Brunswick Town DAR treasurer answered the Constitution Week question correctly and received a gift.
This website is not an official NSDAR website. The content contained herein does not necessarily represent the position of the NSDAR. The President General is the official spokesperson on issues that have not been addressed as policy of NSDAR. Contact blog manager, Phyllis Wilson at par4wilson@gmail.com for additional information or Brunswick Town Chapter, NSDAR Regent, Mary Sands at sandsdarmary@gmail.com. We are located in Southport, NC.
Rick Kaplan was flying with his service dog, King, when the dog got close to him and signaled that he sensed something wrong. Kaplan has a seizure disorder caused by an accident, and the dog is able to sense when Kaplan is about to have a seizure. In this case, the dog backed away and shook his head. “What he was saying to me was that there’s a seizure going on here, but it’s not you. I told the flight attendant. We marched King down the aisle. He came to a lady and put his foot on her seat and his nose close to her face.” When asked if she had seizures, she answered “yes.” While the flight attendant located a doctor among the passengers, the woman took her medication. “Within ten minutes, she had a big seizure,” Kaplan said, “but because she had taken her medication, it wasn’t the end of the world.” King is the leader of the pack at Kaplan’s house which doubles as his kennel and primary training facility for 12 to 20 service dogs at any given time. The founder of Canine Angels, Kaplan has been training dogs since he was a child. It was a gift he had by the age of six, he said. A retired New York City jeweler, Kaplan said he views this effort as his way of giving back. Health issues kept him from serving with his friends in Vietnam, so he focuses on veterans now. “I had a series of injuries and allergies, and nobody would take me. I had a lot of friends who served in Vietnam. I always said that when I was able, I would serve as an old man. It’s a total give back.” Since moving south and establishing Canine Angels as a 501 (c) 3, he’s rescued and trained hundreds of dogs. All of the dogs are from Brunswick and Horry Counties, and almost all were on death row, some minutes from being euthanized. Those that make it through service training are generally paired with military veterans. Those that can’t quite make it as service dogs go into the therapy dog division where they’re paired with a forever home and an individual who donates time and energy to visit hospitals, hospice, nursing homes, and the children’s reading program. (More on that in a bit). Most recently, Kaplan has been training dogs to assist autistic children. The fourth dog is in training now. As service dogs for veterans, the animals may be called upon to do a myriad of tasks. Part of Kaplan’s challenge is to evaluate exactly what the veteran needs and match those needs to the perfect dog. Sometimes the matches don’t work because the chemistry isn’t there, he said. The dog and veteran spend 24 hours a day together. It’s not like a marriage where there are hours apart. It’s total togetherness. “The chemistry has to be right. I had a marine who came, and I thought I had the perfect dog for him. The dog wasn’t interested in him. He started to tell me about the loss of his mother, and he welled up in tears. A new dog who wasn’t trained ran to him and put his head in his lap.” The dog was at the beginning of his basic training and was going through heart worm treatment. Nonetheless, the veteran felt the connection and asked to have the dog. The only way to make it work was for Kaplan to train the veteran to train the dog. That’s exactly what they did, and the two have been together for four years. The veteran and his wife and children have reunited (they had separated because of his PTSD), and he holds down a job. PTSD training for dogs is only one of the specialties in the dogs may excel in. Veterans with physical limitations need dogs that can pick up things, turn on lights, pull food from the refrigerator, or simply be strong enough to allow the person to hold onto them in order to move from a wheelchair to a stationary chair. In the children’s reading program where therapy dogs are used, second-grade children in Brunswick County schools read to dogs. “First graders are too young and third graders know the dog doesn’t know what they’re saying. Second graders are right there. I have the dogs trained to pop their head up on an imperceptible signal. If a child misses a word, I’ll give the signal and say ‘I don’t think the dog understood that word,’ so the child tries again. It’s great fun. That’s a total community give back.” All of the therapy dogs went through the service training program but proved better for living with a family. “They found a great home and a better life.”
The above story was written by the Brunswick Town Public Relations Chair and appeared in the November 2022 Newsletter. Click on the website below to view the November 2022 Newsletter
Go to: file:///C:/Users/Phyllis%20Wilson/Downloads/n-Nov2022final.pdf
The dogs showed the DAR members at their November meeting how they are trained to accept donations and place the donation in the bucket. Very tricky.
Veterans Day is November 11th
Let’s Order Some Wreaths For Wreaths Across America – Put a wreath on every Veterans Grave at Wilmington National Cemetery on December 17th, 2022
E-mail Phyllis Wilson at par4wilson@gmail.com who will send you a form to fill out to order wreaths. You can mail the form yourself. Just be sure on your check that you put the NC0009P in case the check should get separated from the form. You can also click on the Wreaths Across America tab and order your wreaths online or you can call the number listed and order over the phone. This is the perfect time to honor our Veterans. Hope you will think so too. If you order online be sure to e-mail Phyllis your receipt. If you order by check e-mail Phyllis your check number. She can check wreath orders electronically.
Photo of WWI Rifle Range taken November 2019 with DAR Brunswick Town Chapter members. present.
The Friends of the 1918 Fort Caswell Rifle Range (FFCRR) and the Brunswick Town Chapter NSDAR announce their joint program for Friday, Veterans Day, November 11, 2022, at 11:00am beside the rifle range in Caswell Beach. The public is encouraged to attend.
After a 2 year delay caused by the pandemic, they will resume the Roll Call of the names of the 718 men and women from Brunswick County who served in the Great War. FFCRR president Norma Eckard said, "We are excited to continue the program of honoring the men and women who served by calling their names. We also have a historic program to offer folks."
Following the Roll Call, the cannon Thor, donated to the Southport Historical Society, will be fired by their crew members.
Brunswick Town Chapter NSDAR member Caron Myers will portray World War I Navy Nurse Susan Adkins Williams, who was raised in Southport.
Caron will also sing "God Bless America." The words and music were written by Irving Berlin during the Great War but the musical piece was not used until 1938.
Taps will be played by Richard Slease at the end of the program.
FFCRR's recently published book Brunswick County in the Great War will be available for sale after the program.
Those attending may park in condo parking lots but not on the grass. Please bring a folding chair to sit on.
The next Roll Call is tentatively scheduled for Tuesday, April 6th, 2023, to commemorate the date the US entered World War I in 1917.