“He was very scared, [the dogs] had never been out of that barn,” George
recalled, adding that Smiley quickly bonded with another one of his
dogs, a deaf Great Dane named Tyler.
“Tyler was so bouncy and crazy and happy go lucky and [Smiley] turned
into the same dog,” George said. “He came out from underneath the tables
where he was always hiding.”
George said seeing Smiley interact with crowds made her realize he would
be a perfect therapy dog.
She now takes the dogs to hospitals and schools in the area and says the dog almost always brightens people’s days. She said at one nursing home, she realized how even a small visit with Smiley could make people happy. “There was this man Teddy, [he had] no speech, no communication at all,” George said of one memorable nursing home resident. “[The staff] had never seen Teddy smile before.” But once Smiley came up to Teddy, George said the staff were amazed.
“[Teddy] smiled when Smiley got into his vision,” George
said.
She says that after caring for Smiley for 10 years, she has learned a
lot about how to care for blind dogs.
“Somebody through St. John’s Ambulance is wanting to adopt a dog that’s
blind,” George said. “I told her all those things don’t be his eyes,
don’t run his life, don’t keep him in a bubble.”
She said it's key for Smiley to figure out how to get around on his own.
George said Smiley is mostly able to get around on his own without too
much difficulty.
She now takes the dogs to hospitals and schools in the area and says the dog almost always brightens people’s days. She said at one nursing home, she realized how even a small visit with Smiley could make people happy. “There was this man Teddy, [he had] no speech, no communication at all,” George said of one memorable nursing home resident. “[The staff] had never seen Teddy smile before.” But once Smiley came up to Teddy, George said the staff were amazed.
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