For a Good Cause -- Kristi Hofstetter
--Story by June Casagrande; photo by
Jamison has his sea legs -- all four of them. And the seeing-eye dog
hopeful owes the salt in his blood to foster mom Kristi Hofstetter and
Adventures at Sea’s Kathy Leek.
The two women met by chance at a social of the Anaheim Convention and
Visitors Bureau. There, a conversation about guide dogs for the blind
took shape as an idea that could one day be a great benefit to a blind
person.
“The dogs have to be comfortable walking on all kinds of surfaces,â€
said Hofstetter, an Anaheim resident who is raising the golden retriever
voluntarily until he’s ready to enter guide dog training school.
The 7-month-old Jamison will then be returned to his owner, San
Rafael-based Guide Dogs for the Blind, in hopes of making the cut to one
day serve as a seeing-eye dog. Only about half make it, and getting used
to different environments and walking on as many diverse things as
possible definitely helps.
“I said, ‘You want different surfaces? We’ve got surfaces,â€â€™ said
Leek, public relations director for the Newport Beach company that offers
chartered cruises on its three luxury yachts. “We’ve got wood surfaces,
docks, metal stairs, wood stairs, carpeted stairs -- a floating training
ground.â€
On Leek’s invitation, Hofstetter began making trips to Newport Beach
to take Jamison along the docks and to walk around on the yachts Dream
Maker, Dream On and Just Dreamin’.
“It’s excellent experience,†Hofstetter said. “The less likely they
are to spook, the better they will be to help a blind person. A disabled
person wants as normal a life as possible. So if the dog is comfortable
on and around boats, that’s just another thing a blind person can enjoy
as a result.â€
And, Leek interjected, “It’s like we always say: Boats are for
everyone, not just for a chosen few.â€
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