Lord Goliath's Bulldog Domain
  May 24th 2012
| Home | Message Forum | Contact

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
May 24, 2012, 01:45:57 PM
Remember, unregistered guests may post in the Guest Posting Area.
Home Help Search Calendar Login Register
News: Hey!  Why don't you join in the community and introduce yourself on Goliath's Discussion Forum?

Pages: [1]   Go Down
Print
Author Topic: Disaster Preparedness for Pets.  (Read 4360 times)
0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.
brumzoo
Mrs. Save the World
Global Moderator
Super Bullie
*****

Bullieness: 542
Offline Offline

Posts: 22960


Lumpy's Mom!


« on: September 06, 2005, 04:46:05 PM »

Hurricanes, floods, wildfires, hazardous material spills—disasters can strike anytime, anywhere. If you think you will never have to evacuate unless you live in a flood plain, near an earthquake fault line or in a coastal area, you may be tragically mistaken. It is imperative that you make preparations to evacuate your family and your pets in any situation. In the event of a disaster, proper preparation will pay off with the safety of your family and pets.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If You Evacuate, Take Your Pets

The single most important thing you can do to protect your pets is to take them with you when you evacuate. Animals left behind in a disaster can easily be injured, lost, or killed. Animals left inside your home can escape through storm-damaged areas, such as broken windows. Animals turned loose to fend for themselves are likely to become victims of exposure, starvation, predators, contaminated food or water, or accidents. Leaving dogs tied or chained outside in a disaster is a death sentence.

If you leave, even if you think you may be gone only for a few hours, take your animals. Once you leave, you have no way of knowing how long you'll be kept out of the area, and you may not be able to go back for your pets.

Leave early—don't wait for a mandatory evacuation order. An unnecessary trip is far better than waiting too long to leave safely with your pets. If you wait to be evacuated by emergency officials, you may be told to leave your pets behind.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Don't Forget ID

Your pets should be wearing up-to-date identification at all times. It's a good idea to include the phone number of a friend or relative outside your immediate area—if your pet is lost, you'll want to provide a number on the tag that will be answered even if you're out of your home.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Find a Safe Place Ahead of Time

Because evacuation shelters generally don't accept pets (except for service animals), you must plan ahead to ensure that your family and pets will have a safe place to stay. Don't wait until disaster strikes to do your research.

Contact hotels and motels outside your immediate area to check policies on accepting pets. Ask about any restrictions on number, size, and species. Ask if "no pet" policies would be waived in an emergency. Make a list of pet-friendly places and keep it handy. Call ahead for a reservation as soon as you think you might have to leave your home.

Check with friends, relatives, or others outside your immediate area. Ask if they would be able to shelter you and your animals or just your animals, if necessary. If you have more than one pet, you may have to be prepared to house them separately.

Make a list of boarding facilities and veterinary offices that might be able to shelter animals in emergencies; include 24-hour telephone numbers.

Ask your local animal shelter if it provides foster care or shelter for pets in an emergency. This should be your last resort, as shelters have limited resources and are likely to be stretched to their limits during an emergency.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If You Don't Evacuate

If your family and pets must wait out a storm or other disaster at home, identify a safe area of your home where you can all stay together.

Keep dogs on leashes and cats in carriers, and make sure they are wearing identification.

Have any medications and a supply of pet food and water inside watertight containers, along with your other emergency supplies.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As the Disaster Approaches

Don't wait until the last minute to get ready. Warnings of hurricanes or other disasters may be issued hours, or even days, in advance.

Call to confirm emergency shelter arrangements for you and your pets.

Bring pets into the house and confine them so you can leave with them quickly if necessary. Make sure each pet and pet carrier has up-to-date identification and contact information. Include information about your temporary shelter location.

Make sure your disaster supplies are ready to go, including your pet disaster kit.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In Case You're Not Home

An evacuation order may come, or a disaster may strike, when you're at work or out of the house.

Make arrangements well in advance for a trusted neighbor to take your pets and meet you at a specified location. Be sure the person is comfortable with your pets, knows where your animals are likely to be, knows where your disaster supplies are kept, and has a key to your home.
If you use a pet-sitting service, it may be able to help, but discuss the possibility well in advance.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
After the Storm

Planning and preparation will help you weather the disaster, but your home may be a very different place afterward, whether you have taken shelter at home or elsewhere.

