Minnesota Pit Bull Ruby Changes Minds and Hearts as a Therapy Dog

Thanks to the StarTribune.com for this article. Dog bucks the stereotype Ruby takes her love to senior homes and has taken a turn on the...

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Thanks to the StarTribune.com for this article.

Dog bucks the stereotype

Ruby takes her love to senior homes and has taken a turn on the stage, all part of her owners’ campaign to try to convince people that pit bulls aren’t innately bad.

By PAT PHEIFER, Star Tribune

It took a few minutes for Herb Isakson, 81, to smile as he sat in the hobby room at Croixdale with about a dozen other senior citizens last week. But his face split into a huge grin when Ruby crawled into his lap and snuggled in.

Ruby is a pit bull. She also is a certified therapy dog.

Those two statements seem incongruous, but Ruby’s owners, Pat and Lynn Bettendorf of Scandia, are trying to change all that.

While the very words pit bull evoke images for some people of dog fighting and brutal attacks on humans, the residents at Croixdale, an independent assisted-living and memory care facility in Bayport, visit with Ruby every other week and certainly seem to relish the cuddles and kisses from the 56-pound pooch.

“He reminds me of the dog I had,” said Irene Kreutz, who turned 94 on Christmas Day. “He’s a wonderful dog.

“Look how he listens,” she said as Ruby cocked her head at another resident as if to say, “What?”

Mary Jo Ducklow, activities director at Croixdale, said she doesn’t have any concerns about Ruby’s breed.

“When they’re a therapy dog, they’ve gone through all that training,” she said. “I mean they’re trained with wheelchairs running over their paws, for goodness sakes.”

And the residents? “You can see them relax when they’re petting the dog,” she said.

Pit bulls as dangerous dogs

The public perception of pit bulls as inherently dangerous is fueled by news reports such as the Aug. 16 death of a 7-year-old Minneapolis boy who was killed by the family’s pit bull, which previously had bitten two people and was kept chained in the basement.

In the wake of two severe dog attacks in St. Paul, DFL state Rep. John Lesch said last June that he will introduce legislation next year to ban five types of dogs in Minnesota — including pit bulls and Rottweilers.

Minneapolis is considering placing more restrictions on dangerous dogs, and Apple Valley has proposed restricting some breeds to industrial areas.

Pit bulls don’t belong to a particular breed. The American Pit Bull Terrier, the American Staffordshire Terrier and the Staffordshire Bull Terrier all are often called pit bulls.

Watching the Bettendorfs with Ruby, it’s easy to see why they insist the problem is bad owners, not bad dogs. The Bettendorfs own “a number” of dogs, including another pit bull, Tiger, and another certified therapy dog, Venus, a not too bright but awfully sweet Rottweiler.

“Ruby is not the exception,” Pat Bettendorf said. “There’s a lot of good pit bulls out there.

“We’re not saying these breeds are for everybody, but it’s just training and socialization, training and socialization,” he said. “You do have to be the alpha, but with any dog, really, you have to be alpha. It’s not a light responsibility.”

Ruby was just a puppy when she was found three years ago, abandoned and starving in an empty house in the northern suburbs. Most of her fur had fallen out. She spent three weeks at an animal hospital before her rescuers set out to find her a foster home.

She makes herself at home

The Bettendorfs weren’t in the market for another dog, but after being asked three times, they agreed to take her “just for the Thanksgiving holiday weekend.”

After Thanksgiving dinner, she crawled onto the loveseat and fell asleep in a guest’s lap.

She is trained and socialized at least once a week at Total Recall, a dog obedience school in Hugo run by a retired St. Paul police officer and his wife. Ruby underwent rigorous testing to be certified by Therapy Dogs International.

Last February, she received the Minnesota Veterinary Medical Association Animal Hall of Fame Companion Award. Recently, she was given an achievement award from the Animal Farm Foundation in New York.

Follow this link to read the rest of this article and watch the video.

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