Gransnet forums

Pets

Dogs and hot weather

(35 Posts)
GannyRowe Sun 01-Jul-18 15:10:57

Don’t forget, it’s not just dogs getting left in cars! It’s idiots walking dogs no matter what, just because they always have, doesn’t mean they always should! A beloved dog won’t die if it misses a walk once in a while.

GannyRowe Sun 01-Jul-18 15:08:30

Like you, I thought my dog would just stop returning the ball if she was too tired! Though as she got older I am far more sensitive to the temps for her walks. But this story has really opened my eyes too!
Post and re post, maybe we can really get the message over if enough people did just that.

sodapop Sun 01-Jul-18 14:35:57

Several sad stories in the news about this issue, so easy to assume our dogs will stop when they are too hot. Why do people take their dogs out in cars in the heat, they would be much
happier and safer at home. It's 36 degrees here, my dogs are comfortable indoors as am I.

grannyactivist Sun 01-Jul-18 14:30:24

Post much appreciated * GannyRowe *. flowers
What a heartbreaking tale - the dog's owners must be distraught. My own (black) dog has had his walks considerably shortened in the hot weather and every walk has included a dip in the river, but he has continued to chase his ball. I shall be even more careful from now on.

J52 Sun 01-Jul-18 14:19:15

Such a sad story. The last paragraph says it all.

We’re dog sitting today for friend, who didn’t want to take her on a long, but necessary days journey.
She’s been in the garden under the table shaded by the sun umbrella and is now on the cool stone floor.

Nanabilly Sun 01-Jul-18 13:08:51

We went to our caravan site yesterday to empty van for a service this week and I left my dog at home. I was shocked at the amount of dogs that were being walked around the site in stupidly high temperatures in the middle of the day and owners stood around chatting too while dog was getting hotter and hotter and on tarmacced roads too so poor dogs pads must have been so hot.
Irresponsible dog owners at their worst.

polyester57 Sun 01-Jul-18 13:02:40

Thank you for posting this GannyRowe. What a sad story! I consider myself to be a responsible dog owner, would never leave a dog in a car, even on a cold day. But I wasn´t quite aware of just how serious overheating can be. My dog hates it when it is this hot, he always heads for the shady side of the street when we´re out walking. He adores chasing a ball however and will do that even in the scorching sunshine, his tongue lolling, he keeps coming back for more. I always thought that as long as he was happy doing it, there wasn´t a problem. Surely, he´d know when to call it quits if it got too much for him. I´ll definitely be more careful in the future.

Fennel Sun 01-Jul-18 13:02:17

When we lived in France the temps. were often up in the 30s, as they are at the moment.
We had a long-haired border collie and she knew to lie in the shade, sometimes on her back on the grass to cool her tum. And drink lots of water.
She liked to cool off in the pond too, but this time of the year the pond is usually dry. So I sometimes took them down to a nearby river for a dip.
But she was born and grew up in that climate. We and our pets aren't used to it.
ps "them" - we looked after a neighbour's spaniel cross, who loved the water. When he got old I once had to drag him out of a fast flowing stream when his legs weren't strong enough to swim.

Teetime Sun 01-Jul-18 12:28:40

This is my daughters dog who spends most of his time lying on a cold tiled floor or in the pool.

GannyRowe Sun 01-Jul-18 11:17:41

This has just been posted locally. It’s content may be upsetting for some. But if it saves any dogs life, it’s worth it!

