Today’s Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants will
be presented in Spanish,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Japanese,
Korean, Malay,
Persian, Portuguese,
Russian, Thai
and Spanish.
Welcome, virtuous viewers,
to Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Today
on Part 2 of our program
we’ll further examine
a guide dog school
in Madrid, Spain
operated by the ONCE
Guide Dog Foundation.
The Spanish
National Organization
for the Blind, or ONCE,
was started over 70 years
ago to offer aid and
social services to blind
and otherwise
visually impaired Spaniards.
The Foundation,
which began in 1990,
currently has a staff of 60
and trains approximately
100 guide dogs a year.
Mr. Eloy Aranda,
a guide dog instructor
at the school, is giving us
a tour of its facilities.
Right now we are inside
one of the many sections
of the school;
we are in the dog kennel.
The kennel here is
one of the main areas.
We have to say
that the kennels are
one of the centers
that require the most staff
and attention.
We would like to
highlight that
we try to give the dogs
dignified living conditions
and the best treatment
possible, attending to,
above all,
the specific needs
of every dog.
In every two kennels
there’s an outlet
to a concrete yard, so
each internal kennel has
a capacity for four dogs.
So, we can say that
up to eight dogs gather
in each outdoor yard.
Based on our philosophy
of respect for the dog,
of respect for their habitat
and their way
of communication
and their language, being
able to observe the dogs
relating to their own kind
is fundamental.
We believe that
dogs are animals that
live in groups,
and as such
we must observe them.
Many times
we learn things from them,
a lot of things,
observing them
among their own species,
because
when they deal with us
they have a tendency
to cover certain skills,
certain ways of being.
That’s exactly why
we like to respect
their environment, we
like to respect their space.
The facilities are quite
extensive, so they can be
very calm and relaxed.
Another feature that
the kennel has is that it has
radiant heating wires.
The wires go below
(the floor) and
the dogs won’t be cold.
Although the normal
temperature at which
a dog feels comfortable
is between eight or
10 degrees (Celsius),
we want the dog
to get used to the
temperature at which
they are going to later
coexist with humans like,
20 or 22 degrees (Celsius).
In this way
the dog gets used to it
and has less of a change
to their fur coat
if there is a change
from a cold site
to a warmer place.
The Foundation’s
dedicated staff
works round the clock
to ensure the guide dogs’
welfare and safety.
There are personnel here
24 hours a day, precisely
so as to avoid dogs
having anxiety; they are
calm and well cared for.
Then, staff is here
from seven in the morning
to 10:00 pm, and then
there is one shift at night,
which is in charge
from 10 pm to seven am
when the main shift begins,
so the dogs are monitored
24 hours a day.
We believe that
by giving more attention
to the dogs,
the dogs in exchange
will give you much more.
How about play time
outside?
These guide dogs-to-be
have plenty of opportunities
to experience sunshine
and fresh air.
Here we have each wing
that consists
of 10 kennels and
is intended for training.
In each interior park
there’s four dogs, but
every two internal kennels
has access to an outdoor
park, so that the dogs
when they are in here,
they are not locked
in a kennel,
they are doing exercise.
Besides this, we have
earthen-ground parks too.
There are triangular parks
in between every block
and it makes better use
of the land,
since it is a more
natural environment
for the dog, and above all,
it prevents their toes
from chapping.
The firm cement
is not convenient for them
to be standing on
for too many hours;
it’s too static; they can
get their paws chapped.
Here on the ground, they
can exercise much more,
they can run and
with this wide open space.
They can have
the feeling of freedom.
We never tie up the dogs,
they are always loose;
no leashes and no collars.
Oh, very good.
In the morning,
before leaving to work
in Madrid we let them
go run and do exercise,
because later when we
arrive to the work areas,
our mission is that during
the 40 or 45 minutes
that we have for the dog,
the dog demonstrates
fewer signs
of excitability,
so all that excess energy,
especially physical,
has already worked out
through the exercise
that they do early
in the morning, and when
they arrive to Madrid,
we don’t need
five or 10 minutes
of work for them
to be able to have
the kind of concentration
that the work requires.
Guide dogs must deal
with many distractions
when leading
their human companions.
How are they prepared
for this demanding task?
Eloy Aranda shows
how the dogs are made to
feel comfortable working
in a variety of settings.
Now what we’re going
to do, basically,
is to teach what
an obstacle path is like,
what the movement is
and sorting out the fixed
solid obstacles, okay?
Initially we, as a general
rule, in all work,
whether the job is to find
an outer curb,
an interior curb,
to find a staircase,
to walk downstairs
or to walk upstairs,
be it an escalator
or normal stairs,
there is one concept
we are most interested in:
to teach the dog
to move in a straight line.
