Saturday, February 26, 2011

Therapy Dog Visit

In June of 2010 I contacted Susquehanna Service Dogs (SSD) in Harrisburg, PA about possibly applying for an assistive dog for our daughter Miss B. We filled out the paperwork for an application and had a visit at their office several months back and found out we could be eligible for a dog. So today we met with a volunteer who owns a therapy dog for about an hour and a half at a local mall to see how Miss B would do, and here are some pictures of the time we spent.


Here Miss B is meeting Ember, a 6 year old female black lab, for the first time. Her owner, Diane, and Diane's 19 year old daughter Jamie came to help us see what life would be like with a service dog. She answered questions and shared experiences she has had with other people requesting dogs.


Diane had a bag of treats for Miss B to wear to help her praise Ember. Ember is a therapy dog which Diane brings in to schools to do demonstrations, and she uses Ember to give opportunities for people like Miss B to try out and see how they like working with an assistance dog.


Miss B loves animals and can't help but kiss them. We knew she'd adjust to Ember in short order.


Diane talked about Ember and how to take care of her. Ember is spayed now, but several years back she did have a litter of puppies for SSD to use as service dogs. They were all named after things in space since her husband was a star gazer. Currently there are two litters of puppies recently born to the program. The first group is named after Civil War people: George Meade, Joshua Chamberlain, Clara Barton, Julia Ward Howe and Harriet Beecher  Stow. The second litter is named after games: Yahtzee, Atari and Rummy. They can be seen on the site's puppy cam


She gave Miss B a brush to slick her coat.


More kisses.


More explanations. Puppies begin their positive reinforcement training as early as 7 weeks of age. Diane explained they are given "click" sounds and treats every time they do something the trainer wants them to do. If the puppy is working on "sit" the trainer will not say anything, but just stand still. The dog wants to please, so it will begin doing all sorts of things to earn a reward. If the dog sits, a click will sound and a treat will be given. This is done over and over until the puppy/dog does it. Then the word command "sit" will be added. It seemed to work very well for Ember.


Here is an exercise where Diane put two treats on Ember's paws and told her to "leave it." After a short while she picked up the treats and rewarded Ember with them for good behavior. Perhaps the dog can model some good behavior for Miss B.


Getting ready to talk a walk through the mall. Diane had a list of things she wanted Miss B to run through during the course of our session.


The dog is constantly rewarded for good behavior with a "clicker" the human hold in their hand, a small device that emits a clicking sound when you press it, and a treat (small bits of kibble which are part of the dog's daily diet). Miss B will learn how to train her dog to do new tasks if needed to help her out in day to day living.


Here they stopped because there was a small problem with the leash getting caught under Ember's front leg, as we who walk dogs always encounter. She gave the command "fix" to Ember and the dog just lifted her leg out of the tangle.


People were very curious to see a service dog in the mall and many stopped by to ask questions or just watch. Service Dogs are allowed to travel everywhere with their partner: malls, restaurants, churches, schools, airplanes.


Here Diane was showing two other commands like "up" and "off." Ember did wonderfully.



Diane's daughter, Jamie, also helped Miss B with a few things. They put duct tape on their thighs and gave Ember the command to "touch." She did it every time. Since dogs are color blind, the trainers use duct tape to show the dogs what to touch. Diane even had an expensive piece of equipment (an 18" dowel rod with duct tape attached to the end like a flag) to use to show Ember exactly what she wanted her to touch. It was amazing to watch.


The dog was commanded to "lap," and Ember rested on Jamie's legs with her front forearms providing a feeling of pressure. Ember also knows "visit" where she goes up to a person and rests her head in their lap.


A return of kisses to Miss B for all those goodies.


Ember up close. She was rarely distracted from her "work."


I think Ember needs another treat. Miss B had to wipe her hand each time the dog licked the treat from her palm.


Here Miss B was tasked with giving Ember 10 clicks and treats before they reached the next bench. There was a lot for her to remember to do: the clicker, the treats, holding the leash, counting to 10, watching where you walked. It was a lot to take in.


Another task Ember could do was press a button. Diane is explaining to Miss B how this would work. Ember. She can also turn lights off, which will be a great benefit to our electricity bill.

Resting at the end.

One more hug and kiss.



Miss B and Jamie with Ember. A nice Oreo cookie sandwich of girl-dog-girl.

Our next step will be to have a home visit in conjunction with another public outing with another therapy dog. If all goes well, Miss B will have the opportunity to visit with a few dogs in the late stages of training. These dogs are about 1 1/2-2 years old. If one of these dogs is a suitable match for Miss B, it will be further trained to address the specific needs of our daughter. Then there will be a 2 1/2 week daily class where the dog and human partner will be paired up and learn all kinds of skills for working together. It's a long, drawn out process, but we're wading through it with anticipation and excitement.

Carolyn "Care Bear" King

Friday, February 25, 2011

#1 Free-Motion


Well, I tried my hand at my first ever free-motion quilting. There is definitely room for improvement, but I'm rather please with my "stab." I quilted around the bodies of each crab, did a meandering over the blocks closest to the crabs (looks a little like coral), spiraled a wave in the light blue border, and tried my first feathers in the big blue border. I used a variegated blue thread for the top and the bottom, and I think the back turned out equally as interesting. I'm not the neatest person, but they always say, "Practice, practice, practice."



My backing uses a little bit of some of the fabrics from the front.


