skylynx
DIS Sponsor in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2003
- Messages
- 1,280
Here is a video of a service dog on a Disney cruise.
Having two golden retrievers of my own, this made my heart smile.
Here is a video of a service dog on a Disney cruise.
Having two golden retrievers of my own, this made my heart smile.
Just want to point out that the latest ADA rules state that a service animal can only be dogs..............therapy and assitance animals can be anything.
The rights that owners of therapy animals have is much more restrictive then service dogs.
Correct, except that Disney ships are registered in the Bahamas, so ADA doesn't apply so they can do whatever they want.
our dog has the remarkable ability to detect when I open the jar of peanut butter to fix some crackers...
I hope they have these dog potties marked with a sign so little kids don't think it's a play area.It depends. Some use pee pads in their staterooms. Some put a patch of grass sod in an inflatable pool on their verandahs. Others have a patch of grass sod in a container on the deck 7 or 8 aft public verandah.
On the Wonder last week we saw a service dog and a sizeable container of grass sod on the deck 7 verandah.
DCL has 2 special cleanings--one is called a deep clean and one is called an allergy cleaning. I don't know the difference. I know only because we had a funky smell in our room one evening. A white uniform was dispatched to the room--they couldn't figure it out but agreed with us that it wasn't from the bathroom. They sprayed some stuff and put an air purifier in the room that night, and told me they would order a "deep cleaning" in the morning.
The next day our stateroom host stopped me to ask whether it was supposed to be a deep clean or an allergy clean.
For a person with allergies to pet dander, I'd suggest that you make DCL aware of your situation and request an allergy clean of your stateroom before entering--whether there was a dog in there or not. You never know what someone had/used in the room that you might react to.
If a dog is "working" (detecting potential problems for his owner), shouldn't it be wearing a service animal vest? As mentioned above, this warns the public that the animal is truly on the job and should not be played with. There has to be a company that makes vests in all sizes.
I hope they have these dog potties marked with a sign so little kids don't think it's a play area.![]()
All very true until enough guests start complaining........
And now that you brought that up,I wonder what are the Bahama laws, if any?
AKK
On the WBTA this past Sep:
[/IMG]![]()
![]()
Here is a video of a service dog on a Disney cruise.
Part 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U67dM_3kePo&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Part 2 - more dog related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4jQHph4hOs&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Looks like Yager had a great cruise.