Tornado Safety Tips For Companion Animals
A Companion Animal Care Article from All-Creatures.org
This Companion Animal Care directory is presented to help people
seeking reliable resources, tips, and information for companion animals.
FROM
United Animal Nations (UAN)
[Ed. Note: ALWAYS have an emergency box or backpack or duffle bag full of
food and water for you AND your companion animals. You just NEVER know when
normality will disappear and you'll be prepared to care for ALL your family
members.]
As the number of catastrophic tornadoes across the United States mounts
this year, Animal Nations (UAN), a California-based nonprofit, is
encouraging pet owners to take precautions to protect their animals during
these violent storms. “Tornados typically happen with little or no warning,
but pet owners can still take steps to protect their animals,” said UAN
President and CEO Nicole Forsyth. “Animals left to fend for themselves
during disasters suffer terribly, and residents can compound their own
stress by worrying about missing pets.”
UAN encourages pet owners who live in tornado-prone areas to:
- Identify all pets with an ID tag and microchip. This is the single
best way to make sure you are reunited with your pets if you are
separated. Be sure the collar is secure, the tag is legible and your
contact information is current. Include a secondary contact on the tag
in case you lose telephone service.
- Keep the microchip registration up-to-date and include at least one
emergency number of a friend or relative who lives out of your immediate
area. Microchipping is essential since collars often come loose during
powerful storms. Keep small animals like dogs and cats indoors. This
will better protect them if a tornado strikes suddenly and make it
easier for you to round them up if you have to move to a safe location.
- Practice bringing your animals to your “tornado safety” location.
Animals often become frightened and hide during extreme weather. Every
few months, practice leashing dogs and crating cats and bringing them
calmly to the basement or other location you have identified for tornado
safety. This way, when the real thing happens, they will be less likely
to freeze, hide or run away.
- Secure cats if a tornado watch is issued. When a tornado watch
goes into effect, place your cats in a crate and put it in the basement,
a windowless bathroom or closet, or other area you have identified for
tornado safety.
- Move other caged animals to a safe location early. Rabbits,
reptiles, rodents and other “pocket pets” can be moved to a basement or
windowless room during a tornado watch, too. If you have an aquarium or
terrarium that can’t be moved, put it under a table or desk or cover it
with a mattress or other large, soft object.
- Secure horses in an outbuilding and identify them. If a tornado
watch is posted, put horses in a sturdy building on your property or
bring them to a pre-identified safe location. Make sure each horse is
identified with halters, neck straps, or name spray-painted on his or
her left side.
- Carry photos of your pets and give copies to loved ones outside your
immediate area. If you do become separated from your pets, photos will
help you create lost animal posters or post messages to Internet sites.
Include photos of you with your pets, which can prove ownership.
- Know where to search for lost animals. When animals become lost
during a disaster, they often end up at a local animal control agency or
humane society. Keep handy the locations and phone numbers of the
shelters in your area.
Through its volunteer-driven Emergency Animal Rescue Service (EARS), UAN
provides free temporary sheltering for communities that become overwhelmed
by natural disasters or animal cruelty seizures. UAN operated temporary
shelters for animal victims of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005; flooding
in Cedar Rapids, Iowa in 2008; and flooding in Fargo, North Dakota in 2009.
Teams of UAN volunteers cared for animals displaced by flooding in Kennett,
Missouri and Natchez, Mississippi in May 2011.
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