Travelling with a guide dog, playing table tennis and tic-tac-toe blindfolded… – visitors are welcomed in nearly 20 cities all over the country on the occasion of the International Guide Dog Day on Saturday, April 25.

and other specialties are among the different programs which can be of interest to sighted people – everything they do not encounter in their daily lives but can be familiarized with in an exciting way at the various locations where a number of devices and games can be tried out.

Many thousands of people can celebrate a success in our country rooted in Miskolc: the 50th Baráthegyi guide dog has passed the traffic safety exam on April 15, in Bács-Kiskun County.

A Labrador called Maximus is the 50th guide dog since the regulatory requirements were introduced in 2009 who demonstrated before the Examining Board of the Hungarian Therapy and Assistance Dogs Association (MATESZE as abbreviated in Hungarian) as a Baráthegyi guide dog that he had acquired the necessary skills.

The cooperation of an other guide dog couple was strengthened by a successful traffic safety exam at the end of march. Tamás Terhes and his guide dog Labrador Jampi walk, as usual, confidently in the city centre of Szeged. Getting around on crowded squares and travelling with a bus getting on and off do not mean any problem to them.

We the Baráthegyi Guide Dog school celebrate International Guide Dog Day on the 27th of April with several events throughout the country. We are waiting for everyone who is interested in it on Saturday prior to the day.

The aim of this program is to bring attention to visually impaired people and the importance of guide dogs,