His name is Pilot and he got his unique name because as a puppy he was traveling from Oklahoma to the training facilities in Rockwall, Texas and he insisted in flying in the pilot seat so “Pilot” became his name. He is an 80 LBS yellow Labrador Retriever. This blog will be dedicated in entirety to anything involving service dogs including their training and the responsibility of owning one and including his adventures.
Tuesday, August 16, 2016
Adventures of "Pilot" the Service Dog: Becoming a Service Dog Team
Adventures of "Pilot" the Service Dog: Becoming a Service Dog Team: October 2, 2015 was one of the greatest days in my life. That was the day that Pilot and I graduated and we became teammate. So...
Monday, August 15, 2016
Becoming a Service Dog Team
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Pilot working at the Military Exchange in Fort Hood, Texas |
October 2, 2015 was one of the greatest
days in my life. That was the day that Pilot
and I graduated and we became teammate.
So you may ask, who is Pilot? Well,
Pilot is an 80 LBS Yellow Labrador Retriever who happen to be my Service
Dog.
The story goes that Pilot was flown from Oklahoma to Texas in a small plane. He was placed in the rear of the plane while the actual pilot flew the plane. But “Pilot” refused to be in the rear of the plane he kept insisting in climbing in the pilot seat. He did this so many times that eventually “Pilot” became his name. Old habit never died and Pilot still want to be in the front looking at everything and anything he want.
The story goes that Pilot was flown from Oklahoma to Texas in a small plane. He was placed in the rear of the plane while the actual pilot flew the plane. But “Pilot” refused to be in the rear of the plane he kept insisting in climbing in the pilot seat. He did this so many times that eventually “Pilot” became his name. Old habit never died and Pilot still want to be in the front looking at everything and anything he want.
The other issued was depression. Depression was talking a toll on me. To the point that I was obsessed with the
ideal of suicide. My medical provider recommended
that I get a service dog. I found thru a
brochure an agency in Texas, Patriot PAWS Service Dogs, that was willing to
provide me one. Only one catch, the
list was so long that I have to wait and waiting I did. Almost 3 years, and you may ask, why so
long?
Great question, training a service dog is not an easy
task. It takes an average of at
least 2 years and it cost well over $30,000 to train each dog, so volunteers,
prison staff from the Prison Program, corporate and individuals donations is
what make an organization like Patriot PAWS Service Dogs possible.
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Here he is during graduation day and as puppy |
Unfortunately, you there is more veterans
in need of trained dogs than actual dogs and with a veterans’ suicide rate of
22 veterans a day, things are not going to get better. But you can help. You can make tax deductible contribution to
Patriot PAWS Service Dogs or even volunteer.
Learn More about Patriot PAWS Service Dog by going to their website at http://www.patriotpaws.org
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