Post by account_disabled on Mar 7, 2024 5:12:27 GMT 1
Thousand young people and children from all over the country participate in the fair, which has been a breeding ground for national talents. It was the platform to discover talents, such as Amaya Muñoz and Diosdado Soledad, who have raised the name of our state in world and Para-Pan American games,” explained Blanca Rivera Rio de Lozano, president of the state DIF. Both athletes and family members find in this type of events an alternative for the development of their children, as indicated by the director of the Aguascalientes Sports Institute, Jesús García Campos. Photo via via This allows us to look for new alternatives for young people and parents who live in Aguascalientes, for their children with disabilities,” he said. More than a thousand competitors from at least 12 states of the Mexican Republic participate in this event.
These dogs learn through the association of a toy and a sample that is called and that is a chemical, a powder similar to talcum powder, non America Mobile Number List-toxic, and with the smell of drugs, corpses or explosives. “We teach him first to find his toy. When he finds his toy okay, we associate a scent with it, we put it together with the scent, then we remove the toy and he already thinks that his toy smells like narcotics, explosives, the substances that we teach him.” —How many aromas can you detect? —Let's say the dog has 20 balls, there are 20 aromas, he knows each aroma of his 20 balls. The dog then performs passive marking, which can be sitting or lying down, or active marking, which can be scratching or barking, when it detects any of these substances. The training lasts about five months. “There are people who tell you that 'you smell like a dog' and what are you doing. When the dog finds, when he does his job, it gives you a lot of satisfaction and you think it was worth it.” All dogs that arrive at the unit are vaccinated, dewormed and placed under medical observation.
Afterwards an identification microchip is implanted in their skin that certifies them as property of the State. One more morning at the Canine Training Unit. Dr. Luis Jaime Flores and Omar Rivera, his assistant, are carrying out a demonstration with some specimens. This is “El Oro”, the doctor is saying. They had him tied up in a welding workshop and he arrived here with a neck injury caused by the chain; his owners brought him in because he was aggressive. “Every time people passed by the workshop he thought it was stretching, it hurt, and he began to feel aggressive towards people. Here we change that for the ball and he has been working very well.” Another is “Falco” and he came to the Unit as a puppy. His owner brought him because he was already starting to make a lot of mess at home; Today “Falco” is a guard and protection dog. Another is called “El ” and was rescued from a junkyard, now that that type's businesses have closed.
These dogs learn through the association of a toy and a sample that is called and that is a chemical, a powder similar to talcum powder, non America Mobile Number List-toxic, and with the smell of drugs, corpses or explosives. “We teach him first to find his toy. When he finds his toy okay, we associate a scent with it, we put it together with the scent, then we remove the toy and he already thinks that his toy smells like narcotics, explosives, the substances that we teach him.” —How many aromas can you detect? —Let's say the dog has 20 balls, there are 20 aromas, he knows each aroma of his 20 balls. The dog then performs passive marking, which can be sitting or lying down, or active marking, which can be scratching or barking, when it detects any of these substances. The training lasts about five months. “There are people who tell you that 'you smell like a dog' and what are you doing. When the dog finds, when he does his job, it gives you a lot of satisfaction and you think it was worth it.” All dogs that arrive at the unit are vaccinated, dewormed and placed under medical observation.
Afterwards an identification microchip is implanted in their skin that certifies them as property of the State. One more morning at the Canine Training Unit. Dr. Luis Jaime Flores and Omar Rivera, his assistant, are carrying out a demonstration with some specimens. This is “El Oro”, the doctor is saying. They had him tied up in a welding workshop and he arrived here with a neck injury caused by the chain; his owners brought him in because he was aggressive. “Every time people passed by the workshop he thought it was stretching, it hurt, and he began to feel aggressive towards people. Here we change that for the ball and he has been working very well.” Another is “Falco” and he came to the Unit as a puppy. His owner brought him because he was already starting to make a lot of mess at home; Today “Falco” is a guard and protection dog. Another is called “El ” and was rescued from a junkyard, now that that type's businesses have closed.