Balto/HRD
HRD[edit | edit source]

Human Remains Detection (HRD) is a discipline where canines are trained to locate human remains in various forms and environments. Balto's HRD exercise log captures the source details, activity type, environmental factors, and the dog's performance.
Starting an HRD Exercise[edit | edit source]
- From the Welcome page, press and hold the begin training button to start a new mission
- Configure the mission details (date, location, DR number) and tap Start a new task
- On the Exercise Configuration screen, select HRD as the training type
- Tap Set Task Details to begin the exercise
The HRD exercise has two sections that scroll vertically: Setup, and Review.
Setup Section[edit | edit source]
This section captures the configuration of the exercise.
Lead[edit | edit source]
Select On lead or Off lead based on how the dog is working.
Area Size/Length[edit | edit source]
Enter the approximate size of the search area. Use the spinning wheel control to quickly adjust the value, or tap the text field to enter a specific value.
Select the appropriate units from the dropdown:
- acres (max 200)
- meters (max 1000) — for linear search areas
- sq. feet (max 10,000)
- sq. meters (max 10,000)
- miles (max 20) — for linear search areas
HRD Activity[edit | edit source]
Select the type of HRD work being performed:
- Imprinting — Teaching the dog the target odor
- Blocks/Tubes — Training aids in blocks or tubes
- Alert — Working on the trained final response
- Wheel — Scent wheel exercise
- Surface — Surface-deposited remains
- Buried — Buried remains
- Elevated — Remains in elevated locations
- Water — Water-based HRD
- Debris — Searching in rubble or debris
- Concrete — Concrete-encased or covered remains
- Burn area — Fire scene HRD
- Vehicle — HRD in vehicles
- Building — HRD in buildings or structures
- Negative — Area known to contain no source
- Other — Any other HRD activity type
Details[edit | edit source]
Free-form text field to describe specific details about the activity. The placeholder shows "N/A" which can be left as the default.
Distractions[edit | edit source]
Free-form text field to describe any distractions present during the exercise (other dogs, wildlife, scent contamination, etc.). The placeholder shows "None" if no distractions are present.
Blindness[edit | edit source]
Select the handler's knowledge level:
- Known — Handler knows source location(s)
- Single Blind — Handler does not know, but someone else does
- Double Blind — Neither handler nor person directing the search knows
Source Type[edit | edit source]
Select the type of source material being used:
- Blank, Blood, Tissue, Organ, Fluids, Teeth, Soil, Cremains, Bone, Adipocere, Body, Limbs, Burned, Contaminated Item, Indeterminate, Unknown, Multiple/Large
Source ID[edit | edit source]
Enter an identifier for the source material (e.g. "S-12" or "Sample A"). This helps track which specific source was used across multiple exercises.
Source Placed[edit | edit source]
Enter the date and time when the source was placed in YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm format, or tap the Now button to use the current time. Tracking source aging is important for HRD training records.
Review Section[edit | edit source]
This section captures the performance rating and notes.
Performance Rating[edit | edit source]
Select a rating from N/A through 0-10 to assess the dog's performance.
TFR[edit | edit source]
Select TFR Unprompted (dog gave the trained final response on their own) or TFR Prompted (dog responded after handler cue).
False Alert[edit | edit source]
Check if the dog gave a false alert during the exercise.
Notes[edit | edit source]
Free-form text area for activity notes and remediation plan.
Finishing the Exercise[edit | edit source]
When you're done recording the exercise:
- Scroll to the bottom of the screen
- Tap Finish & save exercise
- The exercise will be saved and you'll return to the mission
Tips[edit | edit source]
- Use Source ID consistently across exercises to track scent aging across multiple sessions
- The Source Placed date/time enables tracking of scent permeation in different environments
- For training records that include multiple HRD activities, run separate exercises for each activity type rather than combining them
- If the dog gives a false alert, note the location and circumstances in the Notes field for later analysis