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Kobi Pet Carrier + mesh luggage wrap giveaway winner

This was by far the most popular Dog Jaunt giveaway ever — 85 of you entered to win, and that means the comments section on the giveaway post contains a wealth of excellent dog travel tips. I have learned so much over the past week — thank you, and thank you, too, to the kind souls who praised the blog.

The Kobi carrier in the delectable chocolate-and-pink colorway. Photo by Kobi Pets.

The randomly-chosen winner is Davinah S., entrant #5, whose tip was to “Try to find flights that leave late in the evening! A good long walk, and your dog will already be a bit sleepy because their bedtime is soon!” Congratulations, Davinah! Please send me an e-mail at [email protected] and let me know your shipping address, and which color combination you want for your carrier (charcoal/black or chocolate/pink). As I mentioned, I’ll have Kobi send the carrier directly to you, and I’ll send the mesh luggage wrap (still not available on Kobi’s site, or elsewhere) separately from Seattle. [6/2/13 update: The Luggage Adapter is now available on Kobi’s web site.]

Thank you again to everyone who entered! So many of you will be bummed not to have won, and I’m sorry about that. If you’d like to purchase one for yourself, Amazon sells the Kobi Pet Carrier: All sizes, both colorsand the large costs $114. Despite what Amazon says, that’s the same price that Kobi sells the large carrier for (why is $129 grayed out in the Amazon listing?). If you’re signed up for free shipping from Amazon, you may decide to go that route, but please note that Kobi also offers free shipping. And that leads me to my final thank you — thanks to Kobi Pets for letting me know about its new, larger carrier and mesh luggage wrap, for sending me a set to try out, and for agreeing that I could give them away to a Dog Jaunt reader!

Priceline: “Express Deals” feature now useful for some travelers with pets

Almost a year ago, I wrote a depressed post about Priceline and the companies that seemed to be in its market space (Hotwire, Last Minute Travel, Hotel Tonight), concluding that none of them offered useful services to travelers with pets. Thanks to reader Adrianne, I now know that the situation has improved.

Mind you, “Name Your Own Price” is still not an option for travelers with pets, since the bidding pages do not include any opportunity to narrow your focus to pet-friendly hotels (you can only choose your neighborhood and star level). The same is true for the site’s “Last Minute Deals” feature (which may just be the new name for Name Your Own Price).

In fact, Priceline’s new pet travel booking site, ilovedogfriendly.com, does not include a Name Your Own Price feature. (When I wrote to the PR rep asking specifically about that feature, I was told “As we feel that its better for pet parents to book a vacation based on their dog’s needs, we do not offer the name your own price tool. As you mentioned in your post, pet policies vary from hotel to hotel, so our systems works with the traditional price method of booking.” It’s a deft answer, but given Priceline’s resources, and given its need to distinguish itself from an array of existing similar services, I think a better approach would have been to develop a booking system that allows pet owners to choose a hotel that suits their needs and allows them to take advantage of Priceline’s best-known feature. The sad fact is, though, that I do not run the zoo.)

Adrianne’s note told me that Priceline now has “the Express Deals. It’s similar to the Name Your Own Price option and I have noticed pricewise it’s pretty close to what I would have bid in the past. It shows the area of town, star level of the hotel, and tells you the amenities and if they allow pets. Just like the Name Your Own Price you don’t know what hotel you get until you pay.”

And indeed, I confirmed that the site’s Express Deals feature (“up to 50% off”) can be used by travelers with pets. When you’ve told Priceline your city and travel dates, you’re sent (after a one-two punch from William Shatner) to a page where you can refine your results by, among other things, clicking on “Amenities” and then “Pets Allowed.”

If you have a tricky pet situation (e.g., large pet, multiple pets, non-dog pet, pet subject to breed bans), you’re still not going to be able to use this service satisfactorily, because you won’t know the listed hotels’ precise pet policies. However, if you are a traveler with an easy pet (i.e., one small dog), you’re in good shape. If a hotel takes any pets, it will take yours.

