Fido Universe

Pet first aid buys time in an emergency

I’ll confess: the thought of learning mouth-to-snout resuscitation was almost a deal-breaker.

I don’t even know human first aid, so the fact that I took on this class first shows how much value I put on Fido. My own cuts, scrapes and stomach upsets are easy to deal with, but faced with fur, fangs and a creature a fraction of my size, I’m left wringing my hands.

Or rather, I used to be. As a recent graduate of Denise Fleck’s Sunny-dog Ink Pet First Aid and CPR class, I now have the basic know-how and tools to respond for Joey’s sake.

Here are the key lessons I learned:

Has pet first aid training changed my life?

Yes, in some ways.  I now have a first aid kit for Joey, which I’ve decided I will also use as the household first aid kit. As the photo shows, I’ve been practicing my muzzling and bandaging kills, much to Joey’s disgust.  On dog walks, I now carry a simple leash that I can loop around a dog into a harness in the event that Joey’s fails or we encounter a loose dog.

Reviewing disaster preparations has gotten a lot of attention in our household over the last several months, but still has a ways to go to be stable.  Joey’s well-being is definitely a part of that.

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