Don't allow your pets to roam loose. Familiar landmarks and smells might be gone, and your pet will probably be disoriented. Pets can easily get lost in such situations.

For a few days, keep dogs on leashes and keep cats in carriers inside the house. If your house is damaged, they could escape and become lost.

Be patient with your pets after a disaster. Try to get them back into their normal routines as soon as possible, and be ready for behavioral problems that may result from the stress of the situation. If behavioral problems persist, or if your pet seems to be having any health problems, talk to your veterinarian.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Evacuation Planning:

You may not be in a flood zone or have to flee wildfire, but even a hazardous material incident on a nearby street could force you to evacuate. It pays to be prepared!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Disaster Supply Checklist for Pets

Every member of your family should know what he or she needs to take when you evacuate. You also need to prepare supplies for your pet. Stock up on nonperishables well ahead of time, add perishable items at the last minute, and have everything ready to go at a moment's notice. Keep everything accessible, stored in sturdy containers (duffel bags, covered trash containers, etc.) that can be carried easily.

In your disaster kit, you should include:

Medications and medical records stored in a waterproof container and a first aid kit. A pet first aid book is also good to include.

Sturdy leashes, harnesses, and carriers to transport pets safely and to ensure that your pets can't escape. Carriers should be large enough for the animal to stand comfortably, turn around, and lie down. Your pet may have to stay in the carrier for hours at a time while you have taken shelter away from home. Be sure to have a secure cage with no loose objects inside it to accommodate smaller pets. These may require blankets or towels for bedding and warmth, and other special items.

Current photos and descriptions of your pets to help others identify them in case you and your pets become separated and to prove that they are yours.

Food and water for at least three days for each pet, bowls, cat litter and litter box, and a manual can opener.

Information on feeding schedules, medical conditions, behavior problems, and the name and number of your veterinarian in case you have to board your pets or place them in foster care.

Pet beds and toys, if you can easily take them, to reduce stress.

Other useful items include newspapers, paper towels, plastic trash bags, grooming items, and household bleach.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Other Evacuation Tips

All mobile home residents should evacuate at the first sign of a disaster.

Evacuate to the safest location you can that's as close as possible to home. Long-distance evacuation can be a problem when highways are crowded.

When planning for hurricanes, identify your evacuation zone and level to determine if and when you would have to evacuate. Be prepared for one category higher than the one being forecast, because hurricanes often increase in strength just before making landfall.

Your local humane organization or local emergency management agency may be able to provide you with information about your community's disaster response plans.

Logged

Trish, Jeff, Lumpy & zoo! Until we meet again with Precious, Sapphy and Onnie.

"Compassion for animals is intimately connected with goodness of character; and it may be confidently asserted that he who is cruel to animals cannot be a good man." ~ Arthur Schopenhauer
Curlygirl
Super Bullie
*****

Bullieness: 122
Offline Offline

Posts: 4269


I lub my new babies!


WWW
« Reply #1 on: September 06, 2005, 06:57:27 PM »

I think everyone that reads this should give a praise point to Trish for all she has done and is trying to do to help the poor babies in Louisiana. I gave her one!  Grin

Jessi
Logged

Jessi, Paul, Bailey, Boscoe, Delaney & Cooper
jeepgirlgina
If you drink it from the pitcher, does it count as one?
Super Bullie
*****

Bullieness: 85
Offline Offline

Posts: 3036


Life without a bully.....I think not !!


WWW
« Reply #2 on: September 06, 2005, 07:06:26 PM »

trish is an angel.
Logged

Gina
Proudly owned by Maverick and Chief
brumzoo
Mrs. Save the World
Global Moderator
Super Bullie
*****

Bullieness: 542
Offline Offline

Posts: 22960


Lumpy's Mom!


« Reply #3 on: September 06, 2005, 07:17:34 PM »

Thank y'all. I am just trying to do my part, which doesn't feel like enough right now.

There is a website www.nola.com that people are using to get info on their neighbors, neighborhoods, and list pet rescue. I just got in touch with Lara Maloney of LASPCA and gave her information on two dogs and several cats in dire need. Please keep the animals of the disaster areas in your thoughts and prayers.
« Last Edit: September 06, 2005, 07:38:15 PM by brumzoo » Logged

Trish, Jeff, Lumpy & zoo! Until we meet again with Precious, Sapphy and Onnie.

