30 Tips on How to Prepare Your Pet for a Weather/Hurricane Disaster

1. Microchip your pet and then file the paperwork. This is probably one of the single best ways to make sure your pet can be returned to you. But it does not do any good if the paperwork is not on file. Things to consider: be sure that your registry service is a national company within the United States and that it is up to date after each move. There is a different chip for international travel. This isn’t like Lojack where the pet can be pinpointed but the good news is that almost all shelters and rescue organizations have the scan guns to detect the chip. Tags on a collar are also good but they can be removed.

2. Take pictures but not just any pictures. You want a headshot and profiles shots of both sides. Why: Because the left may be different than the right. Now weigh your pet. It’s actually best if you do this every month. Try linking it to something you are already doing once a month like giving heartworm medication or flea goop. Now, develop the film every so often, back it off the camera and off the computer. The film may be bad or the camera may be stolen or the computer may crash. You want this back up if the pet is missing or you evacuate. Sure you may have pictures you don’t need today. But what if you needed them tomorrow?>

3. Keep these current back up pictures someplace special. One suggestion: Keep the copy in the glove box of your car and/or a special file. Sometimes a fun shot of you with your pet can help verify ownership or show some amount of size of the pet relative to a chair. Big, little, and medium mean nothing without something to compare it against.

4. Weigh your pet frequently. When you have it, it becomes easy to incorporate it as part of the description. Approximate weights as hopefully remembered can be wildly inaccurate.

5. Teach your pet to be calm within a crate by offering special treats and food when inside it. Even cats can be taught to be inside a crate. Even if you don’t plan to need to put the pet in a crate, having the pet already crate trained if needed means you will not have to teach this while you are stressed and under pressure.

6. Make an extra tag for your pet’s collar. The blue bone shape at the make a tag machine can fit 4 lines which directs someone to take the pet to your local veterinarian’s office, their address, phone number and comment that the pet can wait for you there. Why not direct someone to take your pet to the one place where they already know you, your pet and your pet’s medical needs?

7. Take your last vet bill (where they list the due dates for the next shots) and place it in the glove box of the car. After every visit, replace the older bill with the newer one. You will probably evacuate in the car. Any new vet or kennel (short or longer term) will need this information or will require you to pay for it again as you cannot prove that the pet is current on shots. One less thing to remember to grab.

8. Transporting your pet: Do you have enough carriers for all the pets? Is the pet contained in a crate or seat belted in? If it’s loose, please restrain it for the same reasons we secure babies. A study was done with crash test dummy dogs loose in the back seat at 30 mph. The 13-pound dog clipped the human dummy in the head before hitting the windshield in 187 milliseconds. Impact weight of the dog was 396 pounds. The 70-pound dog hit the back of the front seat before going over it. It hit the windshield in 387 milliseconds and had an impact of 2112 pounds. Both dogs would not have survived. A millisecond is one 1000th of a second. Besides, a loose dog might try to protect you from the EMTs if you were in an accident.

9. Have on hand an animal first aid kit. It’s similar to a human first aid kit but has some additional items like a couple of slip leashes (like at the vet’s), some spray bandage liquid and disposable latex gloves (a pair fits in a film canister). A first aid book for animals is good. Animal first aid classes are offered through the Red Cross and by individuals certified to teach this. And there are books too. Being prepared can help your pet in any emergency.

10. Locate your nearest emergency clinic near where you live and then where you will be if you evacuate. Your pet may be dehydrated or need other medical assistance if traveling. Having that information already means you not lose critical time when your pet is sick.

11. Always have at least 3 weeks of pet food and 4 weeks of medicines (heartworm, flea and any others your pet takes) on hand before a storm approaches. You don’t know how long you will be without being able to refill those supplies. Although we are often suggested to have 3 days to a week of supplies for ourselves, why not have more on hand so if the situation takes longer than anticipated so your pet does not suffer?

12. When you purchase your water, did you also count on how much your pet will need? Without air conditioning, you and your pet will need more than usual. And what is usual for your pet? Find out now by measuring how much you put out and how much is left when you replace it with new water.

13. Planning to evacuate: Write out a plan with leaving in 5 minutes, 20 minutes and 45 minutes. List not only what you would take but also where it is located. We aren’t always given much notification so if we have already planned our list, we are not under additional stress of making any decisions at that time. And, with the stress, you really can forget where something is(Zompolis, Operation Pet Rescue).

14. Planning to evacuate: Gather the animals first. Block off each room as you search the house for the pet. Otherwise animals, like cats, have a way of quietly wandering into previously checked rooms when your back is turned. It does help if you know already where the common hiding places are.

