Helen & Opal get more good press for Halifax!
Tuesday, September 15th, 2009Filed under: Themes, Blind Visionaries

Quoting The Chronicle-Herald:
When Helen McFadyen got her first Seeing Eye dog a few years ago, she realized quickly there was a need in Halifax for places to exercise the animals. Her five-year-old black Lab, Opal, is extremely well trained and disciplined, but like other dogs she needs a chance to run free, play and sniff around a bit. ”That’s a huge thing, that part of a dog’s life,” Ms. McFadyen, 53, said Monday. “They need the downtime because working dogs, especially guide dogs, have a pretty stressful job. ”They have to do stuff that’s opposed to their natural instinct.” So as the chairwoman of Halifax’s advisory committee for people with disabilities, she started to push three years ago for an enclosed place where people could take their working dogs without worrying about them running away or getting into trouble. ”I thought, wouldn’t it be great if there was a place where I could go and my guide dog could run freely,” she said. Now there is . . . Ms. McFadyen, a divinity student at the Atlantic School of Theology, lives in residence. ”If I were to let Opal off leash, she’d probably decide she wants to go swimming in the Northwest Arm,” she said. “And I don’t think I want her smelling like that.” She said the park cost about $25,000 to build and caused some envy among other dog owners in the city who have been lobbying for off-leash areas. She said she has no problem sharing the space with non-working dogs, as long as they’re behaving. ”There are people who have really wacko dogs out there,” she said. “My dog’s been attacked. We’ve been jumped on by pet dogs.”
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Read the rest of Jeffrey Simpson’s great article
Then…
Read all about Canada’s first Service Dogpark
Read all about Opal-the-dog
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The idea is unique not only in the region but apparently in the country as well.




