[pct-l] Thru hiking with dog
juma
juma3 at cox.net
Wed Feb 22 15:50:36 CST 2012
well obviously yours is a special case - check out superman and winter's
trailjournal -- http://www.trailjournals.com/entry.cfm?trailname=1331
my fav high calorie dogfood usually available is canned corned beef (no
joke). spam will do in a pinch.
I would get the vaccine if it was me. It promises to be a dry hot year.
you will see snakes. tics are a constant. I remember one time looking
at my feet, i think it was around silver lake, and they were just
covered. I didn't know there were tics in socal before that.
the ruffwear is a great pack. I think I'd try body glide on the dog if
you wearing off hair.
If lucy is more than 6-7 years old, I'd reconsider the whole idea.
juma
On Tue, 2012-02-21 at 23:14 -0700, Dana Fuhrmann wrote:
> I understand that the topic of whether or not to bring a dog on the trail
> tends to piss off veteran PCT forum readers...however that is NOT my
> question. My dog Lucy and I ARE going to attempt a thru-hike this year, I
> could never leave her behind. I've spent a fair amount of time searching
> the archives, and the internet in general, and that is the only dog-related
> topic I can find. So please don't get mad at me for posting this! But I
> have some questions for anyone who has thru-hiked with a dog...
>
>
>
> Does anyone have a favorite high-calorie dog food that is readily available
> in towns off the trail? Or did you mail dog food ahead of time?
>
>
>
> Any opinions on whether it is worth getting Lucy a rattlesnake vaccine from
> my vet (a series of 3 shots) for that first dessert section? (If I wasn't
> a broke ski bum by winter, hiker by summer I would say why not...but it
> costs a couple hundred). I did it last summer and of course we never even
> saw a rattlesnake but I don't know much about southern Cali hiking. Any
> other medical stuff? In Colorado we don't need heartworm meds and fleas
> and ticks aren't an issue...is it on the PCT? (I'll ask my vet about this
> too...but it would be nice to have a list of issues to raise with him
> before our next appointment).
>
>
>
> Lucy currently wears the Ruffwear Palisades pack. On long trips the fur on
> her armpits gets rubbed off...she doesn't complain but it doesn't look
> comfortable. Playing around with the straps doesn't seem to do much. Any
> suggestions? Or is there another dog pack out there that people like
> better than Ruffwear?
>
>
>
> I've carried around dog boots on so many trips as a pre-caution and she has
> never needed them (and is not psyched about wearing them around the house
> for practice!), including rocky trails and hot dessert/cactus sections.
> Should I bring them? Would using paw wax suffice?
>
>
>
> Any other general dog knowledge gained from experience on the PCT that you
> feel like sharing would be appreciated...
>
>
>
> (And for all you nay-sayers out there: I know the reasons not to bring a
> dog and I know that there are very few dogs who can handle a thru-hike.
> However my dog is a badass--she has done tons of hiking and backpacking in
> Colorado (where we live) carrying her own pack, she goes backcountry skiing
> in pow much deeper than she is tall, I've taken her whitewater rafting (she
> jumps in and out of the raft to swim in the rapids), and when she was only
> 7 months old she carried her own pack for 150 miles on the Hayduke trail in
> the Utah dessert (through the slot canyons section--it is awesome and
> unlike any other landscape I've seen if anyone hasn't done it and wants a
> springtime trip!) and she loved it. A couple of weeks ago I even watched
> her climb a ladder! I still don't know how. And getting her back down was
> kind of interesting. That being said, Lucy's health and happiness is as
> important to me as my own and I am of course prepared to change plans
> should the trials of the trail prove too much for her--the longest trip she
> has done without a break is 2 weeks.)
>
>
>
> Thank you for reading!!
>
> Dana (and Lucy)
>
>
>
> P.S. I've been reading the threads on blisters and wanted to pass on the
> prevention tactic that has worked best for me: lots of climbing tape! (the
> stuff that rock climbers use to wrap up their bloody fingers). It's fairly
> cheap, available at any outdoors store, breathable, and stays put.
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