I have been on the list for two and half years for an assistance dog, I applied in June 2015 to Canine Partners for an Assistance Dog, after a long hunt around all the different assistant dog companies. All the others refused me on multiple grounds which luckily Canine Partners oversaw, as they liked a challenge; and saw it as finding a way to create an ability around the disability.
I got invited to their centre for a training day where they would assess if they could meet my needs; rather than agreeing from just off a piece of paper. I don’t want to go into too much detail about it all, I’d rather say about how my assistance dog and my cat have bonded which we thought wouldn’t happen so soon.



Originally I should of gone September/October but I was hospitalised, so it got postponed until mid-November.
After the day at the centre I saw the Dog Occupational Therapist (DOT) who came out to my home, this was to check that the surroundings the dog will live in is habitable. The home, garden, any hazards to myself which could put the dog in danger even like a step with me using a wheelchair; and my cat at current time anything that we could do to make them transition easier.
Together we also had to go to the chosen most used exercise area for the dog, along with a long list of other things.

They then believed they had the ideal dog to my situation and needs, and they had found the dog that would benefit from living with me.
We met for a day for a matching day in November 2017 to see if the dog (Black Labrador x Retriever) would be ok with my cat (chubby and grumpy), and how the dog and myself would connect. This was the turning point.

You spend two and half years on the waiting list, not knowing when you will get the call to be told your potential match has been found; then if that match is good when you meet you get six weeks typically. I got two, from meeting the dog till training to get your head around it.
It’s almost like being pregnant, you wait all your life for your baby; you keep dreaming one day it will happen. It’s the longest pregnancy for an assistance dog you don’t know when the birth will be though, whereas mothers going into labour at least they know the longest will be nine months; maybe a couple days over. I could have had three babies in that time if I was pregnant and just train them to level of an assistance dog, although I’m sure they wouldn’t qualify and wouldn’t be allowed. Although there wouldn’t be any of this problem with businesses saying the dog isn’t allowed when the dog is allowed by law as it’s an assistance dog.


To help my cat settle with the dog more I ended up getting a natural plug in diffuser. I would highly recommend this.
https://www.medicanimal.com/Pet-Remedy-Natural-Diffuser-Plug/p/I9106277?_fp1=ppc&_fp2=277849834&_fp3=1213860958744278&_fp4=I0009879-mauk&utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=F3D+-+MA+-+Shopping+-+Generics+%25255BUK+-+EN%25255D+ACQ-PLA-BHV&utm_term=4579465930408112&utm_content=F3D+-+MA+-+Shopping+-+Dog+-+Dog+Training+%252526+Behaviour+%25255BUK%25255D+ACQ&gclid=CNHBlNjgk9gCFQX7GwodlZUCeQ&gclsrc=ds


The first 48 hours has a strong scent of herbs and oils, but I do have heightened senses so it maybe isn’t as bad. But it actually was a calming smell even to me.
I plugged it in a week before the dog arrived so the cat had some benefit in her system and the house was wells scented for when the dog arrived; although the dog is fine with cats as he displayed brilliantly when I met him, and showed he can touch noses gently with a strange cat on a pathway and didn’t even frighten the cat. 
For the dog and cat it made them be a lot more relaxed, only a small amount of tension on first couple of days. The cat is one to stand her ground if she felt the dog was doing wrong being in her home, so I think the plug in helped to some degree.
I felt my cat needed this especially as she may of felt pushed out from a dog being bought in, due to her being especially close to me as previously mentioned caused by my condition. But I make time to be with both of them at separate times, and then also together at their comfortable distances at the early days; and this seems to work for us and they accept it this way.


Throughout the training we learnt the similar things that all partnerships do, some bits were tailor-made to our partnership and will be throughout ours, but the dogs can pull doors open, undress, do light switches, un/load washing machine, pull shoes off, pick up dropped items, and bring happiness to your life; among so much more.


Once the intense training finished I got an Aftercare worker allocated to us, who will come out to my home to visit my dog and myself to see how we both getting on. At first these visits will be weekly then will slowly get less until there is a couple months in-between. And this will continue for the first year.
The first month or so could be tricky, the dog has been uprooted from all he has ever known, its ‘puppy home’ to now it’s ‘working home’. He has lost all his familiar surroundings/smells and people he has ever known from the ‘puppy home’ and been placed in a ‘working home’ and expected to get on with it. So we are going to have some teething problems. From both sides.
Yes is adorable to have an assistance dog and it will make my life so  much easier and more safe when I go out; but this will be a test to start with; and a time where I could need support from my loved ones too.
So yes the cat and the dog are getting on now, but we have to keep a happy balance every day to check it’s keeping that way due to the uprooted nature; luckily I have the aftercare team on hand if things do erupt.

I will have so much more freedom and independence having an assistance dog, I’m in my 30’s I shouldn’t be reliant on others despite having chronic health conditions. This is 2018 nearly, and yet there isn’t the support out there unless a dog is willing to help as they don’t make the judgment.
So thank you to the wonderful people all involved in my dogs care up to this point and throughout his partnership now. Without them none of this would be possible. For just my partnership alone it costs them £20,000 to train, feed, house, vet bills, insure, toys etc.
And that’s the ones that don’t go missing sadly, there have a been a few rare cases where they have been out training on ‘free runs’ and gone missing with massive searches with no trace.

I have kept this quiet until our partnership is at a good bond rather the day after he arrived home, but no doubt the news travels fast due to training at my door, on my road and in my town; and assistance dogs in my area are uncommon. It’s a shame privacy isn’t a thing anymore, especially when you need it when training up an assistance dog; and needing that time to put your effort and energy into your bond and making sure things are correct.

I have been so honoured to be placed with a dog from Canine Partners and work with them through the training course; just the same as the Cats Protection to know them over the years and the support they have given. I now have a wonderful household which works in harmony.


Those two and half years were well worth waiting for, and that time was spent preparing my cat with reading dog stories too.