by Staff Sgt. Christopher Gross
460th Space Wing Public Affairs
11/4/2013 - BUCKLEY AIR FORCE BASE, Colo. -- Jeja,
a 2-year-old Belgian Malinois hailing from Germany, is the newest
addition to the 460th Security Forces Squadron military working dog
kennels.
Before joining the rest of her fellow service dogs, Jeja completed a
roughly 90-day training program instructed by members of the 341st
Training Squadron, Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas.
According to the 341st TS website, they train dogs used in patrol, drug
and explosive detection, and specialized mission functions for the
Department of Defense and other government agencies.
After arriving at Buckley, it's now up to Jeja's partner, Staff Sgt.
Robert Aikins, 460th SFS MWD handler, to advance her training and become
certified as an operational team. This process generally takes about 60
days, and they must become certified on a number of tasks.
Tasks include identifying nine different types of scents, and Aikins has
to be able to identify Jeja's behavior when she makes these finds.
Aikins and Jeja must also certify on the six aspects of patrol. First,
Aikins has to ensure Jeja won't bite a suspect when he and the suspect
are in conversation. Next, is the release and hold; Jeja must be able to
attack a suspect at Aikins' command and needs to hold on even though
she may be kicked, hit or swung around. Jeja then must obey the off
call, which is used to release her bite.
The second half of the patrol aspect is the standoff. This happens when
Aikins sees a potential threat such as a busy street the suspect runs
across. Aikins will call out to the dog to stop until he can come and
evaluate the danger, and the team will then proceed. The last two
aspects of patrol are search and escort. Jeja can't bite the suspects
while Aikins searches and escorts them back to the patrol car.
So far, Aikins said Jeja has been progressing well. One of the minor
things for her to overcome has been the altitude adjustment.
Although having a new dog can be challenging at times because of her
puppy-at-heart mentality, Aikins said it definitely has its upside.
"The biggest perk for getting a green dog, which is what they call them
when no handlers have had them before other than instructors at (dog
training school is) you can kind of train it how you want to train it as
long as you're within regulations and not harming yourself or the dog
during training," Aikins said.
He said other dogs that have had previous trainers can sometimes be a
challenge to work with, as they become set in their ways and handlers
really have to work harder with them.
Regardless if it's a new dog or one that's been around for a while,
Aikins said it's extremely important to stay patient and positive.
"They say it travels down leash, so if I come in during the day and I'm
in a bad mood, then that's going to make the dog be in a bad mood,"
Aikins said. "They're just like us; somedays she doesn't feel like
working."
Those are the days Aikins said you have to push them, so they know who the alpha is in the partnership.
The patience and pushing will pay off, as Aikins and JeJa are already
halfway through her 60-day training cycle. Once Aikins feels his team is
ready, the 460th SFS MWD kennel master will evaluate the team and put
in their certification to become operational. The 460th Space Wing
commander is the final person to sign off on their certification.
Wednesday, November 06, 2013
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