Shopping for BBQ Gear? Start Here!

2,000+ Free Pages

2,000+ Free Pages

YOU ARE HERE >> AmazingRibs » About AmazingRibs » About Leader Dogs For The Blind

Share On:

About Leader Dogs For The Blind

Closeup of grey puppy wearing red bow around neck against plain black background.

We support several charities, but none is more dear to me than Leader Dogs For The Blind.

Leader Dogs is one of the largest schools for training service dogs in the nation, founded in 1939. About 300 dogs a year graduate from the remarkable 14 acre campus and they go on to mean independence to their new masters. Four of those graduates got their first year of training in our house. Here are some pix of a few of the five pups my wife and I have raised for Leader Dogs.

Leader Dog SportLeader DogLeader Dog JazzwagsFrom left to right: Sport, our first, is navigating the streets of Mexico City, Layla is working in Southern California, Jasmine is working in Fort Worth, and Wags is working in Northern Virginia. Below is our fifth trainee, Sunshine. All five of our pups graduated and went on to drag blind people around. Not a bad record since only about half of the trainees graduate.

Exterior of the WienermobileIn February 2009, Sunshine and I got to ride in the Oscar Meyer Wienermobile in Chicago’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade. She is shown here with “Hotdoggers” Molly Fergus and Amanda Maurer. Sunshine is now working in Madrid, Spain.

Interior of the Wienermobile

Here’s the inside of the Wienermobile. That’s Molly at the wheel, her mother at left, and Mary Ann Brauneis on the right, retired owner of a popular Southside hotdog pushcart. There’s a mean sound system in this chariot.

reese and ivyIn 2011 Leader Dogs paired us with Reese, the beautiful sweet Golden Retriever, above, with our pet English Pointer, Ivy. From the start she was skittish, shying awar from plastic bags. Although she trained up as well as the others, when we sent her back for grad school, the took her almost to the end and asked us if we wanted to keep her as a pet. She was skittish, and “lacked work ethic.” In other words, she was lazy. A Leader Dog has to get up in the morning ready to go to work, and she preferred sleeping late. Of course we adopted her and she is still with us.In March 2021 after Ivy died, we got back into the Leader Dog program and started training Sandy, a female Yellow Lab. We are blown away by this dog, by far the smartest we have ever worked with and that includes Molly, our pet Border Collie, who won ribbons in agility. That’s her below, at 7 weeks old, the day we were given her by the puppy breeders at Leader Dogs for the Blind.

sandy on day 1

Who makes the best hot dogs in Chicago? Here's one expert's faves.
Published On: March 11, 2014
Last Modified On: March 11, 2014

On This Page

Up Your BBQ IQ By Joining The Pitmaster Club

Get a free trial of the AmazingRibs.com Pitmaster Club and experience everything that the world’s largest membership-based BBQ and grilling community has to offer. No credit card required!

New Recipes, Reviews, and Science Sent To Your Inbox!

Subscribe to receive our FREE weekly newsletter, Smoke Signals, and never miss a new recipe!

Jump To Top