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Tropical Storm Barry: Keeping Your Pets Safe

Tropical Storm Barry is approaching the Gulf Coast and the lower Mississippi Valley, bringing with it torrential rains and expected flooding. The National Hurricane Center is predicting hurricane conditions along portions of the Louisiana coast and rain totals of 10 to 20 inches.  As the storm advances, the American Humane Rescue team is standing by to help. As we prepare to deploy our team and resources to help animals in the storm’s way, American Humane is reminding everyone to keep themselves, their families, and their pets safe during the storm and its aftermath. Please keep in mind the following tips:

BEFORE THE STORM

  • Microchip pets or put a tag on their collar with your name, address and cell phone number so they may be returned quickly in case you are separated from your pets. Be sure that any microchip information is up to date.
  • Tie down or anchor outside objects that might fly about and injure someone.
  • Know a safe place where your pets can go if you need to evacuate or seek shelter. Evacuation destinations may include a friend or family member’s home, going to a pet-friendly hotel, or temporarily housing your pet(s) at a boarding facility. Plan multiple routes to your safe destination. Review your evacuation plan and double-check emergency supplies – including bowls, water and food.
  • Evacuate your family and pets as early as you can and remember to take your disaster preparedness kit for your pets (i.e. First Aid kit, leashes, and pets’ carrying cases, bowls, sanitation materials, chew toy, minimum 3 days, ideally 7-10 days of food, meds, water, your veterinarian’s contact information, a photo of your pet).
  • Bring pets inside; bring outdoor animals inside with a carrier ready large enough to turn around and lie down comfortably.
  • Have a carrier at the ready. The portable carriers(s) should be large enough for your pets to stand-up and turn around in ready to go at a moment’s notice. Practice loading cats and dogs in pet carriers before you have to.
  • If your family must evacuate, take your pets with you.

DURING THE STORM….IF YOU CANNOT EVACUATE

  • Choose a safe room for riding out the storm—an interior room without windows – and take your entire family there, including your pets.
  • Stay with pets. If crated, they depend on you for food and water. Don’t leave pets in vehicles.
  • Keep your emergency kit in that room with you (food, water, litter, meds, etc.).
  • Know your pet’s hiding places. That’s where they may run; keep them with you.
  • Secure exits and cat doors so pets can’t escape into the storm.
  • Do not tranquilize your pets. They’ll need their survival instincts should the storm require that.

AFTER THE STORM

  • Make sure the storm has fully passed before going outside and assess damages before allowing children or animals out.
  • Keep dogs on a leash and cats in a carrier, and children close at hand. Displaced objects and fallen trees can disorient pets and sharp debris could harm them.
  • Give pets time to become re-oriented. Familiar scents and landmarks may be altered and cause a pet to become confused or lost.
  • Keep animals away from downed power lines and water that may be contaminated.
  • Uncertainty and change in the environment affect animals, too, presenting new stresses and dangers. Your pet’s behavior may change after a crisis, becoming more aggressive or self-protective. Be sensitive to these changes and keep more room between them, other animals, children or strangers. Animals need comforting, too. Comfort your pet with kind words and lots of gentle petting. If possible, provide a safe and quiet environment, even if it is not their own home.

To make a donation towards our disaster relief efforts, click here.


ABOUT THE AMERICAN HUMANE RESCUE PROGRAM

American Humane is the country’s first national humane organization, founded in 1877.

The American Humane Rescue program has been involved in nearly every major relief effort over the past 100 years, including World War I when we rescued wounded horses on the battlefields of Europe, the Great Ohio Flood of 1937, Pearl Harbor, Hurricane Katrina, the terror attacks on 9/11, the Japanese earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster, Superstorm Sandy, the killer tornadoes in Joplin and Oklahoma, the Louisiana and West Virginia floods, the Tennessee wildfires, and most recently, Hurricane Harvey in Texas, Hurricane Irma in Florida, the California wildfires, and Oklahoma floods.

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