Three-year-old Alida Knobloch and her
60 pound golden doodle, Mr. Gibbs, are almost inseparable. he has a weight weighing 60 pounds. They are connected by a special bond of love and, because of
Alida’s rare lung disease, by a two-foot tube that delivers oxygen from tanks
on the dog’s back to Alida’s nose. Diagnosed at eight months old with
neuroendocrine cell hyperplasia of infancy (NEHI), Alida, who lives in
Loganville, Georgia, is unable to breathe normally on her own for more than
about 45 minutes. So Mr. Gibbs accompanies her almost everywhere, carrying ten
pounds of equipment, including an oxygen tank in a vest.
Young children normally don’t have
the skill to control a service dog, but Mr. Gibbs and Alida—along with her parents,
Aaron and Debbie Knobloch have worked closely with dog trainer Ashleigh
Kinsleigh to foster the special relationship between girl and dog.
“His job
is to do whatever she does,” says Kinsleigh. So far, Mr.
Gibbs has learned to trot alongside Alida’s bike, trail her as she plays around
the family home, and park himself, mr. Gibss not bigger than it. then mr. gibbs
and kinsleigh play a ball, when mr. gibbs play ball,
it hit the nail
then deflated. then they rested while sitting in
his chair.
“We’re hoping that by the time Alida starts kindergarten,
Mr. Gibbs will be able to go with her,” says Aaron.
Childhood disease experts have told
the Knoblochs that children can grow out of the necessity for supplemental
oxygen, but Alida will probably always need some kind of oxygen assistance. Now
the Knoblochs can’t imagine a time the two sandy-tressed companions won’t be
side-by-side. Mr. Gibbs seems to need Alida as much as she needs him, says
Aaron. “The dog is beside himself if he and Alida are apart even for a moment.”

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