Welcome, gentle viewers, 
to Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Throughout history, 
dogs have shown 
their noble qualities 
and worked miracles 
by risking their lives 
to save humans 
out of unconditional love. 
The acute sense of smell, 
swiftness and agility 
of dogs trained for search 
and rescue work can 
often make the difference 
between life and death 
for lost or injured 
humans.
In his book “Wilderness 
Search and Rescue,” 
former US 
park superintendent 
Tim Setnicka states, 
“One trained search dog 
can patrol a track 
in six hours that would 
take 106 workers 
370 man-hours to comb 
with the same probability 
of detection.” 
On today’s program 
we feature the benevolent, 
selfless work of 
the non-profit, canine 
search-and-rescue group 
Los Angeles Search Dogs 
based in Southern 
California, USA. 
Los Angeles Search Dogs 
primarily supports 
the Los Angeles County 
Sheriff’s Department, 
local fire departments 
and other 
law enforcement agencies 
in Southern California, 
as well as the 
California State Office 
of Emergency Services. 
The organization’s 
free services include 
finding missing hikers, 
lost children, 
injured persons 
and disaster victims 
24 hours a day, 
seven days a week, 
365 days a year.
Please tell us a little bit 
about the history 
of the organization.
This organization was 
founded in 1985, 
so it’s been around 
for almost 25 years now. 
(It) started as a 
very small group of folks, 
three or four people, 
who were all very much 
involved in search 
and rescue and wanted to 
take it to another level 
with the dogs. 
Back in the time 
that this started, 
there wasn’t a whole lot 
of training guidelines. 
There wasn’t really 
a whole lot of 
understanding about how 
the dogs could work and 
getting them to work. 
But most of the folks 
had had some experience 
with dogs in general, 
so they started to develop 
these guidelines, 
figuring out ways to 
train dogs to be able to 
perform specific tasks 
like cadaver 
as well as trailing. 
And those were 
the main disciplines that 
they started with. 
The human members of 
Los Angeles Search Dogs 
are busy people who 
work full-time jobs 
besides performing 
their duties 
with the organization. 
The members pay for 
all search-related costs 
including those for 
equipment, supplies, 
fuel for vehicles 
and veterinary care 
for the dogs. 
We generally get about 
80 to 90 callouts a year,
and we’re an all 
volunteer organization, 
so none of us get paid 
to do any of this. 
We all do it because 
we love working with our 
dogs and it’s a great way 
to give back 
to the community. 
I’ve only been doing this 
maybe about 10 years. 
We have other people 
who (have) been 
around (for) maybe 
just a couple of years. 
So it takes a lot of time, 
takes a lot commitment.
So how do you get 
new members to 
come into your group?
A lot of times
they come from other 
search-and-rescue 
groups and they know 
we exist and they start to 
get interested in maybe 
the canine aspect of it. 
Others are (from) 
police agencies; some 
people get interested and 
they don’t necessarily 
want to do patrol canine, 
which is a whole different 
deal than what we do. 
We really don’t 
do criminal (searches). 
Sometimes cases 
turn into that but initially 
we don’t deal with that. 
Fire department 
personnel sometimes 
get interested and 
come over and learn 
to train their dogs. 
And that provides 
another dog in the field. 
Others are volunteers 
just like myself that 
get interested, 
come on board, 
start training, and get 
their dogs out in the field.
The searches that 
the team conducts vary 
greatly with regard to 
nature and setting.
We worked a train wreck 
that happened 
about a year ago 
in Chatsworth (USA). 
That was very difficult, 
very challenging, 
just due to the nature 
of the accident itself 
and the environment. 
Some of the other things 
are more 
wilderness-related; 
there was the fires 
up in Sylmar (USA) 
the recent fires
that we’ve had. 
What are some skills 
that humans and canines 
must possess in order to 
carry out effective 
search-and-rescue 
operations?
First of all, you have to 
learn mapping, compass 
and GPS (Global 
Positioning System). 
You have to know
the gridding of an area
and you also have to do 
scent theory; 
you have to do first aid. 
The dog has to 
go through all 
the socialization skills. 
He has to learn how to 
climb the rocks, do a lot 
of that agility stuff. 
Just basic obedience, 
for instance, can take 
a little bit of time, 
depending on the dog. 
