Guide dogs are taught to pee and poop on cue. The dog's "partner" (the blind person) learns how to take care of their dog, including how to collect and dispose of the poop.
Some cities exempt guide dog owners and other service dog owners from scooping laws, but most do not. There is no need for an exemption because blind people are just as capable as sighted people in doing most things, including cleaning up after their dogs. A person doesn't have to see poop to pick it up. Like anyone else, a blind person knows which end of the dog is which, and the dog only toilets on command so they know the when and where of poopology. A hand is inserted in a plastic poop bag like a glove and then the scooper feels around for the warm squooshy stuff, grasps it, and turns the bag inside out. It's exactly the same for a sighted person who walks their dog at night and must scoop in the dark.
Local council i suppose lol =]
The guide dogs blind partner picks up the dogs stool.
The blind person does
They're called guide dogs. Dogs trained by the Seeing Eye in New Jersey are called either "Seeing Eye" dogs or guide dogs. All other guide dogs are simply called "guide dogs."
Rawhide or a toothbrush will do fine
you can't because it dopey as if you would clean your dogs theeth
they both guide something.
Uncle Cleans Up was created in 1965.
International Guide Dogs Day is recognized on April 29th.
No, usually guide dogs are Golden Retrievers.
guide dogs don't train their puppies or the puppies being trained to be guide dogs but professional dog trainers do
AchE Acetylcholinesterase. It cleans up Ach Acetylcholine
Yes, guide dogs live in all 50 of the United States.
Dogs need to be trained before they can perform as a guide dog.