The sad news is, River the bernedoodle puppy is gone. The extremely popular school treatment dog who got the pats, stomach rubs and friendly doggy discussion – almost from the day she initially appeared — has actually passed away.
The happy news is, Phoenix the bernedoodle treatment dog will remain in Marietta school corridors as quickly as possible, and it appears like she’ll have the very same terrific individuals abilities as her predecessor.
As Marietta trainees go back to class Wednesday, Marietta Police Department School Resource Officer R.M. “Rob” Sury understands he will be associated with assisting a variety of trainees get used to both the sad and the happy news.
The department’s very first treatment dog, River, passed away all of a sudden in mid-July. Marietta City Schools has actually launched that info so that moms and dads have the opportunity to discuss it with their kids prior to they return to school.
At the very same time, the schools are stressing the intense area, which is another bernedoodle puppy the Sury family has actually invited into their home, another work partner at Sury’s side when the time is right.
Sury talked with Chief Katherine Warden about whether he would be able to resume work with a therapy dog so soon after the loss of River, who lived with Sury, his wife, Shelly, and their high school-age daughter, Kendall. It was his family’s support that convinced him to jump back into it.
“It’s not just about us, it’s for the kids,” his wife had said. “It helps us, too,” Sury added.
Phoenix is 10 weeks old right now. She was named by Chief Katherine Warden’s husband, who thought the classic tale of the phoenix rising from the ashes was an apt reference to rebirth and transformation for the Marietta police program.
The new bernedoodle won’t be in the schools until after winter break, when she has actually her vaccinations and obedience training completed. The basic and advanced obedience training will be done locally. The treatment dog training will be done in Franklin County when she turns 1 year old.
Phoenix, who has paws that look about the size of small pancakes, came from a breeder in Glouster, Buckeye Ridge Bernedoodles. She is receptive to everyone she comes in contact with, Sury said, although she can still get a little nervous around crowds.
“Her attention span is very short right now, because she’s just a pup,” Sury said. “She likes to play, she likes to sleep. That’s about it. Oh, and she likes belly rubs. Which is good, because the kids love to do that.”
Sury said the two rules he has about the students interacting with the therapy dog are, “Ask before you pet her. And don’t feed her anything.”
Sury and Warden are both firm believers in the school therapy dog program.
“It has tangible benefits,” Sury said. “Check with any of the school principals, any of the people who have been around it. It bridges the gap between police and schools.”
Sury said he also believes the program also has given him a better relationship with a number of high school students, since there are now students moving up who knew him and River in the lower grades.
Warden said the assistance of the community was apparent after River’s death, and the department is so appreciative of those efforts.
“We want to say thank you to all those different organizations who helped so that we could buy Phoenix — who was very expensive — as soon as we could,” Warden said. “All of the Go Fund Me money and other donations went into the Fraternal Order of Police Canine Fund, so technically the FOP owns her right now. The FOP is going to appear before city council to officially donate her to the city, and the names of the donors will be read then.”
Warden dismisses the few who think a school resource treatment dog is a wild-goose chase and money.
“There can be lots of learning anxiety,” she said. “This, like the Phoenix, brings new life into the schools.”