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11-23-2017 08:58 AM
K9 Duty!
Amazing how dogs can be trained to detect odors.
https://www.wired.com/story/vapor-wake-dogs-thanksgiving-day-parade/
(excerpt from article):
Researchers developed Vapor Wake dog training at Auburn University's College of Veterinary Medicine, in part as a response to Richard Reid's attempted shoe-bombing in 2001. For the last decade or so, Auburn has honed a process to breed and train labs that can detect faint whiffs of explosive particles in the thermal heat plumes humans create as they walk. Combining genetics with rigorous training, the dogs learn to identify different levels of explosive odor, so they can tell the difference between, say, a concealed firearm and multiple pounds of explosives. That level of discernment matters, especially in a situation like the Thanksgiving parade, where the Vapor Wake dogs will need to ignore the weapons law enforcement will be carrying.
11-23-2017 09:05 AM
Dogs truly are “man’s best friend.” They help us in so many ways.
11-23-2017 10:21 AM
Thank you for your post!![]()
Dogs are amazing creatures and so much smarter and more 'in tune' (receptive), than a lot of humans.
11-23-2017 10:48 AM
I love dogs and they are so smart.
i don’t think they are trained to smell things, I think they are trained to let humans now when they smell something that we want to know about and alert us.
My dogs smell everything, I am working in training them to ignore certain smells, but that is not working out so well.
11-23-2017 10:54 AM - edited 11-23-2017 10:56 AM
For those who appreciate all things canine:
Of Dogs and Men
Tuesday, June 10, 2003
The way I see it, dogs had this big meeting, oh, maybe 20,000 years ago. A huge meeting — an international convention with delegates from everywhere. And that's when they decided that humans were the up-and-coming species and dogs were going to throw their lot in with them. The decision was obviously not unanimous. The wolves and dingoes walked out in protest.
Cats had an even more negative reaction. When they heard the news, they called their own meeting — in Paris, of course — to denounce canine subservience to the human hyperpower. (Their manifesto — La Condition Feline — can still be found in provincial bookstores.)
Cats, it must be said, have not done badly. Using guile and seduction, they managed to get humans to feed them, thus preserving their superciliousness without going hungry. A neat trick. Dogs, being guileless, signed and delivered. It was the beginning of a beautiful friendship.
I must admit that I've been slow to warm to dogs. I grew up in a non-pet-friendly home. Dogs do not figure prominently in Jewish-immigrant households. My father was not very high on pets. He wasn't hostile. He just saw them as superfluous, an encumbrance. When the Cossacks are chasing you around Europe, you need to travel light. (This, by the way, is why Europe produced far more Jewish violinists than pianists. Try packing a piano.)
My parents did allow a hint of zoological indulgence. I had a pet turtle. My brother had a parakeet. Both came to unfortunate ends. My turtle fell behind a radiator and was not discovered until too late. And the parakeet, God bless him, flew out a window once, never to be seen again. After such displays of stewardship, we dared not ask for a dog.
My introduction to the wonder of dogs came from my wife Robyn. She's Australian. And Australia, as lovingly recounted in Bill Bryson's In a Sunburned Country, has the craziest, wildest, deadliest, meanest animals on the planet. In a place where every spider and squid can take you down faster than a sucker-punched boxer, you cherish niceness in the animal kingdom. And they don't come nicer than dogs.
Robyn started us off slowly. She got us a border collie, Hugo, when our son was about 6. She knew that would appeal to me because the border collie is the smartest species on the planet. Hugo could 1) play outfield in our backyard baseball games, 2) do flawless front-door sentry duty, and 3) play psychic weatherman, announcing with a wail every coming thunderstorm.
When our son Daniel turned 10, he wanted a dog of his own. I was against it, using arguments borrowed from seminars on nuclear nonproliferation. It was hopeless. One giant "Please, Dad," and I caved completely. Robyn went out to Winchester, Va., found a litter of black Labs and brought home Chester.
Chester is what psychiatrists mean when they talk about unconditional love. Unbridled is more like it. Come into our house, and he was so happy to see you, he would knock you over. (Deliverymen learned to leave things at the front door.)
In some respects — Ph.D. potential, for example — I don't make any great claims for Chester. When I would arrive home, I fully expected to find Hugo reading the newspaper. Not Chester. Chester would try to make his way through a narrow sliding door, find himself stuck halfway and then look at me with total and quite genuine puzzlement. I don't think he ever got to understand that the rear part of him was actually attached to the front.
But it was Chester, who dispensed affection as unreflectively as he breathed, who got me thinking about this long-ago pact between humans and dogs. Cat lovers and the pet averse will just roll their eyes at such dogophilia. I can't help it. Chester was always at your foot or your hand, waiting to be petted and stroked, played with and talked to. His beautiful blocky head, his wonderful overgrown puppy's body, his baritone bark filled every corner of house and heart.
Then last month, at the tender age of 8, he died quite suddenly. The long, slobbering, slothful decline we had been looking forward to was not to be. When told the news, a young friend who was a regular victim of Chester's lunging love-bombs said mournfully, "He was the sweetest creature I ever saw. He's the only dog I ever saw kiss a cat."
Some will protest that in a world with so much human suffering, it is something between eccentric and obscene to mourn a dog. I think not. After all, it is perfectly normal, indeed, deeply human to be moved when nature presents us with a vision of great beauty. Should we not be moved when it produces a vision — a creature — of the purest sweetness?
-- Charles Krauthammer
11-23-2017 05:54 PM
@just bee. Love this.....thanks for posting.
11-23-2017 05:57 PM
@Kachina624 wrote:@just bee. Love this.....thanks for posting.
It's a favorite.
(And why is it so darned warm today?)
11-23-2017 06:05 PM - edited 11-23-2017 06:08 PM
I had my own food sniffing dog in the big black collie who is my avatar. For several Christmases, my distant sister made my dad special cookies which she packed in Rubbermaid containers, wrapped and included in a big cardboard box with other gifts. When the boxes arrived, I didn't open them but left in the foyer of my home. Jett, the collie, was able to sniff out the cookies, tear into the box, remove, unwrap and eat them all by himself (Sharing treats was not Jett's thing). If my sister had lived closer, Jett would have been a dead dog. When it happened a second time, she was gunning for me!
11-23-2017 09:30 PM - edited 11-23-2017 09:32 PM

Puppies training to become Vapor Wake dogs. (photo: VWK9)
11-23-2017 09:37 PM
@Kachina624 I love your story. It made me laugh.
I had a Samoyed who got into a box of Wolferman’s muffins that were delivered and left on the back deck. He chewed through the cardboard box and plastic wrap and had a party eating gourmet muffins.
it’s amazing how well their sniffer works.
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