It may have been nearly five years since Pepper last put on a harness and guided her partner Sarah anywhere, but she recently proved to me that her guide dog chops are still very much present.
Pepper guiding Sarah in 2018 at The Seeing Eye in New Jersey.
It happened the other day. Craig was cooking dinner and I was upstairs in my office packing up some boxes for mailing. Craig loves to cook and he was trying a new method of searing meat. Well, it made lot of smoke and suddenly the smoke alarms started going off. Since they are all electronically connected, every single one in the house, on both floors, was shrieking. And I mean SHRIEKING!
Knowing the cause, I stayed where I was despite the ear splitting noise and continued working; I knew that Craig would open the doors and windows and get the smoke out of the house and that then the alarms would stop.
But Pepper had different thoughts about that. She came racing upstairs, down the hall, and into my office where she stood right next to me and stared me down. When she caught my eyes, she backed up a few steps and waited, continuing to stare, then repeated her actions when I didn't move. She was all business and her message was clear - follow me!
And so I did. I stood up, and she immediately turned around and ran out into the hallway, looking back over her shoulder to be sure I was following. She paused at the top of the stairs so I could catch up, then barreled down them to the main floor, stopping at the bottom of the stairs and again waiting for me to catch her up.
Into the kitchen she hustled me where she stood by the back door. I opened it and followed her out onto the patio where we remained until the alarms stopped. Sobered and touched by her actions, I gave her a treat and a hug to thank her.
Later that evening I contacted Sarah and told her what Pepper had done. Was she trained to respond to fire alarms? Sarah's answer was a bit of a surprise.
"It is not part of their training. But some dogs are very acutely alert to things like that. Good girl, Pepper! She loves you so much. I am so thankful for her. When she says go, go!"
I asked my other visually impaired friend Kathy the same question. Her response was similar to Sarah's.
"They are not trained for it but every guide dog school has a fire drill, just so dog and person know what to do. She was probably remembering that."
Pepper guiding Sarah on the day she received her PhD from Anderson University.
Pepper gave me a rare glimpse into what it is like to have a guide dog, one who makes it possible for you to live a fulfilling life, loves you, and who keeps your safety in mind.
The next time when Pepper says, "Go," you can believe that I will go.








