If you’re new, 
for instance, you have 
a lot of things that you 
need to do in order to 
get yourself up
certifications that 
you have to do, and 
you’re training your dog 
at the same time. 
So that can take you 
maybe two to three years 
to do all of that. 
But once you get up on 
the curb and you become 
a mission-ready handler, 
it should take you
no more than eight months 
to a year to get a dog up 
and actually on the curb 
and out and working.
When we return, 
we’ll have more about 
Los Angeles Search Dogs 
and its fine work. 
Please stay tuned to 
Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back to 
Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants and 
our program featuring 
Los Angeles Search Dogs, 
an ever-ready 
search-and-rescue group 
that serves the residents 
of Southern California, 
USA.
(We) just would like to 
do a brief introduction 
of the team and the dogs. 
Over here we have Jerry. 
He is actually one of 
our founding members. 
He was instrumental 
in starting this team back 
in the early 1980s. 
He currently has a hound 
and he does trailing. 
I’m Agneta Cohen and 
I have been with the team 
for eight years, 
and have had two dogs. 
I am looking for 
a new dog now to train, 
so I’m doing support and 
helping the team out.
This is Laila and 
we are a trailing team.
How old is Laila?
Laila is three, 
she’s still a baby.
(I am) Shirley Smith and 
this is Flash Gordon.  
For those of you who 
remember who 
Flash Gordon was, 
(an) early rocketeer, 
and that’s how he got 
his name because he 
rockets back and forth.
He is now 12 years old, 
and he does nothing 
but cadaver now. 
Flash has four finds 
in that area. 
He has a blue eye 
and a brown eye.
Both the canine and 
human members of 
Los Angeles Search Dogs 
spend many hours 
on the job, so 
the work requires great 
passion and dedication.
And how much time 
do you devote to 
this organization, 
say, every week 
or every month?
It’s actually quite a bit 
because I also sit 
on the board 
as the vice president 
so that does take 
a lot of time. 
And with the trainings 
as well with search 
callouts, it turns out 
to be quite a bit a time. 
Over the year I probably 
drive maybe six to seven 
thousand miles 
 in my vehicle, 
personal miles, 
just going to searches 
and trainings. 
Time-wise, my goodness, 
I mean it’s probably
a few thousand hours
a year. 
I think, most volunteers 
with the Sheriff’s 
department, it takes 
several years just to get 
500 or a 1,000 hours 
of volunteer time. 
Well, most of 
the members of this team, 
when you join
this organization, 
you generally clear that 
within almost two years. 
Most people who 
volunteer at stations 
and things like that, 
takes five, six years, 
seven years for them 
to reach that. 
So that kind of gives you 
an idea of how much time 
and dedication 
it really takes.
All types and breeds of 
dogs can participate 
in search and rescue, 
but selecting dogs 
from the start that 
have a natural talent 
for searching generally 
shortens training time.
We usually use 
the working dogs like 
Border Collies, 
Labradors, Bloodhounds 
and so forth. 
Those are basically 
the dogs we use, but 
there can also be mutts 
that can be trained 
to anything. 
It just depends (on)
their drive. 
Dogs are trained in 
particular search specialties 
such as trailing, 
area search and cadaver. 
Two olfactory skills 
are employed in canine 
search and rescue – 
trailing and air scenting. 
A trailing dog follows 
the residual scent 
left on the ground 
as a missing person 
walks around an area.
A trailing dog 
is a certain type of dog. 
They’re trained to take 
an object, which we call 
a “scent article,” which 
could be your shoe, 
could be a toothbrush, 
could be a pen that 
you’ve handled, 
your watch for instance, 
whatever. 
She’ll take a scent 
off that by sniffing it, 
and then she’ll follow 
that trail that you walked.
Area dogs identify 
human scents within 
a space and can follow 
a scent in the air 
emanating from 
a lost or missing person.
We use them especially 
in the wilderness area, 
like this huge park here. 
Somebody can be lost 
and they can be 
in the brush and so forth, 
where the trailing dogs 
have difficulty to get in. 
They may find the trail 
up to the end of here and 
then they lose the trail, 
and we deploy 
the area dogs. 
When the dog has
any human scent, 
we can tell 
in their body language. 
