воскресенье, 6 октября 2013 г.

Lambert let Cajun off his leash and onto the trail of the invader's scent. They went to two area of


The perpetrator, allegedly trying to break into an ATM, had already heard the warning shouts of Officer Kevin Lambert and other Huntsville police officers san francisco walking tours responding to the call in the wee hours of last Sunday morning at a Huntsville Utilities office on Jordan Lane.
Cajun is Lambert's German shepherd partner, a handsome three-year-old. In one moment, you could see yourself rolling around san francisco walking tours on the floor, laughing and wrestling with Cajun over a soggy chew toy. In the next moment, you are jolted into a respectful bit of terror by one simple bark.
Lambert let Cajun off his leash and onto the trail of the invader's scent. They went to two area of the building san francisco walking tours and Cajun picked up an odor where "he knew somebody was in there." Lambert gave still another loud warning, but no response.
"Cajun went into a room and there was a big pile of trash bags. He passed him up once, then went back, looked at it, then grabbed one of the trash bags and started pulling," Lambert said. "There he was on top of the trash bags, and he had the guy on the arm trying san francisco walking tours to pull him out. I gave him commands he came out, the guy had a little tug-of-war with the dog."
"Every time (I'm amazed)," Lambert said. "It's different every time he does it. When we put him in there, you can tell if somebody is in that building or not. You can see it in his face. He gets more excited, works a little faster. san francisco walking tours It's interesting to watch."
Instead, Spartan, the German shepherd partner of Gary Trampas, approached the man. The man froze. Without a bite or any harm to anyone, police were able to calm him, force him to surrender and take him away.
The dogs are far from robotic. Each has a different personality. There's companionship and eagerness to please and that sort of inexplicable human-animal bonding and comfort that can define a police dog on a leash or a cat in a lap.
So, when he does, as Cajun did in a simple but intriguing call Sunday morning, "it's satisfaction knowing you spend all this time training, you work with him and you put him in a building and he does what he's supposed to do," Lambert said. "And he's happy about it."

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