Most dogs love car rides! But what if your dog turns into a terrified trembling drooling mess the moment you open the car door? Here are some helpful tips to overcoming your dog’s fear of riding in a car! Start with baby step building blocks, using rewards for each step if performed without fear. Can she walk up and sit next to the car confidently? Great, that gets a reward! It is very important during these training exercises detailed below that you try not to get stressed yourself! Pets need to go at their own speed, and can sense if you are feeling frustrated or rushed. That will only add to their anxiety, the opposite of what you are trying to do. Each step will take as long as it takes for your dog. Maybe read a book or sing along to a song on the radio! The fastest you should progress through the steps is one a day. Only advance to the next step if she can do the previous step confidently and happily.
If your dog acts stressed at any step, ignore her. You don’t want to reward anxious behavior inadvertently by giving her anxious behavior any attention, even just looking at her.
Bonus tip: giving your dog a special chew toy stuffed with their dinner or extra tasty treats each time you get into the car can help her associate getting in the car with something positive and fun too.
1. Have her sit next to you and the car, on leash, with the car door shut. Increase time sitting until it is one full minute. If no signs of stress, open the car door and stand there calmly for another full minute.
2. You sit in car, holding her leash with her outside. Again increase time up to one minute. (If she jumps or wants to get in the car that’s fine too, just have her get out again right away and you’ve completed step 3.)
3. Ask her to jump into the car (or put her in the car), then out again immediately.
4. Have her get or put her in the car, wait three seconds, get out of car. This step gets repeated with the “wait” getting longer and longer until she can sit in the car for five minutes, either attached to her dog harness seat belt or inside crate, just as she will be when you are traveling.
5. Sit in the car and car gets turned on for 10 seconds, then turned off. Repeat, gradually lengthening the time the car is on each day until you get up to 5 minutes. After 1 week of 5 minute car sessions, or however long it takes till your dog is sitting calmly with you for those 5 minutes, you are ready to…
6. Drive out of the driveway or parking spot! If your dog shows no signs of distress (no panting, freezing, drooling, pacing) you can drive down the block, but keep the total time in the car under 5 minutes. If she becomes distressed, calmly pull back into your parking spot, and once the pet calms down, try driving off again. If the second time isn’t any better, try again the following day. It may take a number of tries and days.
Once you’ve gone through all the steps above, gradually lengthen the car trips over time. Try to make the car trips going somewhere fun, like her favorite park, the pet supply store to go in with you and buy treats (and she gets to eat one there), a friend’s house she likes visiting. Many pets associate car trips with vet visits, and that can be one big source of their fear.
Happy Trails & Tails!
Plus don’t forget our essential…
5 Tips for Safe Car Trips with Your Pets:
- Pet Seat Belt Harness or Crate. Pets should never be allowed to ride unrestrained inside your car/suv, or outside in the flatbed of a truck. Keep your pets safe in a properly fitted car or flatbed pet harness, secured to the seat-belt or tie-downs, or inside a properly-sized travel crate that is securely strapped in place.
- Windows Open? Oh my, how dogs love to stick their noses out of a moving car window! But is the danger of your pet being blinded or worse worth it? Check out BreezeGuard‘s car window screens! They will let your dog (or even that adventurous cat) enjoy the same windy sensation much more safely. They also keep your pet safely contained, and inside temperatures matching the outside, when you stop.
- Back seat. Just like with kids, the back seat is the safest place for your family pet to ride – not all the way in the back of a wagon or truck, and not in the front, especially where an airbag could deploy in case of an accident.
- Car Sick Pets. Motion sickness is really no fun for you or your pet. Try to not feed them 4-6 hours before the car trip. Make frequent stops if its a long trip. Drive slower than usual, especially around curves. Roll down the window closest to them an inch or two for a safe breeze, or use a BreezeGuard car window screen. If they are a smaller pet, elevating them on a cushion, pet car seat, or in their crate so they can see out the window can help too. You can also get your pet used to car trips and less likely to get sick by taking them on daily short rides around the block, gradually lengthening the trip each time.