When we return,
we’ll have more
from the ONCE
Guide Dog Foundation
school in Madrid, Spain.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
I like this dog a lot.
She knows
how to make decisions
and to be agreeable.
I like her a lot.
Now I would like to
start thinking
about the person that
she will be paired up with.
Welcome back to
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
as we continue our tour
of the ONCE
Guide Dog Foundation
school in Madrid, Spain.
Eloy Aranda,
guide dog instructor
at the school, now explains
more about one of
the most challenging skills
a guide dog must learn.
It is the most difficult thing
to teach a dog
to walk in a straight line,
whatever the situation is.
Why?
Because there are a
multiple number of stimuli
which are going to
inhibit movement
in a straight line.
The dog will have to keep
going in a straight line,
moving with his user
at least until
one of two things happens:
one, that the user stops
at a point and
decides to turn right, left
or go back and straight,
or two, he gets to a point
in the environment
in which the environment
itself blocks the path,
and then he has to
ask the dog what is
the next path to follow.
That is the concept
we call “straight line.”
On that straight line is
where we start to work
with the curbs, obstacles,
obstructions in the
pavement, and the traffic.
Yesterday
in Part 1 of our program
we met Runa.
How is her
training progressing?
Runa’s lessons
are being carried out
in the street
with real obstacles that
an apprentice dog needs.
When you
walk through the streets
with a walking stick
it’s completely different.
An animal sees, right?
It’s not the same
with a walking stick,
which is just a stick.
It doesn’t see anyone.
They are at a bus shelter.
The guide dog must
locate the bus, which is
not always stationed
in the same place.
The animal is trained
to go right up to the door
of the bus.
In the subway,
each station is different.
Therefore it is the person
who must guide the dog
using his or her sense
of hearing and touch.
The dog distinguishes
doors and spaces
between cars,
and going up stairs.
Very good, very good.
It’s a case of teamwork.
Okay, then
month after month
we would be building up
this work on the street.
Of course on the street
there are many more
stimuli, there is noise,
there is traffic,
there are smells, dogs,
bikes, and there are people
that distract dogs
when they are working.
Then we have to teach
the dog to discriminate,
teach them
that all those things
are not of interest,
depending on
what we want to project.
At times it’s best
for guide dogs to rely on
their own judgment.
Mr. Aranda next
describes such situations.
Finally,
at the end of the training
we are looking for the dog
to develop a concept
that for us is paramount;
that is,
intelligent disobedience.
Intelligent disobedience
is a response from the dog
to respect the environment
instead of
the person’s decision.
It is clear that a user who
is blind or barely sighted
may make a mistake in
giving a spacial command
to the dog
in the environment,
and the dog will have to
first obey the conditions
of the environment over
obedience to the person.
Here we go,
let’s continue…
I will make her
go to the obstacles
and we will see if
she is able to discriminate
between what I ask her
and what is around her.
This is what we were
talking about before,
intelligent disobedience.
Runa’s instruction
continues.
One of the gauges
used to measure
learning progress
is the intelligent
disobedience test.
Here the dog
is to ignore a command
to move forward when
an unexpected car appears.
Very good, very good.
What’s the hallmark
of a guide dog
that can lead his or her
human companion
in an appropriate manner?
We look for a dog
that is confident, especially
we must have control
over the speed he goes,
the pace he goes
and the tension.
It is most important
that the tension between
the body of the dog and
our hand is not too loose,
but the dog wants to pull,
the dog has to pull
because he knows,
he is conscious,
he has to guide me.
Now we are going to
let her go on
her own initiative,
without telling her
anything else.
We’d like to express
our sincere thanks
to Mr. Eloy Aranda for
giving us an in-depth tour
of the ONCE
Guide Dog Foundation
school.
The Foundation’s
hard-working staff
and guide dogs are truly
special and wonderful.
We wish the Foundation
all the best
in reaching more
of Spain’s blind and
visually impaired citizens
in years to come.
For more details
on the ONCE
Guide Dog Foundation,
please visit
Thank you for joining us
on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Up next is Enlightening
Entertainment
after Noteworthy News.
May Divine Providence
always guide you.
Fowl Play,
a documentary by
Mercy for Animals,
shows the lives of hens in
egg production facilities.
You’ll discover that
it is an existence that
no being should
ever have to endure,
even for a second.
How can you not take
an active role to stop this?
This has to stop!
It’s not okay,
any rational human being
that saw this would agree
this is not okay.
We invite you to watch
“Fowl Play –
An Award-Winning
Documentary by
Mercy for Animals,”
this Tuesday, January 12
on Stop Animal Cruelty.