MASSACHUSETTS 
CANINE RESPONSE TEAM, INC.

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MACRT Membership

Many people contact MACRT because they are interested in search and rescue and want to learn more about the canine search and rescue training offered by MACRT. To assist people who think that they might be interested in training with us, MACRT has listed some frequently asked questions below. We also have posted our Canine Air-Scent Wilderness Performance Standards right here on this website for you to review and to learn what is required of a MACRT certified dog and handler search team.  

                                                                               

What is MACRT?
Massachusetts Canine Response Team, Inc. (MACRT) is a volunteer search and rescue (SAR) canine unit. We are a Certified Canine SAR Organization with the Massachusetts Search Dog Committee. MACRT also is a Qualified SAR Organization with Northeast Wilderness Search and Rescue, Inc. (NEWSAR), an organization which maintains a database of trained search and rescue personnel in and around the northeastern United States. MACRT is on-call 24-hours a day, 365-days a year to assist Law Enforcement Agencies, Fire/Rescue Agencies and other official agencies (local, statewide, and even nationwide) in emergency response situations to help find lost or missing people, or to assist in the location of people who have been caught in the midst of a large-scale natural or man-made disaster.

How can I join MACRT?
People who are interested in becoming SAR handlers with MACRT must attend at least five trainings as observers only. During this observation period, you get to meet us and we get to meet you. While we will not start SAR-training with your dog (if you have one) during this introductory period, your dog will be evaluated relative to its aptitude for search and rescue training. We also will try to assign you to a more experienced SAR handler who can answer questions you might have. This handler will help evaluate your interest and your commitment as well as your dog's temperament and aptitude. During this introductory period, you will have an opportunity to work with other MACRT handlers and get to know them too. Getting to meet us and to watch us train will help give you some idea whether you feel comfortable with MACRT's canine handlers and whether you like how we train our dogs. Every SAR organization trains their dogs in a manner they think is best. However, there are many SAR organizations and, as such, there are many different ways of training SAR dogs. MACRT urges you to contact all of the different SAR organizations in your area and determine for yourself which organization best fits yours training philosophy. By attending several of our training sessions, you also will begin to understand the time commitment and the amount of work that is required to train a search dog and to become a Certified Canine Handler with MACRT. After observing us for up to five trainings, you will then be asked whether you want to submit an application to MACRT seeking to be accepted into MACRT as a Trainee. Applications for membership are reviewed three times a year in January, May and September as an agenda item at the Regular and Annual General Meetings. Certified Field Assistants and Certified Handlers vote on all applicants. (Applications can also be reviewed at a Special Meeting called together for that purpose). If approved by majority vote, you will be invited to attend three months of scheduled training accompanied by your dog (if you have one). During this probationary three-month period, MACRT will work with you and your dog as you start the SAR training process. At the end of the probationary three-month period, Certified Field Assistants and Certified Handlers will again vote on whether to formalize your status as a "Trainee." You can be given "Trainee" status with or without a canine. Once officially granted "Trainee" status, you are considered a member of MACRT and we will assign to you a more experienced SAR handler who will accept responsibility for helping you become Fully Operational.  Only Fully Operational Handlers are deployable in the event of an emergency response event. In working with this more experienced handler, your goal will be to become a Fully Operational Handler within two years.

 

What breed of dog should I use as a SAR dog?
There are over a hundred breeds of dogs and individuals of many of these breeds are capable of doing SAR work, and even excelling in this discipline. Most SAR dogs, however, come from the working, herding or sporting breeds -- but even certain breeds within these groupings are more suitable than others. You will learn that SAR training demands much of a dog -- the dog must be able to work without handler support yet be very biddable. The SAR dog must have a great reward relationship yet not be aggressive in its demand for the toy or must be controlled when working around other dogs. The SAR dog must be agile and have great task endurance. Above all else, the SAR dog must be tenacious in its hunting drive and must be resilient in its ability to withstand rough footing and adverse weather and long hours of work.  In short, a SAR dog is a performance animal and not all breeds of dogs -- and not all dogs within a breed -- have the temperament, and the talent, to do the work required. Given the commitment you will make, and the hundreds of hours you will invest in training this dog, it is heartbreaking to work with a dog that does not have the drives appropriate for this work.  (We say, in such cases, that the dog is just not "raising his paw for SAR."). So, it is very important to select a dog that will be up to the demands asked of it.  Dogs at the extreme ends of the size range (i.e. very small or very large) also tend not to be well suited for this work. The canine-candidate does not have to be a purebred but one advantage of working with a dog with a known pedigree is being able to look at the parents of that dog as a guideline for its temperament and working ability.  It is a good idea if you don't already own a dog is to come out to a MACRT training session to observe different breeds before you make up your mind about a given breed or particular dog. Watch what it is that your dog will be asked to do. Talk to different handlers about the pros and cons of their breed in doing search work -- certain breeds may have inherent traits and talents that make them easier (or sometimes more difficult) to train than other breeds. Anyone who has been working with SAR dogs for any length of time has learned a great deal about what is important in a SAR dog and you can gain much by listening carefully to what these more experienced handlers have to say. However, if you are set on a particular breed, you will have a much better chance of success in purchasing a dog that will be able to do the work by buying from a working line and not a show line. Also, you should investigate any genetic diseases inherent in your breed and take all steps possible to ensure you purchase your dog from a bloodline that appears clear of genetic health problems that tend to occur in your breed. A reputable breeder should be able to answer any questions you have about health problems within their bloodlines, as well as the potential working ability of their dogs. Again, you don't want to put years of hard work into training a dog just to find out later that it is not capable of doing the work due to a genetically-linked disease. And, you want to start with a dog that has as much potential as possible to do the work -- and for as long as possible!