- Collar and ID. Every car trip, make sure your pets are wearing a collar with an up-to-date ID tag. Preferably it should have not only your phone number and address, but your emergency contact phone numbers as well – like your vet, or a neighbor/friend who could take in your pet temporarily. What if you are in an accident, your pet escapes, and you are not home or unable to answer your cell phone? Having your pet microchipped with all those up-to-date contacts is a good safety tip too.
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We love hearing from happy adopters who have used Adopt-a-Pet.com to find their new furry friend! Here’s an email we received with a great photo from Susan: “Hi Adopt-a-Pet.com, I just want to thank you for bringing Gizmo into my life. I really am not sure who rescued whom? I saw Gizmo on your site last November and kept going back to his picture (I wasn’t sure I really wanted the responsibility of a dog). After Thanksgiving, I called “Nate’s Place” in Sarasota and asked if Gizmo was still available for adoption. They said yes, so the next week I couldn’t resist. Gizmo was such a charmer, I filled out the papers etc and pop next thing I knew Gizmo had adopted me. He is a wonderful companion and has become the neighborhood social butterfly. He loves everyone and all the pets too! He even gets along with my daughter’s two cats. Such a sweetie! (Photo: It is obvious that Gizmo owns the house and allows me to live here with him!) Truly, if I had not seen Gizmo on your site I would never have found him. Thanks, Susan”
If you live in the path of or near Hurricane Isaac, there are many animal shelters and rescue groups who desperately need your help with the animals in their care. Below is a list of five ways that you can help animals being affected by the hurricane right now! We appreciate that you care about homeless pets. Together we can ensure that the two-legged and four-legged members of your community are all safe.
Our pets will never be left behind again. Seven years ago today, Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans. Many people had left assuming they would be back in days so they did not (or could not) take their pets. Others tried to take their pets at the last moment but were turned back from government busses. Adopt-a-Pet.com was instrumental in saving thousands of pets in the following days and weeks and helping reunite pets with their families. As Hurricane Isaac now threatens New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, we remember on this day all the people and animals who suffered seven years ago. We hope for the safety of everyone there now, and we pledge to not repeat the mistakes of the past. No one shall be left behind.
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If you’ve ever lived with a kitten, the expression “Midnight Kitten Zoomies” probably needs no explanation! Our feline friends are by nature nocturnal, and since kittens have boundless bucketfuls of youthful energy, nighttime is playtime for our kitten friends. For the humans sharing the household – and sleeping spaces – with one or more party-all-night-long kitten rockstars, getting a good night’s sleep can be quite a challenge the first year. A kitten without another kitten to play with often will add a Midnight Meow Mix soundtrack to the festivities too, trying to entice you (and your neighbors) to join the party in the living room… or on top of your head! Good news: it doesn’t have to be that way if you’re prepared and educated about how to channel the after-hours fun. Having fostered hundreds of kittens and helped hundreds of adopters handle the Midnight Kitten Zoomies, I’ve learned a few helpful tips that I’ve shared below. Ready? 3-2-1… Go!
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From September 20th through the 29th in New York City the love of animals will be celebrated through art thanks to the creative vision of curator/writer Alix Sloan and the generosity of AFA Gallery. “Awakened,” an exhibition and fundraising event inspired by pet companions that brighten all of our lives, will take place at AFA in the SoHo neighborhood of New York City. A portion of the proceeds from every sale will be donated to Adopt-a-Pet.com, which will help us to help the many thousands of homeless pets we serve. For this special ten-day exhibition, curator Alix Sloan has challenged over sixty artists to create works inspired by the powerful impact of animals in our lives and homes. This exhibition holds a special place in Sloan’s heart as it also serves as a celebration of the completion of Alix’s novel “Pet Sitter: A Jenna Stack Mystery,” a labor of love co-authored with writer Amy Eyrie.