*Heatstroke Warning for Dog Owners*
This was posted by a local vet in a local group; they have given permission for it to be copied.
Today a dog died of severe heat stroke – exercised at 9 o’clock in the morning. If it was a child, the parents would be convicted of man slaughter and sent to prison. The long coated dog was being exercised in the local park at 9am this morning – it was already 21˚C. The owners where throwing a ball for the dog. Our loyal faithful friends will still pander to our requests of going with us for a walk or fetching the ball thrown even when they are under extreme stress of excessive heat. They don’t know to self regulate, because their pack leader has instructed them to walk with them or chase a ball etc.
I turned up to the local park to park my car and walk to work. It was in the car park that I discovered the dog with the owners next to their car, suffering from severe heat stroke. The scene was; the dog lying flat out on his side, semi-conscious, with extreme panting. His mouth and tongue were swollen up and a dark red/purple colour, there was a white frothy coating of saliva, the tongue and gums being fairly dry. The owners were trying to get the dog to drink some water, but the dog was entirely unable to do so. His belly was distended from panting and gulping air; this in itself can then restrict breathing. I was not equipped to take the dog’s temperature, but I could feel it was dangerously high. His pulse however was unusually slow. I had water in my car and dowsed the dog’s coat down and we wetted a towel to stretcher the dog in to the car and for him to lay on in transit. The dog was not registered with my practice, so I instructed the owner to take the dog to their own vet immediately.
Once I had finished my shift at work, I phoned the owner’s vet to see if they could tell me how the dog was. He was dead. A 5 year old, fit and healthy dog - dead. A death that was completely preventable. I asked the vet for detaila explaining that I was going to write this post. They were in support as long as names weren’t mentioned. Names are irrelevant, as this story will be happening all over the country.
The owners took the dog straight to their practice were he was treated immediately. His body temperature was just shy of 42˚C. A normal temperature range for a dog is 38.3˚C to 39.2˚C, a rise of just 1 – 2˚C can have major effects on the dog’s body systems. The nurses commenced cooling of the dog and the vet put him on a drip with rapid infusion of fluids and electrolytes. However, within 10 – 15 mins of being admitted the dog began to seizure. Seizures are caused when the electrical impulses in the brain misfire and cause like an electrical storm in the brain so the muscle fibres of the body rapidly twitch uncontrollably. In this case, the excess heat in the brain disturbs the electrical impulses. This is an added issue as the activity of the muscles then acts to increase the dog’s temperature even more. It was at this point that the vet went to gain consent to administer anaesthetic to the dog to try and reduce the seizure and lower the respiratory rate. But as the vet was talking to the owner, approximately 20 mins after arriving at the practice, the dog began to vomit and pass diarrhoea. The vomit and diarrhoea was full of blood. This even to the untrained reader, you can appreciate is bad news. Once this was discovered, the dog’s gums were checked and small red/black spots were present, along with areas of bleeding on the abdomen. At this point the vet had to return to the owners and request consent for euthanasia.
The dog was suffering from disseminated intravascular coagulopathy. This is a fancy veterinary term that means the dog’s body systems was unable to clot his blood and therefore he was bleeding internally. In the veterinary world, it is nicknamed Death Is Coming. The process is not fully understood, but it is thought that the excess temperature prevents the body from performing the myriad of chemical reactions that allow it to function normally. Loosely, this causes the body to activate clotting, causing hundred of clots within the body. Once all the clotting factors are used up, the blood can no longer clot, so widespread haemorrhage ensues. It causes major organ failure; the kidneys, the liver, the heart and the lungs cease to function effectively. With a bit of luck, the dog is unconscious by this stage, as this must be hugely uncomfortable and a terrifying death.
For all those dog owners who think this was because the dog was chasing a ball and that is why he overheated, this can happen with your dog sat in the sun in the garden. It can take up to 60 days for a dog to acclimatise to a change in climate. I am pretty sure 60 days ago it was pouring with rain.
Once the dog becomes mildly overheated, unless they are cooled, they will continue to overheat. Dogs cannot sweat effectively and can only really lose body heat through panting. The process of panting can in itself cause excess body temperature if it is prolonged or laboured.
So, if you think it is too hot to put a thick coat on and go for a run, don’t make your dog do the same. If you think it is too hot to sit in direct sunshine for more than a few minutes whilst wearing a woolly jumper, then don’t make your dog do so. If it is too hot to stand on the pavement with your shoe and socks off, then don’t make your dog walk on it. If you don’t want to sit in your car without the air con on even if you have all windows wound down, don’t leave your dog in the car.
If you are ever in any doubt of how to care for your dog in the warm or hot weather, speak your local vet practice. Better to speak to them now than your vet speaking to you to request consent for euthanasia.