That’s progress, and I appreciate it. But I look forward to the day when Priceline (or a competitor) dedicates some funding to a tool that will make bargains available to all travelers with pets.

Chloe’s Clicks: This week’s best dog travel links

It’s just a glorious day here in the Pacific Northwest, and, fittingly, this week’s clicks are a bouquet of cheer and inspiration. The first one is from the PNW, in fact — Go Pet Friendly hosted a great guest post about staying at the former officers’ quarters of Fort Worden, just outside Port Townsend, a drive and a ferry ride away from Seattle (remember the movie An Officer and a Gentleman? yep, that’s the place). Four of the little houses are dog-friendly, and when you’re sick of the gorgeousness there, you can poke around lovely Port Townsend.

A view in Port Townsend (photo by Robert Sanzalone). The Palace Hotel, a former bordello, welcomes small pets.

Their guest post may have highlighted the PNW, but Team Go Pet Friendly is actually in Texas, and they posted this report from Marfa, an extraordinary artist’s colony in an otherwise quiet part of the state. Return to the West Coast to check out Have Dog Blog Will Travel‘s recommendations for a dog-friendly visit to California‘s San Luis Obispo County (three counties north of Los Angeles, and the home, among other things, of some seriously good wineries). Veering northeastwards, Montecristo Travels visited the eye-catching Hog’s Back Park and Falls in Ottawa, which looks like a great place for a walk and a picnic.

And that’s it for North America. All the rest of the links are an ocean away, starting with some recommendations for dog-friendly boutique hotels in Spain (treasure them — every dog-friendly tip you can find for Spain is precious), and specifically in Granada, Sevilla, Ávila, Valencia, and Cáceres. Speaking of Spain, reader Laurel has arrived in Barcelona with her sweetie and Lilly, their Jack Russell Terrier, and she’s writing tempting and picture-laden blog posts about it. Here’s the main link to Inspiring Moments — scroll back to May 2, then move forward from there (well, scroll every which way! but the Barcelona posts are May 2 and following).

And then it’s over to the U.K., by way of the island of Jersey, where Phileas Dogg‘s Vee and the Travelling Bear spent a week consuming ice cream and going on walks. Arriving on the mainland, the first stop is the dog cemetery at Edinburgh Castle. The second link is old, but new to me, and how can I pass up telling you about a book of dog-friendly walks in Derbyshire and the Peak District?

Manfully resisting the temptation to segue to the next link by suggesting that you sail to the U.K. (just look at how I resisted doing that!), I merely suggest that you check out this post on Something Wagging This Way Comes about how blogger Pamela is helping her dog Honey get comfortable with some of the alarming things she’ll encounter when they start sailing together. And when you return from your own voyage, return to a home with a dog-friendly garden, with help from this sensible Mother Nature Network article.

Giveaway: New, larger Kobi Pet Carrier + mesh luggage wrap ($139 value)

About a month ago, I posted a review of the new, larger Kobi Pet Carrier (and the very new — in fact, not yet released — mesh luggage wrap). I liked it very much, you’ll remember, and I told you that I’d be buying one for Chloe. The carrier is big enough to accommodate a large small dog like my girl, but it still fits under an airplane seat — and the three extra inches you can add to its length by unzipping a gusset are priceless, especially on a long-haul flight.

The charcoal and black option (containing Chloe), with me starting the luggage wrap demo.

According to my own rules, I cannot keep gear sent to me for review that costs more than $50. You, however, would hardly want a carrier that Chloe used on two long days of flying across country and back. Since I already planned to buy one of these carriers for my own use, I’ll keep the one Chloe’s used, and purchase the one I’m giving away (and have Kobi send it directly to you). Clever, right? And it’s even more clever than you think, because this way you get to choose whether you want your carrier to be the same color as the one Chloe tested (charcoal with black trim), or the other available color, chocolate with pink trim:

The chocolate and pink option (with both ends zipped open, and the padded base pulled out a little). Photo by Kobi Pets.

