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You are here: Home / Archives for dog shakes during thunderstorms

Help for Dogs Afraid of Thunderstorms

June 10, 2015 by Fanna Easter

New Finding to Help Dogs Afraid of Thunderstorms

L-Theanine Anxiety
alexeys/iStock

It’s that time of year again. As we broke record rainfall levels in north Texas this year, it seems thunder and lightening were the forgotten villains. Well, I’m beyond happy to share a new finding, which can reduce your dog’s anxiety during terrible thunderstorms. Drum roll please!

L-Theanine Calms Dogs During Thunderstorms

I’ve been successfully using this amino acid in the past to reduce fear and anxiety in dogs, and humans too. But now, we have scientific proof that L-Theanine works! If your dog is afraid of thunderstorms, I highly recommend taking a look at this research study.

Basically, the study proves L-Theanine reduces anxiety caused by thunderstorms. You’ll notice a decrease in fearful dog behavior such as:

  • Pacing
  • Drooling
  • Heavy panting
  • Vocalizing
  • Trembling
  • Seeking comfort from a person (e.g. waking you up, trying to get close to you and following you around)
  • Hiding in a bathroom (sometimes in the bathtub) or closet

Now, L-Theanine is not a cure. It’s a preventive, and with everything a combination approach is always best. By preventing your dog from reacting to thunderstorms, over a period of time your dog’s anxiety will decrease. However, it’s not immediate. It’s accumulative.

To learn more about calming a thunder-phobic dog, take a peek at this article. It goes into further detail.

L-Theanine Dosage

This is a bit tricky, as I’ve taken too much L-Theanine in the past and felt overly exuberant (hyper). 🙂  I was happy and not a bit stressed in the least, but I had a ton of energy! So dogs may react this way too if given too much.

It’s even trickier dosing smaller dogs. I recommend products especially made for dogs that contain L-Theanine plus other calming supplements.

By far, my favorite brand is Composure by Vetri-Science. These pills are chewable and available, depending on your dog’s weight. Also, Composure contains colostrum calming complex, which promotes well-being during high-stress situations.

Anxitane by Virbac pills were used in the study. However, this product is currently out of stock nationwide. No one knows why or when it’ll be restocked. (This always makes me nervous.)

It’s best to dose your dog at least 20 minutes before a storm appears. Now, if a storm sneaks up on you, still give your dog a dose. Preventing anxiety from creeping in works best.

RELATED: Supplements for Anxiety in Dogs

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Why Your Dog Is Shaking Or Shivering When Not Cold

June 1, 2015 by Fanna Easter

Shaking Dog

Shaking Dog
W1zzard/iStock

While researching articles, I usually have the TV on for background noise. Today was no different until I noticed a small dog walking into a popular daytime talk show. Well, the movement of four feet instantly causes me to look up and smile. This darling little dog was accompanied by a well-known movie star who picked her up and immediately said, “She’s shaking because she’s cold. I’m not abusing her.”

Well I certainly don’t think the dog is shaking because she’s being abused, as she looks well loved by her pet parent. One thing I want to address: shaking or shivering doesn’t mean a dog is cold, but instead it means he or she is stressed or scared.

Do I feel this darling little dog is abused? No. She willingly walked onto a stage with her pet parent. Her shaking was minor and ended within a few minutes, meaning she settled into her pet parent’s secure arms and watched the crowd. But I do want to address the cold shaking myth because it’s not entirely true.

Dog Shaking Means Stress

Shivering or shaking means a dog is stressed or fearful. Humans react the same way. It’s a natural response to stress. Shaking paired with flattened ears, bulging eyes, tucked tail, closed mouth, or slow walking, looking away, turning head means fear. The dog is trying to walk away and ignore the cause of his fear.

Now, some dogs shake with excitement, but the majority of their body language is different. When dogs are excited, their ears are up, tail wags loosely, eyes soften, body bouncing or jumping around, and engage with whatever is causing their excitement.

Shaking, trembling and shivering can be a medical issue, and usually happens when dogs are hurt, nauseous or sick. If you suspect any of these causes, contact your vet immediately.

RELATED: How to Train Fearful Dogs

Why Dispel This Myth?

Once pet parents understand why their dogs are shaking, they can address it and move on. Now, dogs can shake because they’re cold, but it’s highly unlikely when it’s warm outside. I’ve yet to notice air conditioning causing a short-haired dog to shake. Plus, look at a dog’s entire body language. Choosing one thing to focus on (shaking) is like reading a sentence with missing words—you’re missing the true meaning.

How to Address Shaking and Shivering

If your dog shakes and shivers, take note where this happens. Usually, I witness small dogs shaking at the vet’s office or during the first day of group dog training classes. Now, this is not a small dog problem. I’ve witnessed large dogs shivering too—big dogs get scared too.

If you notice your dog is shaking due to fear or stress, bring super yummy treats with you when visiting these scary places. Ask your worried dog to “touch” while waiting at the vet’s office. This gives your dog something else to do instead of worry. Notice I mentioned dogs shake and shiver during the first day of class? It’s because we keep them busy by rewarding other behavior. Soon, dogs learn scary places mean yummy treats and they’re not as worried. They’ll have had more positive experiences than scary ones, so they learn it’s not that bad.

RELATED: My Dog Refuses to Move

Typical Redirection Session

Assuming fearful dogs will get over it is like assuming your fear of spiders will subside in a room filled of fast-moving spiders. It’s not going to happen, and it will only get worse. Instead, redirect their stress or fear with a simple game.

