Hull’s Jacobs Elementary School Hosts Dog Safety Program for Students

Hull’s Jacobs Elementary School Hosts Dog Safety Program for Students
For instant release

A Jacobs kindergarten class poses with therapy dogs Merida and Parker as element of past Friday’s occasion. (Image courtesy Hull General public Educational institutions)

HULL – Superintendent Judith Kuehn and Principal Christine Cappadona are pleased to share that the Lillian M. Jacobs Elementary College hosted a puppy security party for kindergarten college students a short while ago. 

On Friday, May possibly 6, Cathy Acampora and Trish Morse from the Plymouth County 4-H Program offered a dog basic safety system with their respective treatment canine, Merida and Parker. The puppy protection plan teaches students about primary puppy protection and delivers info about support dogs. 

“We are so glad to be able to supply pupils with information and facts about puppy basic safety and provider puppies,” Superintendent Kuehn said. “It’s these kinds of an critical matter for pupils to study about, primarily at a younger age, moreover the kids enjoy the prospect to interact with the pet dogs in these a pleasurable way.”

At the presentation college students learned the next:

Fundamental Canine Protection

  • Although people today like to glance into each and every other’s eyes, canine do not like this.
  • While folks like hugs, canine do not.
  • Canines do not like strangers to pat them on the head

Actively playing with a Canine

There are sure indications that canine will give out when they want a break from you. If you see these warnings, your pet dog demands a crack from you. These symptoms are: 

  • Exhibiting the white component of their eyes
  • A major yawn
  • Exhibiting tooth
  • Scratching on their own
  • Licking their lips just after all the other signals

Provider Canine

  • Operating pet dogs/services dogs have a vest that suggests “do not pet”. This is mainly because the pet is functioning and desires to focus.
  • Performing dogs can have numerous work opportunities this kind of as supporting men and women who could possibly not be equipped to see or stand on their own.
  • You can interact with company pet dogs when they are not at do the job and following speaking with the person in demand.

Pupils also viewed the puppies do tricks this kind of as assisting a man or woman stand up by placing physique pounds on the pet, showing tooth, displaying white components of their eyes, licking lips, and “waiting” with meals on their nose.

“This was a very exciting function for students that also taught them worthwhile information and facts that they can use in the foreseeable future,” claimed Principal Cappadona. “We thank Cathy and Trish from the Plymouth County 4-H Application for getting the time to give this presentation for our college students.”

About the Plymouth County 4-H Program 

4-H is the greatest youth group in the United States. The 4 H’s stand for Head, Coronary heart, Hands, and Overall health. The program presents youth ages 5-18 with opportunities to get associated in the neighborhood this kind of as likely to camp, riding in a bike rodeo, developing a blog, giving a presentation, collaborating in a group company task, establishing a resume, understanding about wholesome eating patterns, and far more.

###

Frank Moe, legislator and avid dog sled musher, dies at 56

Frank Moe, legislator and avid dog sled musher, dies at 56

Frank Moe, a two-term DFL state legislator from Bemidji whose passion for environmental protections inspired him to drive a dog sled team on a lobbying trek from the North Shore to the Capitol, has died.

Moe died Wednesday of brain cancer, with his wife Sherri by his side in the Twin Cities, where he had been receiving treatment for the past several months, according to his family and friends. He was 56.

During his two terms in the Minnesota House from 2005 to 2009, Moe became assistant DFL House majority leader while gaining a reputation as a straight shooter and establishing himself as a tireless advocate for preserving the environment.

In his post-legislative life, Moe moved with his wife to the North Shore, where he was a wilderness guide and tended to dozens of dogs at his kennels in Hovland, while also being a longtime official and participant in the annual John Beargrease sled dog races.

Over more than a week in March 2012, Moe left Grand Marais with a team of dogs and mushed 360 miles to protest what he saw as a looming threat to northeast Minnesota from mining interests. Tucked in his provisions were petitions signed by northeast Minnesotans who opposed nonferrous mining adjacent to the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness.

“The BWCA, Lake Superior, the lakes and rivers of the northeast, these are Minnesotans’ crown jewels,” Moe said at the time. “The mining industry says this is about jobs. But about 30,000 of us in the northeast depend on clean water for our livings, and we have to protect it.”

John Beargrease president Kirk Weber said that race officials are “talking about some way to honor Frank at the start” of this year’s races, which begin Jan. 30 in Duluth and span three days.

Moe was a longtime Beargrease board member who served as vice president until just after the 2021 races and who competed in last year’s 120-mile run, Weber said.

“Frank was very instrumental in making sure we could safely have the races” in light of concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic, Weber said. “He was just a great champion of mushing. He helped mentor younger mushers, and he had dogs people could train with and dogs that other mushers could run with.”

DFL Party Chair Ken Martin said in a statement that Moe “was a champion for our environment, a terrific legislator who delivered for northern Minnesota, and a tremendously warm and caring person. I was fortunate to work closely with Frank to pass the Clean Water, Land, and Legacy Amendment and am still grateful to this day for his pivotal advocacy.”

“The impact of Frank’s hard work, leadership, and activism will be felt for generations to come, and I have no doubt that his legacy will continue to inspire environmentalists across Minnesota,” said Martin.

Moe was born in the Twin Cities in 1965 and graduated from Bloomington Jefferson High School. He received his undergraduate degree in history from Carleton College in Northfield and his master’s in physical education from the University of North Carolina before doctoral studies in education at the University of Minnesota.

Jack Stone could barely get through his grief as he expressed how important Moe was to his Stone Harbor Wilderness Supply business in Grand Marais as one of his first employees in 2010.

Moe led groups kayaking in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness and climbing in Tettegouche State Park near Silver Bay in the summertime, when he wasn’t off mushing during the snowy months, Stone said.

Stone traveled to the Twin Cities last year to be near Moe when he went in the hospital.

“I’ve been in touch with him and Sherri through all of this,” Stone said. “He kept talking about what trips he wanted to do this summer.

“Frank can’t be replaced up here,” said Stone. “I just don’t see him being replaced.”

Moe is preceded in death by his father, Paul Moe, and brother Paul Moe. Along with his wife, he is survived by his mother, Vonda Moe Bezat, stepfather James Bezat and half-brother John Moe.

A celebration of Frank Moe’s life is planned at the Hovland Town Hall on Feb. 5. Further details are pending.