The carrier is valued at $114, and the mesh luggage wrap (I’ll send you the one I tested, since it hasn’t been Chloe-fied, and since it’s not yet available on Kobi’s website) is valued at $25. [6/2/13 update: The Luggage Adapter is now available on Kobi’s web site.] My thanks to Kobi for making it so easy for me to try out this carrier and luggage wrap, and for letting me give them away!

How To Enter

One lucky reader can win. If you would like a chance to win, leave a comment with a dog travel tip of your own (you have even more good ideas than I do, and I want to hear them!) before 11:59 PM PST on Monday, May 6, 2013. Please fill in the e-mail field of the comment form (your e-mail address isn’t shared with anyone, and I will not send you e-mail unless you win).

Announcing the winner

I will choose a winner randomly and announce the results here, on Dog Jaunt’s Facebook and Google+ pages, and in Dog Jaunt’s Twitter feed on Wednesday, May 8, 2013.

Rules

Please, only one comment per person per giveaway post. Duplicate comments and anonymous comments will be discarded. Please make sure that the e-mail address in your comment form is valid (e-mail addresses are never public). Winners must claim their prize within three business days after the date of notification of such prize. A sweepstakes winner’s failure to respond to the prize notification and provide a shipping address within the specified three business days will be considered such sweepstakes winner’s forfeiture of the prize and an alternate winner may be selected from the pool of eligible entries. If an entrant is found to be ineligible, an alternate winner may also be selected from the pool of eligible entries. To enter, you must be a U.S. resident, age 18 or older. (Dog Jaunt loves residents of all countries, but it’s just too difficult to comply with every country’s rules.) Employees, partners and vendors of Dog Jaunt and their immediate family members are not eligible to enter. Entries that appear to be generated by scripts and other automated technology will be disqualified. When applicable, the winner may be required to execute and return within five business days an Affidavit of Eligibility and a Liability and Publicity Release to be eligible for the prize or an alternate winner will be selected. All prizes will be awarded. No substitutions including for cash are permitted, except that Dog Jaunt reserves the right to substitute a prize of equal or greater monetary value for any prize. Winners shall be responsible and liable for all federal, state and local taxes on the value of their prize.

Photo Friday: Scoop law signs from Chicago and Avignon

There is nothing cheerier than finding new scoop law signs in my in-box and Twitter feed — my thanks this week to reader Melissa and to Naomi Bishop, the blogger behind The Gastro Gnome (tweeting at @gastrognome), for a couple of world-class signs.

First up is Melissa’s sign, a whimsical offering from the Chicago Park District:

The expression on the dog’s face is priceless.

The whole thing is so charming that I find myself only distantly wondering why the Poop Fairy is using fireplace tools to pick up dog poo. (Also, where is that dog’s collar? An owner and leash would just clutter up the scene, I get it, but fer Gawd’s sake, get some I.D. on that pup.)

At the other end of the spectrum is the solidly practical sign Naomi photographed in Avignon:

In English, it’s “dog poop.” In French, it’s “déjections canines.” The French totally win.

While it’s not perfect (for one thing, while I get the link between loving Avignon and picking up dog poop, the link between loving my dog and picking up dog poop is less obvious), the sign makes it absolutely clear what you are supposed to do, and why. Also, that’s a darned cute dog, despite (or perhaps because of) his mullet.

Thank you again for sending me these signs! I’ll keep refreshing my in-box, in the hope that more arrive. If you want to see the others in the collection, click on the “scoop law” tag below this post, or type “scoop law” in the search box.

