Client stories Archives - International Guide Dog Federation Supporting Guide Dog Mobility Worldwide Tue, 05 Mar 2024 12:46:42 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://www.igdf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/igdf-favicon-100x100.png Client stories Archives - International Guide Dog Federation 32 32 A golden family for Ouni https://www.igdf.org.uk/articles/a-golden-family-for-ouni-2/ Tue, 05 Mar 2024 12:39:58 +0000 https://www.igdf.org.uk/?p=8784 Article and photograph kindly provided to IGDF by Fédération Française des Associations de Chiens guides d’aveugles (FFAC) www.chiensguides.fr  As an English teacher and mother of two, Bénédicte Kerg saw her family life turned upside down in 2019. Cergy-Pontoise University, launched an invitation to get involved with the cause of guide dogs by becoming a puppy-raising family. The adventure, which was […]

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Article and photograph kindly provided to IGDF by Fédération Française des Associations de Chiens guides d’aveugles (FFAC) www.chiensguides.fr 


As an English teacher and mother of two, Bénédicte Kerg saw her family life turned upside down in 2019. Cergy-Pontoise University, launched an invitation to get involved with the cause of guide dogs by becoming a puppy-raising family. The adventure, which was supposed to last only a few months, took a completely unexpected turn for Bénédicte and her family.

“It was a family project, we consulted each other several times. It was supposed to last a year, the typical time taken for the early training of a puppy! »

She therefore requested from the headteacher, permission to get involved in this project. Another colleague has also taken the step alongside Bénédicte, so the school now has two guide dogs in training, which are around every day, during and in classes. “The impact on young people is particularly interesting! Puppies are attractive because they are cute, but older dogs also prompt questions about their work. »

Bénédicte was very involved in the training of her new four-legged pupil: “I took part in the group lessons organised at Ecole de Chiens Guides de Paris, practised the recommended exercises.”

Ouni was well on her way to becoming a guide dog… Then the family was contacted by the breeding department of the school, who offered them the opportunity to contribute in a different way to the guide dogs cause: become the breeding family of Ouni, which Ecole de Chiens Guides de Paris wished to keep as a brood bitch for future guide dogs. “It was an opportunity for us to keep Ouni with us, she had become an adult dog, calm and obedient. So much so that she is nicknamed “Miss Ounique”! »

Ouni first underwent extensive aptitude tests, in particular screening for dysplasia. Since being selected, she now shares her life between her family and the Guide Dog School of Paris, where she stays for 3 months for the litters to be born and weaned. Bénédicte takes good care of her health and well-being, with outings and fun activities in the company of other dogs. When Ouni is about to give birth to a new litter, she goes into the school 15 days before whelping, so that she and the pups can receive professional care. Bénédicte is the first to see photos of the newborn puppies and is allowed to visit the little family in sterile clothes a week later. When the pups are weaned, Ouni returns to her puppy-raising family.

“I was lucky enough to follow the handovers (qualification ceremony) of Ouni’s puppies, including that of a dog whose owner returned to Ireland and keeps a blog. These are particularly touching moments. »

But the family doesn’t stop there: during Ouni’s periods at School, they welcome dogs as a relay family for stays of up to a month and a half long.

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I’ve got my life back to where I was before… https://www.igdf.org.uk/articles/a-golden-family-for-ouni/ Tue, 05 Mar 2024 12:34:37 +0000 https://www.igdf.org.uk/?p=8769 I’ve got my life back to where I was before… Article and photograph kindly provided to IGDF by Fédération Française des Associations de Chiens guides d’aveugles (FFAC) www.chiensguides.fr  Visually impaired from birth, Charlene permanently lost sight after the birth of her second child. Obelix’s arrival has allowed her to reconcile her professional life and her life as a mother, and […]

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I’ve got my life back to where I was before…

Article and photograph kindly provided to IGDF by Fédération Française des Associations de Chiens guides d’aveugles (FFAC) www.chiensguides.fr 


Visually impaired from birth, Charlene permanently lost sight after the birth of her second child. Obelix’s arrival has allowed her to reconcile her professional life and her life as a mother, and to take more confident steps with her children.

When Charlene lost what little field of vision she had left, she quickly wondered how to readjust her life. “The occupational doctor sent me to an association in Lille to receive orientation and mobility training to facilitate my journeys. That’s where I was referred to guide dogs.” Having always had a pet dog at home, she immediately fancied this solution as she no longer felt safe with her cane.  Charlene had imagined her ideal guide dog as  a quite independent small German Shepherd, but it was a completely different profile that was offered to her – a 33 kg Labrador, sticking like glue, according to her. “I must admit that the choice of Association des Chiens guides des Centres Paul Corteville was excellent. After a few weeks at home, Obelix had totally adapted. »

Her children were happy to welcome this new playmate, very cuddly and protective. They quickly understood that life was going to be easier for them too. “When I’m on a journey, I don’t have to concentrate as I used to with a cane and I can chat with them!” Accustomed to not going too far so that their mother could hear them, they now benefit from more freedom to their greatest happiness. Charlene can now pick them up from school on her own and take them to their sports activities. “They’re so proud to have a mom who has the right to bring a dog, because he’s exceptional.”

But the changes made possible by Obelix do not end there. When the lockdown was over, the company where Charlene works offered her a position adapted to her blindness. Obelix quickly became the new mascot to her colleagues. “They had seen my distress when I lost my sight: I couldn’t manage anymore, they came to pick me up in the morning… Now I come on my own and it normalizes relationships.” She has also rediscovered the pleasure of spontaneity and autonomy. “I can make a phone call while walking, I can go to the baker’s without having to anticipate, now journeys rhyme with pleasure and not stress! I am back to my old life.  A guide dog certainly involves some constraints, but according to her, this is nothing compared to the safety that Obelix brings every day. “I wouldn’t imagine myself without him!”

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