 

Must I start with a puppy or can I work with the 4-year old dog I currently own?
Yes . . .  and no. The old maxim that "ya' can't teach an old dog new tricks," just ain't so. Any SAR organization that understands the "Laws of Learning" and has a good system of SAR dog training should be able to put a solid SAR foundation on any dog, young or old, that has the drives appropriate for the work. In fact, SAR training sometimes moves quicker with an older dog than it does with a puppy whose ability to focus and whose limited strength and coordination have to be factored into early training sessions. Additionally, older dogs who have in place an established reward system, and who have a good handler/dog communication system, and who understand the learning process and are not threatened by the demands of learning something new (ie, the dog "loves to learn"), can move very quickly through the initial foundational SAR training (although a dog will become "solid" and will "generalize" only after many, many, many hours of training and proofing). And so, it is very possible for older dogs to learn "how to be a SAR dog" and, in fact, some of us at MACRT started our SAR-careers with the dogs that we "just happened to have at the end of our leashes." Often these were dogs that were older and already had a successful previous career or two. Or, they were younger dogs that were just "sitting around at home" and "we wanted to give them something to do." Some of these dogs turned out to be "super" SAR dogs . . . but not all of them did and, while these dogs may have been wonderful in other canine-training environments, they just did not have the drives appropriate for SAR. Or, because of the age at which these dogs started, the dogs were near retirement by the time they became operational. Despite their "shortcomings," each of these dogs taught us a great deal during the years that we were starting out -- and it truly can be said that that dogs which are "training-challenges" teach one more about how to train a dog than do the dogs that just come out and "naturally" do whatever it is that we want them to do. So, all of us at MACRT have benefited working dogs that others would consider marginal. And, we each understand the "first-dog-syndrome" that makes new handlers want to work with their much loved pet, or former working dog. However, MACRT canine handlers also have developed over the years and MACRT now encourages new trainees to start out with a young dog or puppy with a strong aptitude for SAR for several important reasons:

 

I currently own two dogs and both would make wonderful SAR dogs -- may I work with both?
New handlers often ask whether that can train more than one dog at the same time for SAR. As much fun as it is to train a SAR dog, the answer is "no, not until you successfully certify your first dog." And, we take an especially dim view of anyone trying to train their second dog "all on their own." As we explained above, it takes a great deal of time and commitment to train even one dog and your dog will be a reflection on MACRT -- so we want to do all we can to ensure that your dog gets the proper training, under thoughtful guidance. So if you have more than one dog, we will ask that you concentrate on, and just work with, one dog. We can help you evaluate which dog would make a better candidate for SAR work.  

 

How long does it usually take for my dog and I to finish our training?
If you have trained dogs before, especially SAR dogs, then training progresses much faster than if this is your first SAR dog. But, even for experienced handlers, dogs often "dictate" how quickly training progresses. Different dogs learn at different rates -- and even a given dog will learn some things quicker than they will other things. So, progress is often dependent on the dog's ability to absorb what we want it to do and then to be motivated to perform that behavior independently. But, in general, the training of SAR dog can take up to 1 1/2 - 3 years.  And, of course, you too will need to gain certain skills before you and your dog become Fully Operational.

 

What are the skills which I will need to learn?
You must learn CPR and take a "Basic First Aid" or "First Responder Course," or equivalent. Here, in Massachusetts, both the MASARD Committee and NEWSAR, require that any person interested in responding to SAR emergencies have acquired skills equivalent to a NASAR SAR Tech II. Therefore, before you can be deployed in the field, you must pass certain Training Certification Modules including, but not limited to, map and compass, POD estimation, radio communications, search strategy, scent theory, basic first aid and canine first aid. MACRT will assist you in acquiring these skills and testing you but previous outdoor experience and/or medical training will be beneficial.