International airlines’ carry-on policies regarding your pet’s carrier

I’m reposting this summary of the major international airlines’ policies regarding how your pet’s in-cabin carrier fits into your carry-on allowance because it’s been updated, and I’ve moved the info into a table, which is much easier to navigate than the list I originally provided. As in the U.S. airlines version I posted yesterday, each airline’s name is also a link to that airline’s pet policy page.

This Monday, I wrote a post about the major U.S. airlines’ policies regarding how your pet’s in-cabin carrier is classified, and how there seems to be a shift in progress from regarding it as a replacement for your main carry-on to regarding it as a replacement for either your carry-on or your “small personal item.” Why was that so interesting? If your pet’s carrier counts as your small personal item, then you can also bring a carry-on with you — if it has wheels, you can loop your dog’s carrier over its handle and spare your back, and if it has sufficient capacity, you don’t have to check (and potentially pay for) another piece of luggage.

That post covered the major U.S. airlines, and this post looks at the major international airlines. Here’s the information I’ve collected from their websites:

AirlineCarry-on policyTotal items allowed
Aer LingusN/A (no in-cabin pets)
AeroflotNot stated
AeroMexicoNot stated
Air Canada"Your pet in its carrier will count as one standard item toward your carry-on baggage allowance" [given the pet carrier size allowance, it will be counted as your "standard article"]Pet carrier + personal item
Air France"Your pet´s travel container is considered an additional baggage item and will incur a fee."Unclear
Air New ZealandN/A (no in-cabin pets)
AlitaliaNot stated
American Airlines"A pet kennel counts as either a passenger's one carry-on bag or personal item"Pet carrier + carry-on OR pet carrier + personal item
ANA All Nippon AirwaysN/A (no in-cabin pets)
Asiana AirlinesNot stated
British AirwaysN/A (no in-cabin pets)
Cathay Pacific AirlinesN/A (no in-cabin pets)
ContinentalSame as United
Delta"Your pet counts as one piece of carry-on baggage."Unclear
EmiratesN/A (no in-cabin pets except falcons)
EtihadN/A (no in-cabin pets except falcons)
EVA AirN/A (no in-cabin pets)
IberiaNot stated
IcelandairN/A (no in-cabin pets)
JALN/A (no in-cabin pets)
KLMNot stated
Korean Air
(under "At the Airport," then "Baggage," then "Pets")
Not stated
LANN/A (no in-cabin pets)
LufthansaNot statedPer reader Christina (flying Lufthansa 4/13) rule is pet carrier + personal item
Open SkiesNot stated
QantasN/A (no in-cabin pets)
Qatar AirwaysN/A (no in-cabin pets except falcons)
RyanairN/A (no in-cabin pets)
SAS"Pets and transport boxes are taken as cabin baggage and other carry-on baggage is not permitted."Unclear, but likely pet carrier + personal item
Singapore AirlinesN/A (no in-cabin pets)
SwissNot stated
TAP PortugalNot stated
THAIN/A (no in-cabin pets)
Turkish AirlinesNot stated
United"An in-cabin pet may be carried in addition to a carry-on bag...."Pet carrier + carry-on
U.S. Airways"Pets in cabin count toward your carry-on baggage allowance."Unclear
Virgin AtlanticN/A (no in-cabin pets)

If you are traveling on an airline that hasn’t provided clear information about a pet carrier’s carry-on status, call the airline to ask exactly how it will be counted (as a carry-on? or as a personal item?). Take notes about the conversation, and then call back, and ask another customer service rep the same question. Take more notes. In all likelihood, the two answers will be the same; if not, call again, explain your confusion, and ask politely to speak with a manager. Take more notes. Bring your notes with you on the day of travel (and save them for your return trip!), so you have them to refer to if you encounter resistance from an airline agent.

