Walking your dog is ideal exercise, reinforces training, and helps you bond with your pet, and summer is a great time for long, rambling walks. If you are walking on hot asphalt and pavement, however, your dog may be getting something you didn’t bargain for – painful burns and blisters. Fortunately, it is easy to protect your dog’s paws from hot pavement without giving up summer walks.
Quirky demonstrations of frying eggs, baking cookies, or grilling steaks on a sidewalk can be a dramatic way to understand how hot surfaces can get in the summer, but they don’t accurately measure the surface temperature or convey how quickly your dog’s paws can be burned just by standing or walking. Furthermore, because surfaces, particularly asphalt and concrete, will absorb heat, they can actually be much hotter than the surrounding air temperature, so even if a summer day isn’t outrageously hot, your pet’s paws can still be at risk. For example, when the outdoor temperature is a sunny 80 degrees Fahrenheit, an asphalt surface can be as hot as 125 degrees Fahrenheit, and can cause painful and dangerous burns in as little as 60 seconds.
Of course, most pet owners don’t carry surface thermometers and aren’t equipped to precisely measure surface heat before a friendly walk. A quick rule-of-thumb test is to put your hand down on the surface and hold it there for 7-10 seconds. If you are unable to keep your hand on the surface that long without discomfort, then it is too hot for your dog’s paws.
It is also important to remember that all surfaces will heat up in the summer. Not only are asphalt roads and concrete sidewalks potentially too hot for your pet, but the metal bed of a pickup truck, the paved surfaces of tennis courts and running tracks, artificial turf, sunny docks and piers, sandy beaches, and brick walkways can all be dangerously hot and should be treated with caution.
There are many ways to protect your dog’s sensitive paws from hot surfaces in the summer, and with simple adjustments, your four-legged friend can enjoy plenty of exercise without painful paws.
Despite taking precautions to protect your dog from hot pavement, it is still wise to check their paws regularly for damage and injuries. If your dog is refusing to walk or is limping, quickstepping, or licking or chewing on its paws, it may already be injured. Burned paw pads can look darker than their typical color, or may show redness, blistering, or peeling. Flush your dog’s paws with cool water or apply a cool compress, and seek emergency veterinary care as soon as possible to treat burns and prevent infections.
With care, you can protect your dog’s paws from hot asphalt, concrete, and other summer surfaces, but still enjoy the time you spend together walking, playing, and exercising.
More people are putting all their eggs in one basket by trying out backyard chicken farming. Visit Locke Hill Feed, Pet, & Lawn Supply for baby chicks!
At Locke Hill Feed, Pet, & Lawn Supply, we understand your pets are family. Providing top quality pet food, livestock, and lawn & garden supplies for nearly 40 years. From A to Z, we have the feed you need!
This is "Bear" and we hope his stardom doesn't go to his head. Bear is at Locke Hill almost everyday to greet customers!
Emporium offering pet food & supplies, livestock feed & supplies as well as lawn care & garden products and more!