There is something, 
the dog will take off, 
find the person, 
come back to us and 
do their specific trained 
alert, and then bring us 
back to the person.
If we have 
a missing person 
and we know that 
the missing person is 
unfortunately deceased, 
we then deploy 
the cadaver dog so that 
we can find 
that individual and bring 
closure to the family.
The circumstances of 
some missions require 
a combination 
of these skills. 
Some of our dogs 
are cross-trained. 
After they’ve been 
trained in either trailing 
or area, they can 
cross-train in the cadaver. 
But they first have to be 
certified in either of 
the other two disciplines. 
We thank the human 
and canine members 
of the Los Angeles 
Search Dogs for helping 
to locate missing and 
lost persons 
in Southern California. 
Their noble, selfless 
efforts on behalf of 
others deserve 
our highest praise.
For more details on 
the Los Angeles 
Search Dogs, please visit 
Distinguished viewers, 
thank you for your 
company today 
on Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants. 
Please join us again 
tomorrow for Part 2 of 
our program featuring the 
compassionate work of 
Los Angeles Search Dogs. 
May Heaven grace 
all beings 
with infinite blessings. 
What ingredients 
are really important 
for healthy and 
beautiful skin and hair?
Pretty much everything 
we need is 
in the plant kingdom, 
all the microbial kingdom. 
What differences 
do people see when 
they use vegan organic 
skincare products?
They’re biggest, change 
that we have seen 
in people’s skin, 
in reducing eczema 
and that sort of thing 
has been from a switch 
from a chemical 
to an organic product.
Trevor Steyn 
of South Africa, 
the vegan founder 
and owner of 
Esse Organic Skincare 
and African Organics, 
shares the secrets of 
healthy and vibrant skin 
on “Esse Organic SkinCare – 
Vegan Beauty,” 
this coming Monday, 
January 18 
on Healthy Living.
Welcome, kind viewers, 
to Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants. 
 Throughout history, 
dogs have shown 
their noble qualities 
and worked miracles 
by risking their lives 
to save humans 
out of unconditional love. 
The acute sense of smell, 
swiftness and agility 
of dogs trained for search
-and-rescue work can 
often make the difference 
between life and death 
for lost or injured 
humans.
According to 
research studies, 
a dog’s sense of smell 
is at least 44 times 
more acute than that 
of a human. 
Depending on their size, 
canines possess 
between 125-million 
and220-million 
scent receptor cells. 
By contrast, humans 
only have about 
five-million such cells. 
This abundance of 
smell receptors enables 
dogs to find microscopic 
scent particles even 
in extremely challenging 
environments 
such as disaster areas. 
Today, we’ll present 
the second and final part 
of our series 
on a special canine 
search-and-rescue team 
called 
Los Angeles Search Dogs. 
Los Angeles Search Dogs 
primarily supports 
the Los Angeles County 
Sheriff’s Department, 
local fire departments 
and other 
law enforcement agencies 
in Southern California, 
as well as the 
California State Office 
of Emergency Services. 
The organization’s 
free services include 
finding missing hikers, 
lost children, 
injured persons 
and disaster victims 
24 hours a day, 
seven days a week, 
365 days a year.
What specific scent 
enables a canine to 
track a missing person? 
Humans continually shed 
dead skin cells to form 
groupings called “rafts.”  
Heavier rafts such as 
flakes of dandruff 
fall near the body, 
but lighter ones 
float in the air. 
We shed rafts while 
sitting, standing, 
sleeping and walking. 
Dead skin just sheds 
off of us, constantly. 
It comes up from 
our hair, comes down 
through our pants. 
Then skin goes through 
the putrefaction process.
In other words, it starts 
to deteriorate 
based on the bacteria 
that are on that skin raft. 
And that process is 
where you get scent. 
The process is interrupted 
on hot, sunny days as 
the Sun’s ultraviolet rays 
neutralize the bacteria.
So that means 
your scent’s not going to 
be very strong, 
and with the heat, 
that’s going to tend to 
raise that scent up. 
So that’s a difficult 
condition at best. 
In a cooler, more damp 
setting that has more 
greenery around it, that’s 
a much better setting 
because that allows 
the bacteria to thrive 
and feed on that skin raft 
which produces 
more scent. 
So that’s basically 
what they’re following.