Seattle Airport’s indoor pet relief area

Remember that reader Julia reported that the original airside pet relief area at SEA had closed, and there was a new one in the C gates area? Today’s update is brought to you by reader Ashlee, who just visited the new location and told me that “the dog relief area is directly across from gate C2. This is right at the beginning of the C gates (not far from the Life is Good store) so it’s still in (or very close to) the center terminal. The same patch of green turf is there, complete with red fire hydrant. The room is smaller though.” [7/14 Please note that SEA’s indoor pet relief area has moved back to its original location — here’s a post about its current whereabouts and appearance.]

I’ll leave the italicized paragraph and accompanying photo you’ll see below, since it talks about the Astroturf strip Ashlee mentions, and since Ashlee wasn’t able to take a picture during her visit, but I’m going to delete the bulk of the original post, since it’s no longer relevant.

For those of you new to SEA and its pet relief areas, here’s where this all started, back in June 2009: “We returned to the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA) late last night and on our way to baggage claim I noticed a sign for a pet relief area inside the terminal. Not too long ago, I completely panned SEA’s outdoor pet relief area, and now I have to change my tune. SEA has had the brilliant idea of setting aside a room in the terminal for pets to relieve themselves on wee-wee pads, and it’s beyond security, so you don’t have to exit the secured area and then reenter with your relieved dog.” I was thrilled at the time, but now that I’ve experienced the excellence of Dulles’ air-side pet relief area, this pet relief area seems pretty lame.

I’m updating this post (first published on 6/8/09), following a couple of recent visits. A June 2011 update, at the bottom of the post below, mentioned litter boxes and open doors. I made a note to tell you about a visit in July 2012 (litter boxes gone, but now no pee pads or poop bags). It’s just as well that I failed to follow up, because yesterday we stopped in and the whole thing has changed. Now there’s a long strip of Astroturf on the ground (with a toy fire hydrant in the middle, to encourage the males), and a poop bag dispenser on the wall. The doors are still propped open, which I still find less than ideal, and there is still a whiffiness to the place that you’ll notice. However, it’s still on the air side of security, and the airport does seem to be trying to make the room work for travelers. Here’s a current picture:

My head is obscuring the poop bag dispenser. Chloe was a bit reluctant to walk on this particular Astroturf, but she eventually stepped on and attended to business.

This post is part of an ongoing series of reviews of airport pet relief areas we’ve visited. To see others, visit Dog Jaunt’s handy guide to airport pet relief areas.

Good news for travelers with in-cabin pets: Changes in U.S. airlines’ carry-on policies regarding your pet’s carrier

I’ve updated this post (which originally went up on 7/30/12) with a chart. I think it’s easier to follow than the list approach I started with. Please note that the airline name is also a link to that airline’s pet policy page, so you can easily refer to the airline’s own site.

When I began flying with Chloe, nearly four years ago, U.S. airlines that allowed pets in-cabin stipulated that your pet’s carrier took the place of your carry-on bag, leaving you with only a “small personal item” to pack with the items you’d need during flight, or couldn’t bear to entrust to the baggage handling system. I’ve posted several work-arounds, including a couple of pocket-packed travel vests (solving the problem of not being able to get to your small personal item, stowed above you, during turbulent flights) and, as recently as last Friday, a wheeled carry-on that can be passed off as a small personal item (solving the problem of travelers who want to roll, not carry, their larger small pets). [Please take a look, too, at a reader’s report about using a pet stroller at the airport to solve the same problem.]

So when reader Gery asked for clarification on last Friday’s post (“Interesting — so are you saying that the dog carrier replaces your carry-on bag instead of your ‘personal item’?”), I confidently assured him that that was indeed what I was saying, and attached a couple of examples from actual airline policy language — except that after I’d found my first example, from Delta: “Your pet in-cabin counts as one piece of carry-on baggage” (and even that language is a little ambiguous), I found two examples, Southwest and American, with new language saying that a pet carrier takes the place of either your carry-on or your personal item!

I’ve now gone through my list of the major U.S. airlines, and made a table of the results. I updated it most recently on 7/19/16. Before you travel, you might want to print out the relevant page from your airline’s site, in case you meet some resistance from a ticketing or gate agent.

