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Rowan,The Eyeless Dog Who Sees Like Bats & Dolphins
The Reason For My Faith ^ | 12/28/20 | Chuck Ness

Posted on 12/28/2020 1:56:50 PM PST by OneVike

I first shared this about 5 years ago on my blog, but I decided to share it again, just so a new audience can read about this interesting dog.


Hosted by imgur.com All warm blooded animals were created by God to have five basic senses. However, when we lose our sight, or are born blind, we find it difficult to deal with a world made for those who see. Blind people cope in a world built for eyes by using trained guide dogs. It has been a partnership that both man and dog have learned to appreciate and love.

Well, what I have for you today is a video of a German Spitz dog named Rowan, who was born with no eyes. You may remember the article I wrote about Ben Underwood. He was a boy who lost his eyes to cancer at the young age of three, but you would never have known it if you had seen him riding his bike. Well, Rowan is a dog who like Ben Underwood, has no eyes.

Like Ben, you would never know he is eyeless. Rowan sees so well, he doesn't even need a seeing-eye human to help him get around.  I guess you can say he is blessed in that he still has the senses that all dogs use to communicate with each other. Like Ben, Rowan doesn't feel sorry for himself just because he cannot see. lAfter all, as far as he is concerned, eyes don't exist for anyone. So you probably wonder how he gets around to learn his surroundings if he cannot see.

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The Reason For My Faith

God is truly good because he gave the dog the understanding that he could bark, and then listen for the sound to bounce off an object. It is what scientists call "echolocation," but you may understand it to be like sonar. Similar to how Ben created an environmental image by hearing echoes bouncing off objects like sonar. Instead of clicking, Rowan uses his barking. Both depend upon the echo sound bouncing off objects they are coming near to avoid them.

Hosted by imgur.com a series of regular barks along with his keen ears, Rowan behaves like a bat in that his movements are not as smooth as most dogs as he runs about enjoying the world around him. Rowan's owner, dog trainer Sam Orchard, was first shocked to discover the dog was born eyeless.

However, as the the months went by, he realized that Rowan was using echolocation to get around in a black shapeless world. When people first meet Rowan, they don't know that he's blind, so they usually ask, "Why does he keep his eyes closed?" When asked about Rowan's condition, Sam's wife will tell you,
"When he was born five days early I kept waiting for him to open his eyes, and when he didn't, I took him to the vet. It was a real surprise when he told me that not only would they not be opening, they didn't exist because he was born without eyes. I was shocked, but I decided that I would just do the best I could for him, and now he is just like the others, only a bit more special. "

"Rowan would go out, and to find his direction, he would use his bark. When he's running around in the open, it's just as if he were the same as the rest of my dogs. When he first started going out, there were no leaves on the trees, but when the leaves grew, there was the rustling, and we noticed the change in his behavior. It really does seem to be a form of echolocation."

For those of you who are clueless as to what Echolocation is: Echolocation is ability that odontocetes (and some other marine mammals and most bats) possess that enables them to see with their ears by listening for echoes. With bats, the sounds are made by their noses. When the sound is reflected off an object the bats picks it up with their sensitive ears. The odontocetes generate sound in the form of clicks, within their nasal sacs, situated behind the melon in their forehead. The frequency of this click is higher than that of the sounds used for communication and differs between species. The melon acts as a lens which focuses the sound into a narrow beam that is projected in front of the animal. The sound is then reflected back to the dolphin in sound waves that received in the panbone which is located in the dolphin or killer whales lower jaw. The sensation is then transferred by the fatty tissue behind it to the middle ear and then to the brain.
Hosted by imgur.com Both the odontocetes and bats must continuously resend the sounds, so they can analyze the time lapsed between signals sent and sound waves received back. This is what allows the creatures to distinguish sizes, shapes, and distances for the purpose of homing in on an object for the express purpose of distinguishing between food and other objects.

This is why you see bats flying in such erratic patterns. Bats will literally make a 90 degree turn in mid-flight if they sense food near by. This highly specialized ability enables dolphins to explore their environment and search out their prey in a watery world where sight is often of little use. In the water, the sound travels four and a half times faster than in air. This advanced system is echolocation, and God has blessed Rowan, the eyeless dog, with it.

I tried to see if Rowan is still alive, but my search was futil. I do know that they can life from 12 to 16 years. I originally wrote this in 2014, so chances are he is still running around, clueless that a world exists in a way he has never seenWeb Hits......


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Education; Miscellaneous; Pets/Animals
KEYWORDS: bats; blindness; dolphins; echolocation

1 posted on 12/28/2020 1:56:50 PM PST by OneVike
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To: Kartographer; Jane Long; dragonblustar; goodnesswins; Salvation; Waryone; TNoldman; chicagolady; ...
Ever wonder how some blind animals, like this dog Rowan can see so good? Well some animals have what is called an echolocation ability. Better known as sonar. Check out this amazing dog.

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2 posted on 12/28/2020 1:57:20 PM PST by OneVike (Just another Christian waiting to go home)
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To: OneVike

I would suspect that this dog spends much of the day barking or yipping out sounds so as to navigate. Noisy, but impressive. It’s remarkable that he can use that to make his way around, preserving much of his independence.


3 posted on 12/28/2020 2:03:53 PM PST by lee martell
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To: OneVike

Josh the doodle is another special needs dog..Not in pain and enjoying life to the fullest..He has no idea he isn’t a “normal” dog....He’s just JOSH....


4 posted on 12/28/2020 2:05:33 PM PST by Hambone 1934 (We all know President Trump....A fighter to the end......)
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To: OneVike
but my search was futil.

It were have a futil, you search yes?

I do know that they can life from 12 to 16 years.

Lifes they can has? They can life like that? Amdiasing.

Seriously, go sober up. You'll be less embarrassed in the morning.

5 posted on 12/28/2020 2:15:14 PM PST by humblegunner (Balls To Picasso.)
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To: humblegunner

Wow


6 posted on 12/28/2020 2:19:09 PM PST by OneVike (Just another Christian waiting to go home)
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To: OneVike
Wow

Yes Wow.

Go look at what you "wrote".

7 posted on 12/28/2020 2:20:41 PM PST by humblegunner (Balls To Picasso.)
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To: lee martell
Perhaps, but the blind pekingese I grew up with would only growl and huff. She worked mostly from memory around the house; she'd huff her way around until she was sure where everything was and, unless someone moved something, she did an incredible job of getting around.

Favorite memory is of playing fetch with her. We had a ball with a bell in it and she'd find it way more often than not. I remember it rolling under a table and she *knew* the table was there, but didn't know how to get under it. About that time, she sneezed and you could see the lightbulb coming on. So here was a pekingese, blind as a bat, sneezing her head off, until she found that damn ball! More determination in man or beast I've never seen. lol

Guess that's why I have a soft spot for rescues and special needs dogs.
8 posted on 12/28/2020 2:22:24 PM PST by Retrofitted
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To: humblegunner

I wrote the last sentence as an add on after I actually had it ready. My wife was calling me for lunch. Next time I’ll post my article after I ate my lunch, instead of rushing it.


9 posted on 12/28/2020 2:23:03 PM PST by OneVike (Just another Christian waiting to go home)
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To: humblegunner

Sea kelp.


10 posted on 12/28/2020 3:16:45 PM PST by Flick Lives (#resist)
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To: OneVike

Meh. Typos.

Theyz happenn to oll of us.

:)


11 posted on 12/28/2020 4:26:32 PM PST by SaveFerris (Luke 17:28 ... as it was in the days of Lot; they did eat, they drank, they bought, they sold ......)
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