"Compassion for animals is intimately connected with goodness of character; and it may be confidently asserted that he who is cruel to animals cannot be a good man." ~ Arthur Schopenhauer
SweetBella
Bullie
***

Bullieness: 4
Offline Offline

Posts: 217


BELLA!!


« Reply #4 on: September 07, 2005, 06:36:35 PM »

GREAT INFO!!!!  These are things we should all consider and do for our fur babies.
Logged
SHFarm
Bullie Baby
*

Bullieness: 2
Offline Offline

Posts: 6

Bulldogs Rule!


« Reply #5 on: November 14, 2006, 10:47:41 AM »

This is info. that everyone with pets....from fish to dogs, cats and small animals should know! I wrote an article on emergency preparedness for horses...from taking care of a small stable of a few horses to large show stables...it incorporated room for dogs and other pets as well in the mix as almost all horse people have a few dogs around. We always have a plan for storms, fires, floods and other natural disasters since we could NEVER think about leaving our buddies behind!

GREAT INFO!!!!
Logged
bull lover
Bullie Champion
****

Bullieness: 9
Offline Offline

Posts: 423



WWW
« Reply #6 on: March 19, 2007, 12:12:07 AM »

its so good to see the animal is being protect in ur countries, here the authority is not that strong Sad those ppl abuse the dog till died, only get a RM400 find Sad how sad to see it.
Logged

** Taro & Foo **
Mr Brumzoo
Bullie Baby
*

Bullieness: 5
Offline Offline

Posts: 15


Lumpy is very very bad.


WWW
« Reply #7 on: March 22, 2007, 10:25:46 AM »

Good info Bullie-Mamma.
Logged
Wembleys_Mama
Bullie Champion
****

Bullieness: 21
Offline Offline

Posts: 744


Can I have that?


WWW
« Reply #8 on: October 05, 2007, 10:38:33 AM »

This is fantastic information for ANY pet owner!!

If I may throw one more link into this:
http://www.petsitters.org/cfincludes/MemberCenter/pdfs/DPPetOwner.pdf

It's a big PDF File - but very useful!! I recommend to ANYONE with a pet to print pages 15 and 16 for each pet and keep copies in a safe place (along with any necessary medical records/proof of ownership), as well as with anyone you may have named to take temporary custody of your pet(s).
Logged

Jenn, Kevin & Wembley



"Whoever said you can't buy happiness forgot about puppies." ~Gene Hill
hoegaandit
Bullie Champion
****

Bullieness: 18
Offline Offline

Posts: 603



« Reply #9 on: March 01, 2011, 11:16:57 PM »

You know, you don't know when disaster can strike. I lived in Christchurch, the main city in the South Island of New Zealand for several years, and my family live there. It is a lovely garden city and was not known to be an earthquake risk. About five months ago they had a 7.1 earthquake there, but it was centred a bit out of the city and happened in the very early morning so there were no casualties. Then about a week back they had a 6.3 earthquake at lunchtime almost under the city which caused widespread damage - 250 deaths and the estimates are that repair will cost over US$15 billion. Fortunately none of my immediate family were injured, nor were their houses structurally damaged, although the interiors and gardens were a mess.

Scientists say the last time there was an earthquake there was about 20,000 years ago. It would never have been expected there - is quite unbelievable in fact.

As regards pets, there have been a number of incidents of desperate pet owners breaching cordons to go back to their homes to try and find their pets. I believe cats often ran away, but dogs stayed put. For those people who had to stay at the refuge centres, they could not bring their pets, which had to be left at the SPCA. I know I wouldn't have left out boy behind, even if it meant having to sleep rough somewhere!

However I think this really brings home having some emergency preparedness (eg water supplies, food, torches, battery powered radio) and having your dog or pet microchipped and have identification.
Logged
hoegaandit
Bullie Champion
****

Bullieness: 18
Offline Offline

Posts: 603



« Reply #10 on: March 02, 2011, 04:52:28 AM »

Here is the local SPCA link as to emergency pet preparedness - http://www.spcacanterbury.org.nz/index.php?mact=News,cntnt01,detail,0&cntnt01articleid=8&cntnt01origid=15&cntnt01returnid=105
Logged
Pages: [1]   Go Up
Print

Jump to:  



Login with username, password and session length
Bulldog Domain Discussion Forum Powered by SMF 1.1.15 | SMF © 2011, Simple Machines
Bulldog Domain Forum Powered by SMF 1.1.15 | SMF © 2011, Simple Machines