AirlineCarry-on policyTotal items allowed
Alaska"When traveling with your pet in the cabin, the pet carrier counts toward your carry-on bag allotment. You may bring either a pet carrier and a personal item, or a pet carrier and a standard size carry-on bag. You may not board the aircraft with a pet carrier, a standard size carry-on, and a personal item."Pet carrier + carry-on OR pet carrier + personal item
Allegiant"Passengers with a pet carrier may bring one personal item, not exceed exterior dimensions of 7 in. x 15 in. x 16 in. (17.8 cm x 38.1 cm x 40.6 cm), which may be stored in the overhead bin space free of charge. Passengers with a pet carrier who also bring a carry-on bag, not to exceed exterior dimensions of 9 in. x 14 in. x 22 in. (22.9 cm x 35.6 cm x 55.9 cm) will be charged accordingly for a carry-on bag." [Section 47]Pet carrier + personal item (size specified)
American"[Y]ou can bring one pet kennel as your carry-on bag"Pet carrier + personal item
Delta"Your pet counts as one piece of carry-on baggage."Unclear
Frontier"Due to limited space in our cabin, if you want to bring on a pet container it will count as either your carry-on bag or personal item. If the pet is taken in place of your personal item, a carry-on bag charge may apply (if you have an additional carry-on bag)."Pet carrier + personal item OR pet carrier + carry-on
JetBlue"Your pet and carrier count as one carry-on bag onboard."Pet carrier + personal item
Southwest"Pet carriers are considered either a personal item or a carryon item. A Customer may board the aircraft with either a pet carrier and a personal item or a pet carrier and a regular size carryon bag. A Customer may not board the aircraft with a pet carrier, a regular size carryon bag, and a personal item."Pet carrier + carry-on OR pet carrier + personal item
SpiritNot statedUnclear
Sun Country"Your pet in its carrier is considered a carry-on item and must be included in your regular carry-on allotment."Pet carrier + personal item
United"An in-cabin pet may be carried in addition to a carry-on bag...."Pet carrier + carry-on
Virgin America"[C]arry-on pets count towards a guest's carry-on baggage allowance."Unclear

I fly on Southwest, United, JetBlue and Virgin America, so on most of my future trips (Virgin America is a mystery, and until they clarify their language, I’ll assume the worst), I’ll hook Chloe’s carrier over my own wheeled carry-on’s extended handle and roll her around the airport. I’ll still wear my Travel Vest of Many Pockets, however, since my carry-on will be in the overhead bin, where my small personal item used to be.

My heartfelt thanks to reader Gery for giving me the impetus to look more closely at language I’d learned to take for granted. Dog Jaunt’s readers make it a better blog, and that is a fact. I will also review the major international airlines’ pet policies, and later this week I’ll write a separate post about what I learn.

R.I.P.: Pet Airways pet airline

I’m updating this 7/12/09 post because it looks like Pet Airways has finally turned its face to the wall. Its website isn’t functioning, and its Facebook and Twitter pages haven’t been updated since Winter 2011. That’s a shame. They never did have any reported issues with the things I was concerned about (quality of kennels, possibility of escape from care). The comments I saw over the couple of years they were active objected to the expense of the tickets, but now owners of large dogs are back to the sad alternatives of checking their pet, shipping him as cargo, or making a long road trip.

On July 14, Pet Airways will make its first flight from the NYC area to Washington, D.C., Chicago, Denver and Los Angeles. Only pets will be on board, with flight attendants to care for them, because this is a pet-only airline (mostly dogs and cats, but PA is willing to consider any pet for transportation).