15. Planning to evacuate: Test packing the car. Be sure to plan for enough ventilation for pets in plastic crates by placing them in first and then pack up to but not covering the vents. Be sure to orientate the crate door opening towards the car door (not towards the center of the car). Those crates will heat up quickly so perhaps purchase a battery-operated fan to attach to crate door. The good ones have a slot for an ice cube that sends cool mist to the animal. And don’t forget the batteries. Do you have a way of giving the animal water while it is in the crate? Try freezing water in a plastic or freezer proof dish. It will thaw slowly.

16. Planning to evacuate: Know where you are going – family, friends or hotel. Be sure that wherever it is, that they are aware of just how many pets you plan to arrive with. With the stresses and strains for this travel, you don’t want to show up and be asked to move on because of the pets.

17. Planning to evacuate: Plan where you are going to stay. Where ever it is, tape a new local phone number on the pet’s collar or tags in case it escapes. Your home answering machine may not have power to take that message that the pet has been found. Cell phones are good but they can have their dead zones. Make it easy (read not long distance) for them to contact you.

18. Planning to evacuate: Pack a few toys that your pet loves.

19. Planning to evacuate: Bring the pet bed. Think of it as being similar to wanting your own pillow you are used to. There will already be much disruption to the pet’s life and this can allow some familiar comfort in strange surroundings.

20. Planning to evacuate: Bring treats that are long lasting with you in the car. What is normally a one-hour trip may take hours and having something to distract during an evacuation isn’t a bad idea.

21. Planning to evacuate: Prepare now if your pet gets carsick. Get the meds if your vet has prescribed them. One owner lines the crate with a potty pad to make clean up easy. Bring something to cut the smell (like an enzyme cleaner), paper towels to wipe down the crate and zip style bags to contain the smelly trash. It is said that a couple of ginger snap cookies can be helpful for dogs. See if this works for your dog so you still have time to get medicine if it doesn’t.

22. Planning to stay: Place your pets in their crates during the storm so that they are contained in a safe place. Yes - especially cats. Place this crate in a safe place, preferably in a room without windows or where heavy objects could fall on it. You don’t have to worry about broken glass cutting the pet or a bookcase crushing the crate.

23. Planning to stay: Place harnesses on all cats. Attach a leash to the harness. If the cat is very small, try one of the companion animal ones at a pet store (safety pin it in case the Velcro pulls apart). Cat collars can slip off or break away and this is the one time you do not want this to potentially happen.

24. Planning to stay or evacuate: For puppies, kittens or other small animals only who do not wear collars yet: please write a good contact phone number for you and a contact number for a family or friend who does not live in the area affected by the impending disaster on your pet’s belly with a permanent black marker. Generally this is a 2-person operation – 1 who writes and the other to gently keep the pet in a position so this can be done. Use treats, move slowly and be careful. Don’t ever use force on any animal to do this. If the animal is uncooperative – STOP. Don’t do this, as it’s just not worth the risk of being hurt.

25. Planning for after the disaster: Put down vinyl flannel-backed fabric (cheap table cloths or from a fabric store) or heavy plastic shower curtains so that you have a clean space for your pets and their crates. This should be sturdy enough to usually withstand even dog nails. As you will not know what the floor surfaces may have been exposed to, you will need a clean area for the pets to stay while you clean up.

26. Planning for after the disaster: Walk your perimeters of the property to see what has changed. The fence may no longer be secure or new animals may have moved in unexpectedly. And, recheck it several times a day because tree limbs don’t fall only during a storm.

27. Planning for after the disaster: Bleach – not scented, not color safe or special additives - just plain old cheap household bleach. As a disinfectant: 9 parts water to 1 part bleach. As a water purifier: 16 drops of bleach per gallon of water. You will need: bleach, a cup for measuring, a dropper, paper towels and trash bags.

28. Planning for after the disaster: Poop happens. So, do you have enough litter, shavings, potty pads and plastic trash bags? This may be hardest for the dogs. If your dog is familiar with potty pads, just buy more. For the potty outside dogs, you may not be able to take the dog safely outside for an extended period so you might want to make or buy a sod box. Fill a plastic container with dirt and cover it with grass. For the advanced owner: train your dog to potty on command.

29. Dealing without electricity – how well would you do? Do you have enough batteries (flashlights, fans, pet fans and phone chargers)? Do you have a manual can opener? All the canned food in the world won’t do you any good if you can’t open it.

30. Understand that this is stressful for you. Understand that the animals may pick up on your stress. Trying to keep to the existing routines before this all happened can be helpful for everyone.