The wind and 
the weather factors into 
how the dog is scenting, 
and the scent can (be) 
blown off far away, 
it can be laying down, 
or it can go straight up. 
Heat causes scent to rise, 
so he may not find 
anything 
if we do it at 12 noon. 
So you also have to 
think about the weather 
when you do searches. 
So the best time to search 
is really early 
in the morning and 
late in the evening.
Just following 
a search dog is not 
all that’s necessary in 
finding a missing person. 
Precise understanding 
of canine body language 
is also essential 
to a successful search.
So, it’s very important 
that you know how to 
read your dog too. 
That is one of the most 
important things, 
his body language. 
There he had the head 
turn. 
And there we go, 
he found it.  
It’s either the ears are up, 
or the neck is stretching, 
or the little head turn, 
or just a little twitching 
of the nose, that you need 
to learn about your dog. 
See the dog looked up 
in the tree sometimes 
because the scent goes up, 
and gets stuck 
in the leaves. 
So you have to be aware 
of all this scent theory 
too. 
Search dogs should be 
able to climb, balance, 
jump and swim and 
be adequately trained 
in their specialty. 
Ms. Cohen now gives an 
example of the training 
used with area dogs.
So I’m going to tell you 
how we train 
the area dogs. 
What they are looking for 
is any human scent 
that is out there; they are 
not scent specific. 
So all of us have 
a different scent, but 
some are specific to us, 
so the dogs know that 
there is a human 
out there. 
We teach them to run 
after a person who hides, 
and then we’ll call them 
back, and we develop 
an alert, either a bark 
or a sit or a lay-down 
in front of you, 
meaning that they have 
found a person. 
Then we tell them, 
“Show me,” 
and they take us back 
to the person. 
That is what 
the area dogs do. 
The dogs love to search 
and are well rewarded 
with toys or food 
for finding a given article 
or person.
Shirley and Flash 
are going to do 
tree cadaver problems. 
We have placed three 
training aids out there. 
So she has deployed 
her dog 
on the cadaver command. 
Now he’s looking for it. 
He’s going to let you know 
when he has found it. 
His alert is a bark. 
He comes back 
to her and barks, and 
then brings her back to 
where the training aid is. 
Now the dog has found 
the aid in the tree, 
and he went back to her, 
and let her know
where it’s at. 
They give him the reward 
for finding the training aid. 
So now 
she is rewarding him.
They love it. 
It’s a game for them, 
it’s totally a game. 
That’s why I like it. 
I couldn’t imagine 
doing anything else. 
I love it. 
So I can’t wait 
for my next dog.
When we return, 
we’ll learn more about 
Los Angeles Search Dogs 
and its important work. 
Please stay tuned to 
Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back to 
Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants and 
our program featuring 
Los Angeles Search Dogs, 
an ever-ready 
search-and-rescue group 
that serves the residents 
of Southern California, 
USA.
Hi, I’m Dawn Brady. 
This is my dog Keller. 
Keller is trained 
in area and cadaver. 
She’s relatively new 
to the team. 
She’s very high drive. 
What she does is mostly 
wilderness searches. 
So she’s looking for 
any human scent. 
Good job, good job.
Hi, I’m Bob Veeck. 
This is my dog Hilly. 
Hilly is a trailing dog. 
She’s three years old, 
and (has) been certified 
about a year now. 
My name is Larry Cude. 
I handle usually the 
radio communications 
and anything 
dealing with paperwork. 
This is my new dog, 
Casey. 
He’s about 10 months old, 
and curious. 
Larry handles all of our 
base camp operations, 
generally at searches 
and things like that, 
organizing the teams and 
getting the teams out 
into the field, making sure 
that they have 
all the right equipment 
when they do go out 
into the field, 
so (that) they’re safe. 
So it’s 
a pretty important role. 
Now let’s look at 
an essential piece 
of equipment 
for trailing dogs.
This is a typical harness 
we use for trailing. 
It just goes over 
their back and then 
we hook to that and then 
it keeps the leash 
off of their neck because 
that’s a huge deal. 
If you take their neck 
away from them, 
they can’t freely search 
for scents because you’re 
tugging on their neck. 
So this puts it way down 
further on their back 
and allows them
 to do their job. 
Now this little pad, 
that’s a scent article. 
