Sunday, October 3, 2010

Who's Got The Treat?

I mentioned that River transfers well. I imagine that most well trained dogs can do this at least to some extent, depending on the behaviors being requested. It has been very handy for us in a variety of visiting situations.

I hand one or a few treats to Speaker and tell him to "Watch Speaker" while pointing to him. He knows to listen to them and mostly does, at least until the treats are gone. I mentioned that Speaker like to have River "Speak!" I don't always give him the treat - sometimes he doesn't like to get his hands messy. But he can give the signal, pointing at River - and I also give it, standing behind him. River usually responds to him, but sometimes needs reinforcement. River seems to know when the person is confident or not. Sometimes he does try to take advantage of this and get treats before finishing a trick and I have to remind him to behave. I guess it's double handling, but needed in some situations.

We also have been visiting at Acadia Neurological Rehab facility. We regularly visit one 50ish man there who has had a traumatic brain injury and we have also filled in for other teams a few times in a group therapy situation.

The gentleman we'll call Ump, has a fondness for baseball as well as dogs. Because of privacy concerns, we usually don't get any background info,so we learn as we go. Our visits with him are more typical of Animal Assisted Activity, because we do a lot of general visiting, conversations about the dog. His therapist does use our visits as a topic of conversation at other times and does try to have him review and see what he recalls. Details like our names, breed of dog, River's age we touch on each week as Ump as memory issues. She also reviews with him some of River's tricks and the commands and hand signals that we use with each.

Usually we chat and visit first for a bit. River is always excited to be there. He waits a bit anxiously in the waiting area, listening for any voices and footsteps as people pass in the hall. I'd like to say he recognizes the therapist and client we visit, but actually, he is eager to greet anyone who acknowledges him.

We try to do just visiting first, because once the treats are out, River focuses on them and doesn't just "visit". After some chatting we usually ask if Ump would like to see some tricks or do some tricks with River - and he always says yes.

Often we (Amanda or I) demonstrate his tricks, using verbal and hand signals and rewarding with treats. Then, with encouragement, Ump will try a few tricks. The interesting part is, we are never quite sure what trick Ump will ask for and he usually confuses the hand signals. Fortunately, River usually responds reliably. He seems to favor hand signals over verbal. River is well trained enough that I am not concerned about him getting confused by Ump's crossed signals, especially since we are not participating in competitions where it might matter. As an example, sometimes Ump decides to walk and seems to want River to heel, but he doesn't necessarily start with River in heel position or even on his left side or use the command we do. Still, River improvises, walking along with him and usually getting on his left during a turn and usually sitting when he stops, although Ump usually seems to think that requires a command. I guess we could try to get them lined up to start and remind him of those details, but they both seem to enjoy it they way they are doing it now.

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