joplinmouse
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2016
- Messages
- 10
Anybody ever have to bring their dog with them? Do you stay offsite or use the kennels at the parks? If so, how was your experience with the kennels?
Taking my dog to my hunting partner's farm tomorrow for our trip. My dog would freak out if we visited her everyday and then put in a shelter again for a day at a time. At least at the farm, she can chase the goats and the chickens and sleep for 3 solid days after we pick her back up.Also note you would have to overnight board them unless you are staying at the camp grounds. Pets are not allowed at the Disney resorts in the rooms. Best Friends is a great option but just know for some dogs their parents coming and going from their boarding can be very stressful for them. I can't do it with my older dog. If I leave her somewhere I have to leave her there until it is pick up time or she will get even more anxious and panicky.
If you want to have your pet with you at night but leave them for dogie day camp during the day that is an option at some off site hotels and rental homes. It really will depend on what you and your pet will be most comfortable with.
Except for "service" animals, and they are letting folks use that term in the loosest of manners. Just like in the parksAlso note you would have to overnight board them unless you are staying at the camp grounds. Pets are not allowed at the Disney resorts in the rooms. Best Friends is a great option but just know for some dogs their parents coming and going from their boarding can be very stressful for them. I can't do it with my older dog. If I leave her somewhere I have to leave her there until it is pick up time or she will get even more anxious and panicky.
If you want to have your pet with you at night but leave them for dogie day camp during the day that is an option at some off site hotels and rental homes. It really will depend on what you and your pet will be most comfortable with.
Except for "service" animals, and they are letting folks use that term in the loosest of manners. Just like in the parks
Guests next to us at BWI this last February had a Yorkie Service Dog in their room. Yapped it's fool head off each time they opened the door. They had it out on the balcony too. Thankfully, it either stopped when they entered the room or you couldn't hear through the walls. Any way, hotel staff knew it was there, I saw them in the hall and know without a shadow of a doubt they heard it when they opened their door.
Also note you would have to overnight board them unless you are staying at the camp grounds. Pets are not allowed at the Disney resorts in the rooms. Best Friends is a great option but just know for some dogs their parents coming and going from their boarding can be very stressful for them. I can't do it with my older dog. If I leave her somewhere I have to leave her there until it is pick up time or she will get even more anxious and panicky.
If you want to have your pet with you at night but leave them for dogie day camp during the day that is an option at some off site hotels and rental homes. It really will depend on what you and your pet will be most comfortable with.
Its so hard..we have a Pomeranian and he is like our little baby, we usually have a friend stay at our house so he can be in his own home..but he still is not quite himself when we are away..
Had a rescue miniature poodle...she was a great dog. The husband of the family that we got her from beat the heck out of her. Was told that she would never go to males...she slept with me on my pillow until last year, when we finally put her down.That's our oldest mix. She is a rescue dog and we believe she is afraid we have left her for good. I think she must have had an original owner because she was found and taken to a shelter at roughly 1 to 1.5 years old and most street pups don't make it that long. Either her owner abandoned her at the shelter or on the street her backstory was kind of lost in the high kill shelter her and her brother were pulled from. She is so happy to see us when she comes back but the sitter always says she spends most of our trips on our bed and only comes out for treats. Now the puppy on the other hand, we have been leaving him since just a couple weeks after we got him so he'll jump in his bag and expect to go to day care. He loves the boarding place we take him to and will pull me there on walks.
I'm curious by this comment. Do you have to come and go if you use Best Friends? Do you not just drop them for the entire time?Also note you would have to overnight board them unless you are staying at the camp grounds. Pets are not allowed at the Disney resorts in the rooms. Best Friends is a great option but just know for some dogs their parents coming and going from their boarding can be very stressful for them. I can't do it with my older dog. If I leave her somewhere I have to leave her there until it is pick up time or she will get even more anxious and panicky.
If you want to have your pet with you at night but leave them for dogie day camp during the day that is an option at some off site hotels and rental homes. It really will depend on what you and your pet will be most comfortable with.
I'm curious by this comment. Do you have to come and go if you use Best Friends? Do you not just drop them for the entire time?
I'm curious by this comment. Do you have to come and go if you use Best Friends? Do you not just drop them for the entire time?
Except for "service" animals, and they are letting folks use that term in the loosest of manners. Just like in the parks
Guests next to us at BWI this last February had a Yorkie Service Dog in their room. Yapped it's fool head off each time they opened the door. They had it out on the balcony too. Thankfully, it either stopped when they entered the room or you couldn't hear through the walls. Any way, hotel staff knew it was there, I saw them in the hall and know without a shadow of a doubt they heard it when they opened their door.
You have much better faith in people than I do.None of that tells me the dog wasn't a service animal.
Service dogs aren't just the perfectly trained seeing eye dogs etc. They can be dogs that happen to sense seizures or blood sugar changes well before the human will sense them, and that is the job they do for the person. (the person can stop the car safely or sit down on the ground, etc before a seizure...or do something for their blood sugar before things go wonky*)
And they don't have to be quiet or perfectly behaved, or anything that we expect from the TV version of a service dog, in order to be a service dog.
Even though we were forced out of a comfortable apartment because of two very obvious NOT service dogs (it's hard to sense a seizure if you are NEVER with your owner), I choose to believe that animals are service dogs if that's what people are calling them.