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Hayven's Scentinel

SUSAN DRINKARD, Contributing writer | Bonner County Daily Bee | UPDATED 4 years, 4 months AGO
by SUSAN DRINKARD, Contributing writer
| September 1, 2020 9:36 AM

Most people have a strong bond with their dog, but Hayven Chase, Bonner County’s reigning rodeo queen, has a unique connection with her 6-month-old pup, Scentinel.

Hayven has Type 1 diabetes. When her blood sugars are low, the service dog lets his young owner know so that she can take care of the matter.

“I wear a continuous blood sugar monitor on my arm. He can catch it about 15 to 20 seconds before my monitor does,” said the 16-year-old daughter of Reed and Roxanne Chase of Athol.

The golden labradoodle is devoted to Hayven. During the nighttime while she’s sleeping, Scentinel has been known to awaken Hayven to tell her she needs to take care of her sugar levels, the teen said.

Scentinel’s mother was a Goldendoodle and her father was a lab. Goldendoodles are friendly, quick to learn and loving and labs are an athletic breed that is happiest when they are working.

“The breeder bred Scentinel’s mother with a lab — for a little more drive,” she said.

Scentinel’s training began early. As young as one month, Scentinel started his training with Hayven at Lily Grace Service Dogs in Sandpoint, learning to detect low blood sugar through the breath and through saliva samples in little tins with holes in them. One saliva sample would be a normal blood sugar reading and the other one a saliva sample taken when Hayven’s blood sugar was low. When Scentinel chose the “low” sample, he received a treat. He associates the “low” smell with a reward and is now able to detect Hayven blood sugar levels even when he is many feet away from her.

Training is now under way for detection of high blood sugars, Hayven said.

When Scentinel detects a “live low,” he sits and paws her to get her attention.

A service dog is expensive; Hayven’s family and Bonner County’s horse community held fundraisers to assist with costs.

Hayven is a busy young person. To earn her title as 2020 Bonner County Rodeo queen, she competed in horsemanship competitions, participated in opportunities for public speaking, attended a Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association queen clinic, and attended clinics with Miss Rodeo Idaho and Miss Rodeo America. She had to demonstrate an extensive knowledge of rodeo and model fashionable western attire. Multiple judges, some with strong horsemanship backgrounds and some with strong rodeo backgrounds, were on the judging panel.

Hayven, who lives with her family on 10 acres in Athol, where they have a few cows and horses, will be a junior in high school this year. She’s an active member of Future Farmers of America and enjoys barrel racing, learning to rope, O-mok-see racing — a timed pattern racing event — running flags, and leathercraft. She is an instructor for the Mica Creek Horse Club and has earned several championships for O-mok-see racing.

“I am passionate about agriculture, the western way of life, the sport of rodeo, and advocating for people like myself — with hidden disabilities, she wrote in an online report on the Bonner County Fair website.

“Having been diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes at 8 years old, I’ve never let it stop me from attaining my goals. Instead, I have turned it into motivation to help and hopefully inspire others,” she wrote.

And now she has the support of a best friend “who also knows when I need help,” she said about her beloved service dog, Scentinel.

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(Photo courtesy HAYVEN CHASE)

Hayven Chase poses for a photo with her service dog, Scentinel. The 16-year-old Athol resident, who was named diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes when she was 8 years old, is training the goldendoodle/labrador mix to detect changes to her blood sugar.

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(Photo courtesy HAYVEN CHASE)

A tuckered Scentinel finds a comfortable spot to sleep on the lap of his owner, Hayven Chase. Chase, who was named the Bonner County Rodeo queen in March, is training the goldendoodle/labrador mix to detect changes to her blood sugar.

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(Photo courtesy HAYVEN CHASE)

Scentinel, a goldendoodle/labrador mix, is being trained as a service dog to detect changes in blood sugar levels by his owner, Hayven Chase, who was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes when she was 8 years old.

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(Photo courtesy HAYVEN CHASE)

Bonner County Rodeo Princess Cherra Dewey, left, and Bonner County Rodeo Queen Hayven Chase, right, with her service dog Scentinel at her side, pose for a photo at the Bonner County Fair recently.

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