  • Use a clicker (or say “yes”) and super yummy treats, such as cheese bits, diced baked chicken or cubed lunchmeat. Don’t be stingy with treats. Give them often (every five seconds or so). 🙂
  • Ask dog to “touch” his nose to your hand. This is super easy to do, and it redirects his attention to something else. Refrain from asking “sit” or “down,” as this is tough to do when scared. Your dog is scared and really doesn’t want to draw any further attention to himself.
  • Patience is key. Usually, a stressed dog will reluctantly “touch” your palm, eat his treat slowly and scan the room again. Say “touch” again after he’s had a few seconds to look around in his environment (he’s making sure he’s safe).
  • Don’t repeat the “touch” cue. If your dog isn’t responding, move farther back from the scary thing and try again. Repeating “touch” over and over with ever increasing volume will cause additional stress. Your dog hears you, but he’s too scared to look away.
  • After a few “touches,” you’ll notice your dog rebounds faster, meaning he’ll look back at you quicker and touch your hand with gusto. Good job!

Keep practicing in scary situations and soon dog shaking and shivering will be a thing of the past. If it happens again, you know exactly what to do!

Filed Under: Behavior Tagged With: dog is cold, dog shakes, dog shakes at vet, dog shakes during thunderstorms, my dog shakes, my puppy shakes, shaking dog, shaking dog does mean, why dogs shake

Calming Dogs During Thunderstorms

February 2, 2015 by Fanna Easter

Calming Dogs Afraid of Thunderstorms

How to Calm a Dog During a Thunderstorm
Don’t wait until a storm hits. Prevention is best for calming dogs afraid of thunderstorms.

If you’ve never woken up, panicked by thunder and lightening, and immediately started looking for your dogs, then you’ve not shared your home with a dog frightened by thunderstorms. I’ve been there, many times actually, and even though it’s been five years since the last thunder girl passed, I still wake up looking for her among the light casted by a storm.

Why Are Dogs Afraid of Thunder?

We don’t know for certain, but the common denominator for thunder phobia is anxiety. Astraphobia, commonly known as thunder phobia, is an abnormal fear of lightening and thunder, and develops in both animals and humans. Some claim thunder phobia is treatable and I agree to a point.

Dog trainers relentlessly debate on precursors, meaning triggers that cause anxiety before thunderstorms. Many theorize dogs are sensitive to a drop in barometric pressure while others believe the loud boom of thunder or flashing light of lightening is the main culprit. Personally, I feel it could be all or one. All dogs are different and will react differently.

Anxiety is a wicked and complex little demon. While it can be learned, I feel some dogs and people are prone to feelings of anxiety. Some dogs are cool as cucumbers while others react to anything, but it’s the latter who usually succumb to phobias.

Just because a dog is afraid of thunderstorms, it doesn’t mean he isn’t afraid of all loud sounds. Strange, huh? At one time, I lumped sound phobic dogs into one category, but not anymore. Personally, I’ve shared my home with two dogs who were terribly afraid of thunderstorms, but completely nonreactive to fireworks. Then, I’ve encountered dogs afraid of all loud noises so be careful of labels. 🙂

Thunder-Phobic Behavior

For the most part, dogs will exhibit one, several or all of these behaviors before a storm approaches. It’s common for nervous behaviors to increase during a storm.

  • Pacing
  • Drooling
  • Heave Panting
  • Vocalizing
  • Trembling
  • Seeking Comfort From a Person (Waking You Up, Trying to Get Close to You)
  • Hiding in the Bathroom (Sometimes in the Bathtub) or Closet

Severe Displays

  • Rips crates apart, if kenneled during storms.
  • Escapes. Destroying doors, jumping through windows or crawling under fences to escape a storm.
  • Aggression. Some dogs panic. It’s just like a panic attack.

How to Calm Down a Dog

When tackling thunderstorm phobia, I find a combination approach is best. I would recommend trying each suggestion and then combining them for the best results. Another tip is to introduce products and supplements when thunderstorms aren’t present, or you’ll end up teaching your dog that putting on a Thundershirt means a storm is looming. 🙂

RELATED: Thundershirt for Dogs

Preparation

Usually, we focus on the preventive part instead of prevention, which is human nature. Use preventive products 30 minutes before a storm approaches or, better said, before your dog displays thunder-phobic behavior.

Thundershirt

As the name implies, this product works wonders for thunder-phobic dogs. It actually pushes against calming acupressure points just like swaddling a baby lulls a cranky baby to sleep.

Music

Oh, the power of music. I wish more pet parents incorporated it into their dog’s daily life. Not only will classical music calm a nervous dog, it will also likely drown out thunder noises. Now, when living in Texas, storms were so loud I had to blare The Doors until 4 a.m., which worked like a charm.

RELATED: Calming Music for Dogs

Turn on Lights

When lights are out, our body knows it’s time to rest. Turn on a few lights, especially if lightening is frequent and bright. This will diminish the haunted house effect of lightening. Or, better yet, turn on the TV. The constant changing light and sound will drown out all aspects of thunderstorms.

Melatonin

My first choice for thunder-phobic dogs is melatonin. It has a pleasant calming effect with minimal drowsiness. Usually, I dose 20-30 minutes before a storm approaches. If the storm misses you, no worries, your dog will get a good night sleep.

When to Seek Animal Behavior Treatment

Seek professional assistance from a veterinarian board certified in animal behavior. These experts can rule out heath issues plus have the most up-to-date information on medications for treatment, which provide minimal side effects. If your dog displays severe thunder-phobic behaviors or thunderstorms affect your dog’s quality of life, seek professional help.

Thunder phobia is treatable with a healthy dose of prevention sprinkled with a mixture of preventive products!

READ ALSO: Anxious Dog Tips

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Dog Training Nation is a dog training blog for pet owners and dog lovers. We cover a range of topics from puppy socialization tips to dog aggression to dog health. It is our hope you share our content to make the world a better place for dogs.

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