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Discovery

The guiding hound

Discovery

BBC

Science

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 20 December 2021

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Dogs and humans have gone paw in hand for thousands of years. Historic and genetic evidence shows we’ve shaped each other's existence over millennia. But dogs were only first trained as guides for blind people in the UK 90 years ago. What’s the biology behind this extraordinary partnership? Hannah heads to Guide Dogs UK’s training school in Royal Leamington Spa. She meets up with expert Graham Kensett to find out what it takes to make a guide dog from nose to tail, starting from before birth and following the life course through to retirement.

Hannah also meets the delightful Wendy and Wilmott, a German shepherd and a retriever cross. Despite both still growing into their ears, they show her their already extraordinary skill set, from tackling obstacle courses to safely crossing roads. Cool, calm, patient, unflappable: Guide dogs are the astronauts of the canine world. But, as trainer Jenna explains, it’s all in the partnership with the owner, who needs to do plenty of work in terms of training and learning routes to journey in harmony with their furry guide.

Richard Lane has owned guide dogs for over 25 years, and confirms this first hand. He reveals just how he gets to the toothpaste aisle, and tells Adam how at its peak a partnership can navigate London Waterloo station better than some sighted people, even at rush hour. Richard also explains how deeply felt the bond that forms between owner and dog is, and describes the hardest part of guide dog ownership: Letting go at the end.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, let me ask you, son.

0:03.7

Have you heard George's podcast?

0:06.1

Me and Ben Brick are back with a blast.

0:08.1

This time with stories from Africa's past, not too distant, unsolved mysteries, unsung

0:13.7

heroes from untold histories, I'm trying to make sense of the present day.

0:19.5

Join me on this journey, by pressing play.

0:23.8

Have you heard George's podcast, Chapter 4?

0:27.2

Listen on BBC Sound.

0:30.5

Hello and welcome to the curious cases of Rutherford and Fry on Discovery for the BBC.

0:35.6

This is the programme where you send us in the queries, questions and conundrums that

0:40.2

you are curious about, and we will look into them on your behalf using the power of science.

0:45.7

So please do send us your questions, curious cases at bbc.co.uk and on with the show.

0:54.8

We've got two excellent dogs, I'm struggling to decide which one I like more.

1:00.1

And they've got a little paddling ball, lots of treats inside, and they're just having

1:06.0

the best possible day.

1:08.4

And so am I, frankly.

1:12.2

Today's episode is all about dogs.

1:14.5

But not just any dogs, guide dogs, the crem de la crem of the canine world.

1:19.4

Yes, because our question sent into curious cases at bbc.co.uk from listener Christina

1:24.6

is, how do guide dogs know where they're going?

1:27.4

It's not like they're handler whispers in their ear and ask to go to the pharmacy, maybe

1:31.1

to buy some toothpaste, so how does it work?

...

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