Emily_Babbelhund
Mama Red HOT Pepper
- Location
- Regensburg, Germany
That's a good question. There are signs on escalators that small dogs should be carried. However larger dogs actually riding the escalators are a very common sight here.Are all dogs in Germany allowed to ride the escalator? In SA, there are signs: No barefoot, no prams, no dogs. I’m guessing for safety.
Riding escalators was part of Brogan's service dog training. The school recommended that he wear boots at least on his back paws while doing so. In real life that proved impossible, unless he was simply always going to wear boots, which would have driven him batty. My fix was to have him jump at the beginning and end of the escalator, completely clearing the point where the stair goes back down into the mechanism, if that makes sense. I checked this with our trainer at the school and her opinion was that this was a safe way to do it. Even as an oldster, he never failed to give that little hop at the ends of an escalator.
For safety's sake for Carbon, I'll dig out his boots again and we can practice with those.
Some people may even be wondering why teach this to begin with. Normally, I'll always choose first a disabled ramp - if available - then stairs or an elevator. Sometimes, however, an escalator is either the only option or the only practical option. When we were in Rome in October, my friend's husband had to carry Carbon on the escalator in the Metro because there were no other stairs and the elevator was broken. The only other option would have been to walk back across Rome to the train station - a dog-friendly taxi in the centre of Rome being a very long shot.
Other places I've visited/lived where escalators were nearly unavoidable were the London Underground and hillside escalators in Perugia. Even just simply an airport, you often have to walk forever to find an elevator and then it can be very difficult to convince other people waiting for the same elevator that you'd like to get on with your dog.
So escalator riding is a very useful skill, even if it only gets used in emergency. I do get the controversy, though, and wonder how other service dog or guide dog schools handle it. Any comment @Boogie ?
Maybe I was simply lucky, but I never got an ounce of guff for Brogan taking an escalator - quite the opposite, I can remember on the Underground getting positive comments from workers saying how good he was on those mega-escalators. I got the impression he thought those were FUN.