We had a yellow Lab, Ghost, who was nearing retirement.
He has some joint issues, was getting on up there in
age, and his eye sight was starting to go. It just seemed
like it was time to be finding a dog to take his place.
I wanted to get another dog trained before I retired
Ghost. It was my desire to have them work side by side
for about a year.
My husband, Rip, located a breeder who had actually
produced a long line of law enforcement dogs and they
were chocolate Labs! We had only had yellow and black
Labs and I had actually heard rumors that chocolates
were more hyper and high strung than the other colors,
which made me wonder if she would be too much for me
to handle, but when I saw her, I fell in love with her!
Her parents were on site and were gorgeous dogs. So,
we brought Miranda home with us. She was so quiet and
sedate on the ride home to Baton Rouge. She remained
rather quiet for a few days, making me wonder what people
were talking about; chocolate labs hyper? Not mine!
Well, once Miranda settled in with the family, she warmed
up and I saw what people were talking about. She was
a live wire for sure, but adorable and smarter than
I ever dreamed she would be. I couldn't wait to get
to work training her. We started first with obedience,
then land scents, then water scents.
Let me start by explaining what kind of work Miranda
does. Cadaver K-9's are used to locate human remains
following a natural or manmade disaster, as well as
drownings. There are two kinds of searches that Cadaver
dogs perform- underwater searches and land searches.
Underwater searches are not as common as land searches
for most cadaver trained canines. A specialty subset
of cadaver dogs are water cadaver dogs. Those dogs trained
in underwater searches have been trained to find the
odor of decomposing human remains. However, water cadaver
dogs have been specifically trained to locate and indicate
the source of the odor to assist divers in a more directed
and speedy recovery of a drowning victim. A water search
dog is trained to detect human scent that is in or under
the water.
The handler and dog are a team and usually work in a
boat. Currents and general changes in the water can
make it hard to pinpoint the location of a body. I can't
tell you how many times a swift current has moved the
body or even the boat caused it to relocate.
It can take hours to locate a body, or even days. We
have a dive team on hand to go right in, once we make
a determination, by playing a buoy outside the boat
to mark the spot. A diver should be ready to search
as soon as the dog indicates to increase the changes
of making the recovery.
Sometimes there are even other teams, unaware of the
previous teams' findings, who will work to indicate
a location. This allows team members to determine the
most likely location of the body.
My husband has a side scan-sonar that we will generally
bring along, to assist, if it takes a while to locate
the body. He has been a law enforcement diver for over
25 years.
You might wonder how hard it is to train a dog to become
a Cadaver K-9. Cadaver dogs go through extensive training
before they can become certified and operational. It
usually takes a year to a year and a half for most teams
to be ready for certification in cadaver scenting.
For starters, the dog must be trained to recognize a
wide variety of odors that are associated with human
remains. Cadaver dogs used in disaster situations such
as 9-11 or the Oklahoma bombing, focus on recent decomposition
odors.
Cadaver dogs, like Miranda, who work with law enforcement
are also trained to alert on the older decomposition
odors as well as smaller, residual odors.
Obedience should be taught first. You can't get anywhere
with the scent training if your dog wont listen and
obey your commands. All K-9's are first taught to give
a trained final alert or indication upon detection of
the odor. They are trained to only give this response
when they locate the strongest source of the odor. A
large amount of time is spent on making sure that the
alert is solid before the K-9 is ever taught to actually
search for the odor in a scenario-based problem. Cadaver
K-9's that are trained in water recovery are taught
to give this final indication while working from a boat
on a body of water.
With Miranda, first she will paw then whine and finally
sit down. If you don't indicate you have recognized
her alert, she has been known to jump in the water,
where she smells the scent the strongest. This is, of
course, after giving us all a look like, "Didn't
you smell that?" which of course, we didn't!
I have nearly been dragged into the water with her a
time or two. I always pay attention to her reactions,
but sometimes it can be hard or impossible to stop the
boat. We make an attempt to circle the area to make
sure she really did alert there then drop a buoy overboard
to mark the spot.
The very first thing to do in training a cadaver dog
is to imprint the scent of the cadaver material on the
K-9. After the dog is familiar with the scent and a
command is attached to the scent, then it is time to
build the alert.
Miranda decided her own alert. Her very first alert
was to look into the water, look at me, look again into
the water and then she would follow the scent around
the boat and sit down. That was when she was only 12
weeks old (I am not saying she was trained at 12 weeks
old, but she DID pick up the scent at 12 weeks old).
We began her scent training as soon as we got her. She
was a natural. Many puppies are afraid of the scent.
Miranda was all over our "scent box", climbing
all over it, like it was something fantastic. We knew
we had a winner at that point. From there, she was trained
with other tools on a daily basis. We got creative in
the ways we trained and where.
During the time we were training her in scenting, the
cadaver training material was placed in a line of concrete
blocks, cans, buckets, PVC tubes or other plastic containers,
one of which was the 'hot' can, which held the scent
in it. The other containers were clean with no cadaver
scent in them. Once Miranda alerted on the scent, she
was rewarded.
During this time, some dogs will bark, scratch, dig,
whine, something that we might use as the alert. Miranda
began with the looking at the area, whining and finally
sitting. She never barked. She now will paw if it's
an extremely strong alert, as well.
Cadaver K-9's are used in a variety of ways, such as:
locating remains in water of accidental drowning victims,
homicide victims, missing persons and victims of human
or natural disasters (Acts of terrorism, hurricanes,
tornadoes etc).
Miranda has special booties to wear to protect her pads
from anything that might cut her feet or harm her in
a search. I have actually had to say no to some searches,
because I will not put her life or health in danger
on a possibility a body may or may not be there. There
are too many risks involved in landfill searches for
me to feel comfortable with it. Needles, glass, etc
are dumped and I won’Äôt take chances.
No particular breed is better at this kind of work than
another, but Labs, being the water lovers they are and
with the intelligence and temperament they have are
wonderful cadaver dogs.
Some areas have Search and Rescue/Recovery teams that
volunteer in their areas to assist law enforcement agencies
in searches. If you have a Lab that has the drive to
work, you might want to consider doing this!
Miranda is also crossed trained in a couple of narcotics,
but that was when we worked in DARE, where she was a
demo K-9 for the community to show people and children
how a drug K-9 works.
Labs are ideal for therapy, law enforcement and service
dogs, due to their intelligence, trainability and drive.
They are less intimidating than other breeds. Anyone
wanting to do volunteer cadaver work, should research
and see if their community has an organization. Contact
them, if there is one. They will tell you how to get
started, help you with training and become part of their
team. A keyword to start with to do the research would
be Search and Rescue or Search and Recovery teams.
I think one of the rewards that I get most from working
with Miranda is the closure we give to families that
have lost a loved one. I can't tell you how many people
have come up to us and hugged us and told us thank you
for helping them find closure. To be able to hug a dog
that helped find a loved one that was lost in the water
or even died in the wilderness, means so much to the
families and friends. She of course, being the licking
fanatic she is, licks their faces, their tears and shows
them she cares and feels their pain. It's a difficult
job, dirty at times, unpleasant, and not glamorous by
any means, but it's rewarding to know we helped someone.
I couldn't ask for a better partner...or a cuter one!
Submitted by - Penelope Kea Linton,
K-9 handler of Miranda
For more information please feel free to contact
Penelope through the Labradors
Worldwide forum (MsDeputy2uK9)
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