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How to behave round a guide dog


When you meet a guide dog leading someone along the street, or anywhere else for that matter, it is important that you remember it is working. You should not distract it, or treat it like a pet, because it might put the person it is looking after in danger. It will also ruin the dog's training, and cause a lot of problems.

Look at what could happen in this picture.

If the dog running free goes up to the guide dog, it could be very dangerous for the blind person. How can the guide dog concentrate on its job if another dog is rushing up to it?

If you take your best friend for walks off the lead, please stop. If you keep it on the lead, please keep it close when you meet a guide dog in harness. Your dog wants to say "hello" in that special doggy way.

Please remember that working guide dogs are really a breed apart. Not because they are superior or smarter, but because they've got a job to do while most pets are on one long holiday.

It is also important that you don't whistle (which will make the dog turn its head - and that is a signal to its owner who can't see, remember) or pat a guide dog while it is working.

If it is wearing a harness, you should not pat it, or feed it, or talk to it, even though it is a lovely dog, and you would really like to. If you talk to the blind owner, and ask them first, they may say it is OK to pat the dog.

But please remember, a dog in harness is at work, and you should not distract it in any way!

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