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Flying with Dogs
Hi everyone.
I have a staffordshire bull terrior with me in spain and I would like to take him back to the UK with me when I go in March/April. Does anybody know any airlines that will fly with him due to his breed? |
Re: Flying with Dogs
Originally Posted by simonbentley
(Post 9876006)
Hi everyone.
I have a staffordshire bull terrior with me in spain and I would like to take him back to the UK with me when I go in March/April. Does anybody know any airlines that will fly with him due to his breed? when you have recovered perhaps you would wish to re-consider taking a dog on a plane remember that if you are coming back then it will be twice as bad for the dog. |
Re: Flying with Dogs
Well my reason for going back as you seem so interested is to collect a car and drive back.
Thanks for very helpful answer! |
Re: Flying with Dogs
Originally Posted by simonbentley
(Post 9876108)
Well my reason for going back as you seem so interested is to collect a car and drive back.
Thanks for very helpful answer! However, interested in the welfare of the dog hence the very helpful answer. |
Re: Flying with Dogs
But companys do fly with them so I thought it would be not such a bad experience? As alot of people do it or not?
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Re: Flying with Dogs
Originally Posted by simonbentley
(Post 9876151)
But companys do fly with them so I thought it would be not such a bad experience? As alot of people do it or not?
|
Re: Flying with Dogs
Originally Posted by simonbentley
(Post 9876151)
But companys do fly with them so I thought it would be not such a bad experience? As alot of people do it or not?
(I also know that OP is returning as it is stated that he is bringing a car back but there is no time limit of how long he will be there) |
Re: Flying with Dogs
Originally Posted by Domino
(Post 9876081)
may I suggest you put yourself in a box and travel for a couple of hours in the hold of an aircraft ?
when you have recovered perhaps you would wish to re-consider taking a dog on a plane remember that if you are coming back then it will be twice as bad for the dog. What a silly answer. You cant possibly know what a dog feels or thinks. Lets face it, dogs arent humans and probably dont feel slighted or offended that they cant sit in first class with an extra leg room seat and a glass of cava! Jo xxx |
Re: Flying with Dogs
To a certain extent I agree with Domino.
There's more to it than just being locked in a box on an aircraft. It's everything else involved including the various transport and handling stages and especially the loading and unloading. I can imagine the average Spanish baggage handler having more respect for a tin of sardines than a crate with a dog inside and there have been cases of such rough handling, that crates have broken open and the dogs escaped, no doubt totally confused, terrified, and traumatised. |
Re: Flying with Dogs
Originally Posted by Dick Dasterdly
(Post 9876711)
To a certain extent I agree with Domino.
There's more to it than just being locked in a box on an aircraft. It's everything else involved including the various transport and handling stages and especially the loading and unloading. I can imagine the average Spanish baggage handler having more respect for a tin of sardines than a crate with a dog inside and there have been cases of such rough handling, that crates have broken open and the dogs escaped, no doubt totally confused, terrified, and traumatised. |
Re: Flying with Dogs
Originally Posted by Domino
(Post 9876081)
may I suggest you put yourself in a box and travel for a couple of hours in the hold of an aircraft ?
when you have recovered perhaps you would wish to re-consider taking a dog on a plane remember that if you are coming back then it will be twice as bad for the dog. Dogs are transported all over the world by plane, could it really be so bad, Being a dog does have its up side, they can lick their own balls and sh1t in the street, but into each life a little rain must fall......so they are not allowed to sit with the human passengers, it is all part of being a canine. |
Re: Flying with Dogs
Originally Posted by Lushdaddy
(Post 9876723)
Don't talk nonsense. If a dog escapes from a leash does it become confused, terrified and traumatised? No.. It bounds around being all happy and mental. As long as they don't break the crate (which isn't gonna happen) things will be fine.
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Re: Flying with Dogs
Originally Posted by simonbentley
(Post 9876151)
But companys do fly with them so I thought it would be not such a bad experience? As alot of people do it or not?
She seemed to cope with the journey very well, perhaps a little shocked for half an hour but she was soon back to herself and into mischief as normal, I think the experience upset me more than her. Monarch fly pets but it's not cheap, that is who we used but it's over four years ago now and it cost over £300 back then. Having said all of that, if you are only going away for a short while it might be kinder to put your dog into kennels for the duration, also not cheap but less traumatic for the dog. |
Re: Flying with Dogs
we had our wee dog flown from Hong Kong to Scotland (try doing that overland!) Then from Scotland to Spain, with no ill effects or trauma.
She's a white pekingese (nearly 14 years old) and airlines don't like taking "short nosed dogs". With a pitbull you may run up similar problems (not the snub nose part, but people are wary of pitbulls) BTW...it's not cheap. Hong Kong to Scotland came somewhere inbetween the price of an encomy ticket and a business class ticket for a human A suggestion would be to go ask the local vet to reccomend a good kennel.Then go check it out, before booking. |
Re: Flying with Dogs
Originally Posted by jojojojojo
(Post 9876654)
What a silly answer. You cant possibly know what a dog feels or thinks. Lets face it, dogs arent humans and probably dont feel slighted or offended that they cant sit in first class with an extra leg room seat and a glass of cava!
Jo xxx these are the times when the inner buddhist comes out in me, because the butterfly doesnt cry out when you rip its wings off doesnt mean it doesnt feel pain. when man meets his first et, will that et laugh as it rips mans arms and legs off.? |
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