The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Keeping dogs calm for July 4 fireworks

Prozac, ThunderShi­rts among remedies for anxious canines.

- By Sharon Kennedy Wynne

With July 4 approachin­g, a handsome but skittish German short-haired pointer named Jake is stocked up on his Prozac. He’ll be wearing a weighted vest at all times for at least a few days, and he will be on an extended leash most of the time with his owner, Eckerd College biology professor Liza Conrad.

This is what it’s like to live with an anxious dog as Independen­ce Day approaches.

“He ate through a pair of vintage French doors when he was home by himself in a thundersto­rm,” Conrad said. “When he is scared, he is just very, very destructiv­e. I can see why a lot of dogs run away during fireworks. You can tell by his face it’s like, ‘We have to get out of here. It’s not safe.’ “

Owners of nervous dogs are bracing themselves for July 4 as their pups shiver at the sounds of fireworks.

“I always hope for rain — for the whole week,” said Mary Ann Engelmann, who runs the Sheldegren Pet Resort in Safety Harbor. Fla. People take them so lightly, but it is explosions and fire. Don’t forget it also effects people with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, so we need to be considerat­e of people who have been through traumatic experience­s, too.”

Conrad has run up against a dismissive, “they are just dogs,” mentality even among veterinari­ans. She has left two practices because the doctor didn’t appreciate the seriousnes­s of anxiety, she said.

“One even refused to refill Jake’s prescripti­on for Prozac when we knew it was helping him,” Conrad said. “Our vet now always asks about Jake’s anxiety and will suggest new things to try when

they come out.”

Nash McCutchen of the Humane Society of Tampa Bay said fireworks drive many dogs to run away.

“We do see a big increase in stray intakes both the week leading up to July 4 and the week of July 4,” McCutchen said.

Engelmann plans to put on music to distract the dogs in her care at the kennel, and found in past years that the other dogs in her kennel can have a calming effect on the more skittish ones.

Animal behavioris­ts say that because fireworks are loud and unexpected, many dogs perceive them as a threat, which triggers their “flight” response and causes them to run, or worse.

“When I worked in emergency care, we had dogs who would jump through windows,” said veterinari­an Kristen Brauer of Clearwater’s Sunshine Animal Hospital. “Even though it seems counter-intuitive, most dogs will want to run outside when they get frightened.”

Just like humans with anxiety, some dogs are prescribed Valium and Xanax to calm nerves. Brauer said she has also gotten good results with a new drug called Sileo, an anti-anxiety drug designed specifical­ly for noise phobia. It’s about $34 for a syringe, but she likes that it comes in a tube with a plunger to administer based on the dog’s weight, it doesn’t seem to have residual side effects and it takes effect pretty quickly.

There are shelves full of doggy downers in most pet stores and Brauer said many of her clients have had good results from natural supplement­s and overthe-counter remedies such as Adaptil, Zylkene, Rescue Remedy, melatonin and also hemp-oil derived CBD products such as Swamp Yeti.

The Humane Society recommends heavy vests such as ThunderShi­rts that run $20-$40 and have a calming effect on anxious dogs.

“What I tell most clients is to use a combinatio­n,” Brauer said. “Be prepared with a thunder vest, have their Xanax prescripti­on filled and try to distract them, play with a favorite toy, and put on some light music.”

Etiquette expert Patricia Rossi of New Port Richey, the author of Everyday Etiquette, urges people to restrict their personal fireworks show to July 4 only.

“You don’t need to be shooting them off the day before and the day after and on and on. Just get it all out of your system on the day of,” Rossi said.

 ?? MARTHA ASENCIO RHINE/TAMPA BAY TIMES/TNS ?? Liza Conrad places a comforting vest on her 12-year-old German shorthaire­d pointer, Jake, at her home. Jake is afraid of loud noises brought on by storms and fireworks, and the vest, which acts like a comforting hug, calms him.
MARTHA ASENCIO RHINE/TAMPA BAY TIMES/TNS Liza Conrad places a comforting vest on her 12-year-old German shorthaire­d pointer, Jake, at her home. Jake is afraid of loud noises brought on by storms and fireworks, and the vest, which acts like a comforting hug, calms him.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States