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Dogs Die On Airline Flights

Author: Kaleel Sakakeeny
Published: July 18, 2010 at 2:47 pm
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A couple of things surprised me in the just-released AP/USA Travel  Department of Transportation (DOT) report stating that 122 dogs have died on airplanes since May 2005, with an additional 88 lost or injured during that time.

I was surprised that the DOT only required reporting the death of dogs in transit since 2005. What took them so long? Did dog deaths not matter much?

And candidly, I was surprised by some of the callous comments made on an MSNBC web page by readers. One asked if there were "any volunteers to ship your small children in the cargo hold of an airplane?"

Not funny.

Another asked, "why we have to put up with crying babies but we can't have our little dogs that don't bother anyone on our laps. that's just stupid!!"

What's the point? That dogs and babies are more alike than not, or that dogs are more important than babies?

In the case of the deaths, the airlines are apparently not the villains. Most of the dogs that died were short-muzzled breeds. English Bulldogs accounted for the highest number of deaths, 25; Pugs accounted for 11 of the deaths, with Golden Retrievers and Labradors making up the rest.

Adam Goldfarb, who directs the Humane Society's Pet Risk program, told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that Bulldogs and similar dogs top the list because their short snouts and reduced nasal areas, typical of the breed, minimize the dog's ability to cool itself, through breathing.

Add that to the heat, stress, noise and unfamiliar surroundings, and pet lovers have to ask if it's worth it to transport a dog, any dog, by plane.

All the pets that died were being transported in the cargo holds of planes, leading some airlines, notably Delta, to refuse to fly short-snouted breeds when the temperature reaches 75 degrees, and 85 degrees for all other kinds of dogs, which already seems extreme.


Sonny Seller, owner of the University of Georgia mascot, Uga, an English Bulldog, has his pet undergo surgery before the dog flies.
Apparently there's a procedure that clips the muscles and tissues of the nasal passage allowing the dog to breathe more easily.

Seller told an Atlanta Journal Travel reporter that they've lost seven Bulldogs already, but regarding Uga's air travel, Seller says "it's just business with us." Uga, he says, flies in the cabin or air conditioned hold of the university's private plane.

 
 

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Article Author: Kaleel Sakakeeny

Kaleel Sakakeeny is the CEO of New Media Travel (NMT) producing Travel Video PostCards, one-minute, sound rich travel videos; timely blogs on travel trends, tips and trips, and Audio PostCards. NMT provides relevant travel news and information for consumers and the travel industry. …

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