So you can see 
it doesn’t take much.
Search dogs and 
their human partners 
have to pass several 
rigorous tests 
before being allowed 
to participate in 
search-and-rescue 
operations. 
Agneta Cohen explains 
the Mission Ready test 
for the three specialty 
areas.
We have a test that 
they have to take, 
what we call 
“Mission Ready.” 
For a cadaver test, 
they have to find 
in a one-acre area
a buried training aid, 
about 15 inches down,
that has been sitting 
there for an hour at least. 
So they have one hour 
to find that aid. 
If they don’t pass, 
they have to try it again. 
That is pretty deep; 
it’s just a small source. 
So it’s hard for the dogs, 
because it takes a while 
for scent pool from 
the source to come up 
through the ground. 
For an area dog (the test) 
is a 120-acre area that
you have to find one 
to three persons unknown 
to you within four hours. 
You have to know 
how to read the map, 
use the compass, 
and also look at the dog 
at the same time. 
So you have four hours. 
That’s your initial test. 
And then every two years 
you have to recertify 
the dog with an 
eighty- to ninety-acre test. 
For a trailing dog, 
there are several tests 
that they have to 
go through before 
they even get to 
the mission ready status. 
They have 24-hour, 
48-hour and 96-hour 
trails, and just 
general interaction with 
the rest of the pack 
and people, crowds. 
In addition, 
human team members 
have to take several 
vital courses required 
for certification 
to participate in 
search-and-rescue work.
You have to 
go through things like 
helicopter safety, 
survival training, 
and medical training. 
Some of us are EMTs 
(emergency medical 
technicians); others of us 
are what are called 
“first responders,” 
which is not as intensive 
of training as an EMT. 
All of that kind of stuff 
takes time. 
In recognition of the 
virtuous contributions of 
Los Angeles Search Dogs 
to the safety 
of their community, 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
kindly contributed 
$US 1,000 to the group.
On behalf of the 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
International 
Association, 
I am honored to give 
this check for US$1,000 
to the Los Angeles 
Search Dogs. 
We’re going to 
have each member 
buy something that they 
really need for their dog. 
For example, 
booties or cooling vests, 
because it gets really hot 
here during the summer 
and the dogs 
get overheated easily. 
So cooling vests 
are really important. 
So whoever doesn’t have 
that is free to buy one; 
we give them 
a certain amount, 
and then they can get 
whatever they need 
for their dog 
for their searching. 
So that’s what 
we have planned to do. 
(Wonderful) 
Yes, it’s all going to 
go toward the dogs. 
Agneta Cohen has 
a heartfelt message for 
Supreme Master 
Ching Hai. 
Thank you very much. 
On behalf of 
Los Angeles Search Dogs, 
I really thank you 
for your organization, 
and especially 
Master Ching Hai, 
for the generous donation. 
This will really help us to 
further our searching and 
training with our dogs. 
We really, really 
appreciate it. 
Thank you very much!
We’d like to convey 
our sincere thanks to 
all the members of 
Los Angeles Search Dogs, 
human and canine alike, 
for their noble work 
of rescuing missing and 
lost residents 
of Southern California! 
May Heaven protect 
all the team members 
while on duty and off.
For more information on 
Los Angeles Search Dogs, 
please visit 
Benevolent viewers, 
thank you for joining us 
today on Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants. 
Enlightening 
Entertainment is next 
after Noteworthy News. 
May the guidance 
of Providence 
always be with you. 
Did you know 
kangaroos grieve for
the loss of their beloved 
just as human beings do? 
A female kangaroo 
who had been hit, 
and her partner, 
had his paws on her back 
and was just standing 
there trying to wake her up, 
trying to move her. …
In 2008, more than 
3.6 million kangaroos 
were hunted down 
and brutally murdered 
for their meat and skins.
You hear stories of 
shooters shooting 
the kangaroo, 
breaking their legs 
so they can't move, 
and throwing them 
in the back of the truck 
so they don't die. 
They get to 
the slaughterhouse, 
you know, still alive 
so the meat's fresher….
Please watch 
“Stop Animal Cruelty: 
The Killing of 
Australia’s Icon, 
the Innocent Kangaroos,” 
this Tuesday, January 19 
on Supreme Master 
Television.