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craftyhunnypie

A daft question

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according to wiki-answers

 

Some cities exempt guide dog owners and other service dog owners from scooping laws, but most do not. There is no need for an exemption because blind people are just as capable as sighted people in doing most things, including cleaning up after their dogs.

 

A person doesn't have to see poop to pick it up. Like anyone else, a blind person knows which end of the dog is which, and the dog only toilets on command so they know the when and where of poopology. A hand is inserted in a plastic poop bag like a glove and then the scooper feels around for the warm squooshy stuff, grasps it, and turns the bag inside out. It's exactly the same for a sighted person who walks their dog at night and must scoop in the dark.

 

urgh!

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I work with a blind chap and we have to give him directions as to where it is in the pen eg. top left, bottom right! I never thought to ask him what he normally does. Maybe the dog sits near it. I know him well enough to ask but I won't be seeing him for a couple of weeks

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Not a daft question at all.

 

I was in London one day, and a blind man realised his dog had done what he needed to and asked me if I would do the honours and handed me a bag. Lots of other people passed him by and ignored him.

 

I stepped in though and helped him out!!

 

He was very grateful.

 

(Would now be interested in hearing other responses to see if he'd taken me for a ride or not!)

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Don't know for sure but aren't they (the dogs) trained to go on command so I guess the person can then estimate fairly accurately where they have gone. It's amazing when you think of it how the visually impaired manage all manner of tasks.

 

I see an old blind man in Chelmsford every morning walking along the street to the bus stop to catch his bus, he then has to ask whoever happens to be around the number of each bus that comes so he can get on the right one. He must feel incredibly vunerable but he copes with it really well.

 

:)

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I stepped in though and helped him out!!

 

He was very grateful.

 

(Would now be interested in hearing other responses to see if he'd taken me for a ride or not!)

 

At least you didn't step in it! :lol:

 

 

I should imagine that he was genuine - it is one thing knowing where your dogs rear end is when at home on the spot where it has been trained to go but completely different when out. The easiest thing to do would be to pretend he didn't even know so to ask someone to clear it up at least showed a public conscience :)

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