Traveling With Your Dog

While summer was fashionably late this year, she showed up scorching hot and full of humidity! Traveling during extreme temperatures can be downright dangerous, especially with dogs. Take a few minutes to prepare. Just like preparing for road trips during the winter, you’ll need some essentials before heading out for summer fun.
Must Have Air Conditioner
Yes, keep your air conditioner blowing. Dogs have a built-in fur coat and need access to cool air to prevent heat exhaustion. Even if a dog’s coat has been shaved short, he still needs access to cool air. Dogs cool themselves differently. Humans sweat when hot while dogs pant, making it a bit harder to cool during extreme heat. Never travel with your dogs in the back of a truck during summer–it’s just too hot. Hot air blowing is still hot, so keep your dog inside where he’ll be safe and cool.
Bring Frozen Goodies in a Cooler
Pack a cooler with frozen water jugs and food stuffed toys topped off with ice. As water jugs defrost, offer your dog cool water every two to three hours. Also, you can purchase Kool Koats and soak them in water to wrap around your dog during extreme heat. Better yet, place them in your dog’s crate, so he can lie on them as needed. I keep my dogs’ Kool Koats in the cooler, so they’re accessible whenever I need them.
Traveling dogs need something to do, so give them a frozen peanut butter toy to enjoy while the family cools down with ice cream cones. For best results, freeze toys overnight before traveling, so they last awhile.
RELATED: Interactive Dog Toys for Car Rides
Travel Early
Temperatures are obviously lower in the early morning, so heading out before the sun comes up will help beat the heat. Plus, your vehicle has a chance to cool completely, which is easier to maintain since heat builds throughout the day.
While traveling late in the evening is a cooler option, it seems to be much cooler during early morning hours. Although traveling at 9 pm is much cooler than noon! When possible, plan to travel during cooler temperatures.
If Stuck in Traffic
It happens and it’s so frustrating, especially when it’s 103 degrees outside. It’s like your vehicle’s air conditioner just can’t keep up. Everyone becomes really grouchy and your dog starts to pant–take quick action. Give your dog cool water and a frozen toy. It probably won’t hurt to toss his Kool Koat in his crate, so he can lie on it to cool himself down. Worse case scenario when it becomes really hot, pour cool water from the cooler over your dog’s body until traffic gets moving again.
Stay cool this summer!