I tried a machine binding this time and really like how it turned out. I only had to go over two small areas where I missed catching the fabric on the back side. I sewed the binding on the front side of the quilt and then I pinned the binding to the back just covering my stitching. I pinned every two inches or so. From the front side I stitched-in-the-ditch for the result below.


Here is the back of the binded quilt before adding a sleeve and label.


Below are the sleeves I added to hang the quilt. I divided a sleeve in two so a nail could be used in the center or the two sides.


Here is my label I created on my printer using a June Tailor Iron-On Quilt Fabric Sheet. I blocked out the recipient's name for the photo.


And here is the quilt hanging on some storage shelves in my basement. Not a pretty background, but you get the idea.



Carolyn "Care Bear" King

Monday, February 21, 2011

Quilt top is complete!


All 80"x96" of this baby is put together. I've never made a quilt this large before. My "helpers" even had to stand on chairs to hold this one up. I love the way it turned out.


I hurried and threw it on my bed just to see what it would look like. I'm guessing this will keep us warm for many nights.



Carolyn "Care Bear" King

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Turning Twenty....Again


From my original stash of 20 fabrics for $37.00


I cut out my pieces for 30 blocks and stacked them in piles. That took some time and planning to utilize my fabric in the best possible way. I have plenty left over for other projects. Woo-hoo!


I laid all my pieces into sets of blocks that had no repeating fabrics. It took my best concentration to keep them all organized and in order. (For some reason I couldn't get this photo rotated, sorry).


Here is one block laid out before sewing. I started with the four squares in the upper left corner first and added the rectangle below to make section A. Then I sewed the three blocks in the upper right corner for section B and the three blocks in the bottom to form section C. I sewed A to B and added C at the bottom. 


I ended up with a 16 1/2"x16 1/2" block that looked like this. You can see I didn't actually sew section B the way I had first laid it out. I should have sewed it to the opposite side of the black fabric (oops!) I also turned it clockwise a few times.


Here is another block I did where I flipped the A section upside-down. In some blocks I turned the C section upside-down as well.


Here are 15 of my 30 blocks laid out on the air hockey table. It's coming along rather nicely.

Carolyn "Care Bear" King

Friday, February 11, 2011

The "Eyes" Have It


OK, NOW they look like adorable little crabs! I think they're so cute. They look at you from all directions, just like Mona Lisa's eyes. Just try this: move your body to the left or the right, and you will always see a crab staring you down.

With the border completed, the top is finally finished. Now I'm off to the store to purchase some batting. I'll also be planning a creative backing for this quilt. I've been inspired by other quilt photos I've seen on-line. I'm also going to be doing free-motion quilting for the first time. Wish me luck!


Here is the small wall hanging I'm making for a gift. I ran out of button eyes, so I'll be picking them up from the store as well. Busy, busy, busy.

Carolyn "Care Bear" King

Thursday, February 10, 2011

My Crab Quilt Top is coming along.


I finally finished attaching the blocks of my crab quilt. The next step is to add the borders or the eyes. It all depends on if I want to watch TV tonight or not. I can sew eyes in front of the tube. Below is a picture of my first practice run of the blocks. I turned that into a small wall hanging. Check out my tutorials on the right to see the steps I went through to get this far.


Carolyn "Care Bear" King

Friday, February 4, 2011

My Fabric Finds



Today I went fabric shopping with my neighbor to two quilt shops I'd never been to. They were located in Hagerstown, MD and just north of the state line into Pennsylvania off of Molly Pitcher Hwy. The first shop in PA was called Marianne's. It's a small quilt shop run by a Mennonite family with fabric packed into every corner. When I entered, the proprietor mentioned there was a bin filled with $2/yd fabrics by the window. I immediately immersed myself in the fabrics there and found 11 pieces I thought fit together in a pleasant color scheme. I bought 1/2 yard of each of the fabrics and spent a grand total of $11 plus tax. Such a deal.

Next we headed to Wilson's which is in northern Hagerstown. It was a fancy-schmancy quilt store with lots of beautiful quilts hanging from the walls. I was incredibly inspired. Of course they had bundles of fat quarters (20 for $69.99), but after spending $11 on my 1/2 yards I couldn't think of spending that much today. So my neighbor and I headed to the local JoAnn's for cheaper fabric.

At JoAnn's it took awhile to find the last 9 fabrics to round out my 20, but I finally came up with some good choices. I bought 1/2 yard of each of them for a total of $25.97 (more than twice what I spent on the first 11). I spent about $38 total for my twenty 1/2 yards which averages a mere $3.80/yard. Not a bad bite in my wallet. It's a great deal: better than $13.99/yard for the bundles at Wilson's. Not only that, but I also have an entirely different mix from anyone else. No cookie-cutter fabrics for me today.

While at Wilson's I was particularly inspired by a pattern they had hanging on their wall called "Turning Twenty...Again" and I think this fabric will be a perfect choice for this quilt inspiration.


Carolyn "Care Bear" King

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

The Storm of the Century Misses Us

The Big Storm missed us last night and this morning. Thankfully the snow we got last week, pictured here, is getting the chance to melt. We've been in the 40 degrees most of the day and I can hear the water rushing into the street drains. There are even a few patches of green grass peeking our from where my daughter shoveled out some snow to make a fort. I've spent most of the past two days sewing on my quilt. You can see the start in my tutorial here.

Not sure about the groundhog today. I guess he saw his shadow in Maryland but not in Puxatony. So do we get 6 more weeks of winter or not???


Happy Groundhog Day


Carolyn "Care Bear " King