Explain? Blind People driving carts?

PatriciaH said:
We saw a service pony in MGM last year! It was as small as a dog and had a handle harness and sneakers on. Awesome.


The little guide horses are absolutely amazing. They're more than a novelty -- they're a very practical option. The average "useful" worklife span for a guide dog is about 10-12 years, but for a guide horse it's 30+. A blind person could have one guide horse for a large part of their life, instead of several dogs. Plus, the horses have an incredible 350 degree field of vision -- basically they can see everything but their own tail.

I tried to talk my dad into getting a horsie, but his wife would have nothing of it. :p No matter -- we can't imagine him not having his guide dog Newley now. :)

Here's some more info on the guide horses, for anyone interested:

http://www.guidehorse.org/


-gina-
 
We trained our own dog to be a service dog for my husband when he needed it . . . he has MS and if he fell, for a while had a VERY hard time standing up on his own. We trained our malamute to help him brace so he could get his legs under him again; we didn't trust strangers to always be helpful, or worse, all it would take is my DH giving someone a good tug so that they fell themselves and we'd be sued. :lmao: Once my DH went on new medication he no longer needed the service, so the dog went back to being a house-pet.
 
Gina said:
The average "useful" worklife span for a guide dog is about 10-12 years, but for a guide horse it's 30+. A blind person could have one guide horse for a large part of their life, instead of several dogs.
Here's some more info on the guide horses, for anyone interested:

http://www.guidehorse.org/


-gina-
Thanks for the link.
I knew a person who was blind and she felt the worst part about using a guide dog was the fairly short useful life span. She and the dog she was using when I knew her were a very good team and she was not looking forward to the time when she would have to get a new dog.
 
Gina said:
The little guide horses are absolutely amazing. They're more than a novelty -- they're a very practical option. The average "useful" worklife span for a guide dog is about 10-12 years, but for a guide horse it's 30+. A blind person could have one guide horse for a large part of their life, instead of several dogs. Plus, the horses have an incredible 350 degree field of vision -- basically they can see everything but their own tail.

I tried to talk my dad into getting a horsie, but his wife would have nothing of it. :p No matter -- we can't imagine him not having his guide dog Newley now. :)

Here's some more info on the guide horses, for anyone interested:

http://www.guidehorse.org/

-gina-

Gina-
Thanks very much for posting that! I had honestly never heard of a guide horse ( :blush: ) but think it is an terrific idea. I had also never given much thought to the facts about a dogs' lifespan so it certainly makes sense. :)
 



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