Here’s how it works: You drop your pet off at the Pet Airways “Pet Lounge” at least two hours before the flight (you can drop her off up to 72 hours before her flight, and PA will board her at a “PAWS Lodge” until flight time). She is taken to the plane and tucked into an appropriately-sized carrier secured on shelves in the main compartment — not in the cargo hold — and a flight attendant checks on her status every 15 minutes during the flight. After landing, she’s given a bathroom break, and either awaits you in the Pet Lounge or goes to another PAWS Lodge until you can meet her.

Until the airline expands operations, its flights will be of interest mainly to people living within a reasonable driving distance of  the Teterboro Airport (NYC, northern NJ, southern CT, and Philadelphia), the  Baltimore/Washington International Airport, the Palwaukee Airport (Chicago, Milwaukee), the Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport (Denver, Colorado Springs), and the Hawthorne Municipal Airport (Los Angeles area, San Diego, Orange County).

The introductory fares are in the $149-200 range (one-way), which sounds like a lot but is actually about as much as you currently pay for your pet to travel in-cabin with you (see Dog Jaunt’s list of airline pet policies) or in the cargo hold. And your pet will be significantly more comfortable on Pet Airways: traveling in-cabin, Chloe is in a carrier not much larger than she is, and a dog traveling in a cargo hold must have a rotten experience in so many ways. On Pet Airways, Chloe would be in a roomier kennel, and the flight attendant will presumably see to it that she gets sufficient water, a comfortable traveling environment, and is handled in a kindly manner.

I don’t yet know what Pet Airways’ normal fares will be, but the insane prices the major airlines charge to transport pets give them some leeway. Delta, for example, charges $150 each way for an in-cabin pet, and $275 each way for a pet in the cargo hold. Given the extra perks PA provides, they could charge up to $300 and still be a contender.

The drawbacks? We won’t know until the flights begin, but a lot depends on the quality of care provided by the flight attendants. I would also like to know more about the quality of the “PAWS Lodges” (local kennels, I assume, that have contracted with PA), and how they are selected and monitored by PA. Another concern? Currently, you give your dog to an airline for cargo loading knowing that you’ve closed her into the best-quality carrier you can buy and she won’t be removed from it until you see her again, but in the PA scenario, your dog will be put in a kennel in the Pet Lounge, then taken from it and walked out to the airplane (and back off the plane after arrival), then walked to a bathroom break before being placed in another kennel in another Pet Lounge. There seem like plenty of opportunities for a dog, especially one stressed-out by the airport environment, to escape PA’s control. Pets escaping from carriers are a current problem for airlines, and these pets aren’t even in carriers. Yikes!

Well, my fingers are crossed. I really want this airline to succeed, and I want it to add Seattle to its list of flight cities. I also want PA to siphon off the pet transport revenues the major airlines are currently receiving, since it will be providing pet-friendly services and the major airlines aren’t. Go Pet Airways!

Brinkmann Smart Space pet carrier giveaway winner

Nineteen of you entered to win the new, smaller Brinkmann Smart Space pet carrier, and I appreciate the entries even more than usual because your comments are helping me rethink how the blog is working, and how it could be improved. Thank you so much, and thank you, Heike, for the laugh (“My pup’s name is Tessa and although she strictly forbade me to give her weight in public, she did allow me to mention she is just under 9 inches at her shoulder”)!

Smart Space pet carrier (photo by Brinkmann Pet)

The randomly-chosen winner is Anne, entrant #18, who says her pup Jazz-Min “is 9 inches at the shoulder and she is now a seasoned traveler, having been to France and Canada 2 times already in the last 3 years!” Congratulations, Anne and Jazz-Min — I love hearing that you guys are traveling so much together, and it makes me happy to think of Jazz-Min stretching out in this carrier on her next international adventure. Please e-mail your shipping address to me at [email protected], and I’ll get the package into UPS’s hands.

Thank you again to everyone who entered! Some of you talked about the Dog Jaunt community, and being a part of it is what I’ve enjoyed most about writing the blog (well, that and the chance to indulge my OCD). Happy anniversary to us all!