Movies like Old Yeller and Cujo have shaped the common belief that animals with rabies always foam at the mouth and turn violently aggressive, attacking anything or anyone that crosses their path.
Leptospirosis, or "lepto" as vets often call it, is a serious illness that can feel a lot like the flu. It mostly affects pets, especially dogs, and if it's not treated in time, it can be life-threatening.
Health issues like diabetes, kidney disease, heart problems, and hormonal imbalances can make it harder for your pet to stay warm. Keeping your outdoor pets safe and comfortable during the colder months is super important. Here are ten common winter dangers you should keep an eye on: Want me to keep going and rewrite the whole piece?
Keeping smaller dogs and cats safe during car rides is so much easier when they’re in carriers instead of sitting on your lap or roaming around the backseat. Carriers are designed to be lightweight and easy to carry, and the best ones come with a strap that you can secure with a seatbelt, giving you extra peace of mind while you’re on the road.
Although there aren’t exact numbers on how many pets die from heat exhaustion in cars each year, countless news stories have highlighted this heartbreaking and completely avoidable problem.
Sometimes, it's not the dogs causing trouble at the park—it's the owners. You’ve got the ones who can’t seem to keep their pets under control, those who ignore their dog’s mess like it’s someone else’s problem, and then there are the folks who act like they run the whole park. More often than not, it’s the people, not the pups, making things complicated.