The Journal
Irish Guide Dogs for the Blind has been operating for 50 years this year, and the charity is set to mark its anniversary with Guide Dog Day, taking place on 22 May.
However beloved the charity may be in its providing trained dogs for blind and visually impaired people, as well as children with autism, there remains a gap in its output and demand.
The charity is seeking volunteers to act as puppy raisers as well as donations to fund the feeding and training of these dogs.
The charity, a mainstay in the Irish charitable scene, has contributed massively to visually impaired persons’ quality of life, as James Fitzgerald explained to The Journal.
Fitzgerald, who is from Ardfert in Co Kerry, is visually impaired and his guide dog Monty is his third support animal. After his previous dog retired and he got Monty, he was waiting several months, and he noticed a massive difference in getting around with a dog versus using a white cane.
“I wouldn’t walk out at night with the cane because I kept bumping into stuff – the cane is in no way comparable to a dog,” he said.
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