 

What will I be training my dog to do?
The type of training your dog receives will be somewhat dependent on which search specialty you choose. MACRT's primary focus when it first formed was to train wilderness air-scent dogs and rubble dogs. Over time, however, MACRT handlers sought training in other SAR specialties and currently trains dogs in the following search disciplines: air-scent wilderness, water, disaster, human remains detection and trailing. MACRT believes in "Specialty Dogs," but there is much overlap in the training of any dog, regardless of the search specialty selected. For example, all dogs must be well socialized, agile enough to safely negotiate obstacles in the wilderness and/or in disaster rubble. The dog must be able to swim if you want to do water training. You may achieve certification in other disciplines such as cadaver or water searches, after you are certified in air-scent wilderness or trailing. Alternately, you may elect to "specialize" in one discipline and MACRT will help you understand the different specialty areas available. Whatever area you select, however, you will find that there are many different ways to get the same results. We encourage you to stay with one method until you achieve some success with that method and not to skip from one method to another just because it seems easier or because someone tells you their method is better. Skipping around not only confuses you, but it confuses your dog.  So, please try to stay with one method unless you find it is totally impossible for you to attain your goals. If you have never trained a dog before, it will be helpful to read a good basic dog training book that explains "how dogs learn."  A couple of books that contain wonderful insights into "how dogs learn" include:

You should also take a basic obedience class on your own. When you start training, you must begin keeping a training log of all your training sessions with you and your dog. This will help you keep up with the progress of your dog as well as to identify any problems or difficulties that may arise. Most of what you will learn about training your dog will come from actual MACRT training sessions as well as input from fellow members and especially the canine handler that has been assigned to work with you. However, your ultimate success will mostly be determined by the amount of time and effort you put in. Finally, please don't let your dog run around loose unless it is working. If other dogs are tied up or under any kind of obedience command, don't let your dog bother them. Some dogs will naturally protect their vehicle or the area where they are tied. Above all, your dog must learn to be very obedient and should always be under your control!

 

I really want to be a SAR canine handler but is all this time consuming?
Yes. Expect to train 2-3 times a week (including night training) when you are starting out with MACRT. Consistent, regular training is the key to having a dog that understands what is expected of it. You can do some training on your own, but there is no substitute for training with MACRT at its regularly scheduled trainings. Not only do you learn more about how to train your own dog by working regularly with us, but a great deal can be learned by watching other dogs work. To make it convenient and to ensure that our rostered-dogs receive adequate training, MACRT offers two nightly trainings and weekend trainings in varying locations. You will be expected to attend as many trainings as possible during your training (and attendance of at least four trainings per month of regularly-scheduled MACRT trainings are required as "sign-offs" prior to becoming field qualified). When you become a Certified Canine Handler, you will still need to continue to train regularly to keep your basic skills sharp and to assist in the training of other rostered-dogs. Callouts for actual searches tend to occur in the middle of the night. And, because MACRT responds to calls throughout the Commonwealth, you may be called to a search in other areas of  the state than the area in which you live. Though you are not required to go on all searches, we are on-call all day and night every day of the year.  The most effective dog handlers today are searchers first, and dog handlers second.

 

Is this expensive?
Yes. Since this is a volunteer organization, you pay for all your required equipment. That includes sleeping bag, backpack, hiking boots, rain gear, wear and tear on your vehicle, gasoline, etc. NASAR recommends that you have sufficient gear to be self sufficient for "at least three days" in case you are deployed deep into the wilderness but we have never found that to be necessary here in Massachusetts where the Red Cross and the Command Centers supply all response personnel with food and lodging. You will, however, need to come prepared with your own field equipment and a sleeping bag and this amount of equipment must be purchased prior to your first certification test. MACRT will provide you with a list of the equipment it requires. Because this is a volunteer organization, many of your expenses may be tax deductible, so please consult your tax advisor to determine if you qualify for any tax deductions. 

 

Some final comments.
One thing you must realize is that we are all here to help each other in our training. MACRT is not a dog training club. We will help you and your dog get the training, instruction and advice you need to become Certified Canine Handler. You can help your fellow MACRT members (and are expected to) by being a "subject" for our dogs during training sessions. If you have some expertise to share with the group, please let us know. We train in all kinds of inclement weather because searches often occur in rainy or stormy weather.  You will find that training sessions are the time to try out your new outdoor gear and not on a real search. Good raingear is very important. If you are asked to participate in a longer search training session (e.g. being a "subject" for up to 4 hours), please bring proper gear and clothing for the weather. Being cold and wet for several hours is no fun and possibly dangerous. Proper clothing, a ground cloth, a sleeping bag, and enough food and water can make being at a training session or a test "subject" a more pleasant experience. It is very valuable to walk with different Certified Canine Handlers (as well as other less experienced members) in their training sessions to watch them work. You can learn a lot by observing and asking questions. We are always willing to share what we know with you and often your observations and questions help us learn too.

A word on physical fitness: If you have any physical handicap or problem, it is best to consult with your physician to make sure s/he approves of this activity. You definitely need to be both physically fit and healthy. Searches can potentially last up to 12 hours a day for several days and be located in areas of very rough terrain with inclement weather. So mental as well as physical fitness is a must. Remember, on a search, you are there to help find subjects, not become a victim yourself.  The MACRT Fitness Test must be completed prior to your becoming Fully Operational. The MACRT Physical Fitness Test consists of her demonstrating the ability to hike three (3) miles with a Field pack (including water for handler and canine) in under two (2) hours).

 


Final Points to consider before you decide to train!

 


Still interested in joining?
Please send an email to admin@macrt.net to set up a time to come and observe the team training.    After observing the team, you can complete the
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION and send it to us at MACRT!  And, thanks in advance for your interest!!