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Ya know what I wish? I wish airports had doggie toilet areas. It would solve a whole lot of problems. |
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Regarding Yorkie Puppy Quote:
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New Federal Requirement for this Quote:
Airports Are Finally Adding Indoor Pet Relief Stations [VIDEO] | 101.5 WBNQ-FM Other info.. Pet Friendly Airports | Animal Relief Areas U.S. Airports | Pet Friendly Travel I used to fly with my Shih Tzu/Yorkie a lot before his health prevented it.. He was excellent at it. A soft sided carrier, minimal fluids beforehand with a small bit of Valium from his vet, and yes layovers for his comfort. My new Yorkie is just at 5 months old. I have not attempted it yet with him as he has completely comfortable with hotels yet. Unfortunately, most flight attendants do not allow the dog out of the carrier. I had one that let him out for water in flight, another that refused to let us deplane until we rezipped his carrier (we were at the back of the plane and last to get off). So much of it is flight attendant dependent. |
One person flying with two yorkies and some travel advice The last I checked, Southwest will allow a single person to travel with two small dogs in a two dog carrier. We purchased the large Sturdy Bag with the divider for our dogs. We have yet to take them on a plane, but we wanted to be ready! Even though the bag says it is suitable for up to a 20 pound dog, my two pups are super crowded in the carrier---and they weigh 4.75 and 5.5 pounds. As such, we will probably only use this carrier for short flights, and then only if my husband or I need to travel alone. If we are together, then we'll give each of them their own bag. In terms of advice, I flew a number of 12-hour trans-atlantic flights with my previous Yorkie. She was a pretty calm girl and her vet felt she would do fine without any meds. In fact, he was concerned about such a small dog having sedatives at altitude. I did give her a number of opportunities to use her pee pad in the airplane bathroom, but she was so freaked out to not be in her bag while on the big, scary plane, that she never took me up on the offer. I did, however, always take a pad out for her in baggage claim and she used it maybe once or twice. I usually gave her a light meal about 4-5 hours before the flight then walked her around the airport for 1/2 an hour to 40 minutes after check-in and before going through security. I would offer her water every 3 hours or so on the flight, but she was usually not interested. It seemed to me that she mostly just wanted to sleep and with each flight she got less and less shaky about take off and landing. After a flight, I usually had a meal and lots of water ready to offer her once she had a chance to walk around outside and do her business, and before getting into a car. Generally, I found that she did better on single flights rather than with layovers, unless we had sufficient time to go outside for a good walk. We mostly flew Air France, which is a great airline for dogs. They always let me keep her carrier on my lap during takeoff and landing----realizing, rightly that my dog is not luggage. People get to keep their human babies on their laps for takeoff, so I find it hard to understand why my canine baby cannot always be treated the same way. In the states I flew Delta (found them great for dogs) and US Air (horrible for us, but hey, they no longer really exist) with her. I am sure that each dog is different, and I have yet to see if our new babies are going to handle air travel well or not. I could have just lucked out with my last Yorkie, but wanted to share my experiences anyway. |
I have a friend that flies international with 2 small dogs or more. She puts 2 of them in the same carrier and flies Delta. |
air Canada only $50 to fly with them |
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definitely practice with the carrier. unless your dog is extremely well behaved and always listens obediently, I would say mild sedation is probably a good idea. Not completely knocked out, but pretty out of it and calm. Moxie was under the seat in her bag quietly, but started to whine and cry a little right as the airplane left the ground, I think the noise and air pressure freaked her out. I was supposed to leave her under seat in her carrier but I put it on my lap and she quieted down immediately. Not ideal, it's something we need to work on. After takeoff, I put her carrier back under the seat until her sedation wore off near the end of the flight. My neighbor tapped me on the back. Moxie had not only gotten out of her stupor, she had found a way to get the zippers down and tried to escape :O I have the most mischevious, poorly behaved yorkie in the world:eek: She wasn't noisy or making a mess but she didn't want to go back in the carrier, she wanted me to hold her. Luckily (and I will only fly at night now until she is better trained to stay in the whole time no matter what) it was a late night flight, the lights were off, and everyone was sleeping. I know it wasn't the "right" thing to do, but she was quiet as a mouse, no one was sitting next me, no one saw, and no one was bothered, so instead of putting her right back in the carrier and risking her whining or getting excited, I held her to keep her calm. I also got to choose seating beforehand and purposely chose an emptier flight and a seat with an empty one next to it. I think all of this helped. So I didn't need to make a tough call about more sedation or have to force her back in her crate at that very minute. Even though I wasn't supposed to :eek::eek:, I held her in my lap a little bit in the dark until she got sleepy and calm again before putting her back in to her carrier. I would reach in occasionally and pet her but after that she was fine until the end. So in hindsight, definitely really practice training w/ the carrier. I will train her to do better next time, but I was pretty proud of her, considering she is a crazy ball of manic energy to burn who generally does what she wants and thinks she is a person and sees no reason why she should not fly as such. All of those with well behaved dogs who never made a peep or stayed patiently the entire trip, tips please? |
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