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Photo Friday: Paris’s Ile Saint-Louis

We were going through our photos recently, and I realized I’d never posted this one — we looked up one day as we crossed the Pont Louis-Philippe to the Ile Saint-Louis, and saw these dogs in their “back yard” (as we watched, one of them peed on the railing). A truly perfect Paris address, right at the corner of the Quai de Bourbon, but look out below….

Look closely -- there are three of them, and they've just spotted Chloe

I’d love to see how you and your pup spent your time together this week — please post your photos on Dog Jaunt’s Facebook page so we can all see them!

 

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

This week’s links take you to dog-friendly spots all over the world, introduce you to dog travel writers, and highlight an interesting pet carrier.

Starting in the middle(ish) of the U.S. and spiraling outwards: The Indiana Dunes hosted a helpful guest post with notes about a dog-friendly nature preserve, beach, and restaurants in the Indiana Dunes country (just east of Gary, and Chicago, on the Lake Michigan shore). Fido Friendly suggests visiting Rock City Gardens, in Chattanooga, TN, with your dog (“an enchanted, 4,100-foot walking trail showcasing soaring rock formations, caves and lush woodland gardens”). The Take Paws team finally got to the Columbia Gorge, in Western Oregon, and fell in love with the views, the waterfalls, the local food, and the dog-friendly Columbia Gorge Hotel. The next turn of the spiral brings it to my part of the world, where the youdidwhatwithyourweiner team took Gretel and Chester hiking at Snow Lake, east of Seattle, and Chester was extra-brave.

Leaving the U.S., we touch down first in Banff, in the Canadian Rockies — Banff National Park would like you to know that Banff Lake Louise is dog-friendly, and put together a video to prove it (a quick interview of a couple visiting the park, and the dog-friendly Jupiter Hotel, with their two small dogs).

And onwards to Europe, by way of a very useful post from The Road Unleashed (“How to Take Your Dogs to Europe, Part 1“). As you may know from their great posts on Dog Jaunt’s Facebook page, the Montecristo Travels team just returned from a marvelous trip to Italy (and France). They’re starting to write blog posts about the trip, and here’s the first: “Pisa–Tuscany–Italy.” Italy is also the second home of Durant and Cheryl Imboden, who write the delightful blog Maggie in Venice — this week, don’t miss their post on Rome’s Quirinale Gardens.

That leaves us with a collection of links that defy categorization. Fido Friendly praised the ZuZUCA pet carrier — an intriguing carrier because it rolls and is sturdy enough to serve as a seat for a weary pet owner. According to the manufacturer, however, it’s not designed for airplane use (and given its size — 18″ X 10″ X 14″ — and its rigidity, it would be a risky choice).

The Juneau Empire‘s Melissa Griffiths wrote an engaging article about musician Danny Kean, who has been traveling for years (in Alaska and throughout North America, as well as Mexico) in a truck with a piano in the back, first with his dog Bo, and now with an English Bulldog/Beagle mix named Mo — meeting people and making music. Check out Kean’s blog about their travels for more pictures and stories. In other news, BizReport, um, reports that, according to an eBay Local survey, significant numbers of consumers like to shop at pet-friendly stores, and suggests that businesses consider allowing pets as a way of attracting and engaging customers.

And that brings us to Will My Dog Hate Me?, which gladdened my heart by (1) including Dog Jaunt in a list of wonderful dog travel writers (thanks, Edie!), (2) recommending a couple of dog travel writers I’d never heard of — check out her list, and (3) offering people who aren’t able to travel abroad a “virtual world journey” via pictures of dogs in outrageous “international costumes.” No question about it — if you haven’t already bookmarked Edie’s blog, you need to.

Sleepypod’s Yummy bowls: Well-made food & water bowl set

When I learned a little while ago that Sleepypod was about to release a new product, I paid attention. The company makes well-designed, quality stuff — in the past I’ve praised both the Sleepypod Air carrier and the original Sleepypod carrier — and I was interested to learn how they’d handle their new project, a set of travel food and water bowls. I wrote to the company and asked for a set to review.

This is, therefore, a product that I haven’t paid for. I will not receive any compensation from Sleepypod, however, and the company does not require that I express a particular point of view. I will be keeping the bowl set: The Yummy costs just under $40, so there’s no conflict with my review policy, but more importantly, life caught up with me a bit and the sample water and food I put in the bowls when I received them have been in there now for two weeks — nothing a good wash in the dishwasher won’t cure, but enough to make the set a bit too used to give away.

The set includes a gently-rounded triangular bowl that holds water. It’s essentially 6 1/2″ round and 3″ tall, so it’s a substantial bowl for a small dog. It has a wide rim, which is meant to discourage spills. Forming a lid for the water bowl, and functioning as one of the two food bowls in the set, is a clear frosted silicone bowl with a wide, folded-over lip. Fitting into its top (and forming the lid for the set) is the third piece, a grey bowl with a built-in saucer. Possible problems with ants? Fill the saucer with water, and they can’t make it to your pet’s food. (That actually works, I can tell you from experience.)

Photo by Sleepypod

So there you have it: A good-sized bowl for water, a food bowl, and a second, smaller food bowl. The water bowl comfortably holds about 1 1/3 cups of water — a good quantity for a small dog. Though you have two food bowls, you can only carry one heap of food — and it needs to be a modest heap, no more than about 2/3 cup. That’s because the edges of the grey, top bowl need to be tucked into its frosted neighbor, and you can’t tuck when the frosted bowl has food in it. You need to put the food in the grey bowl, then invert the frosted bowl over it, tucking and “burping” the silicone until you achieve a snug fit.

Similarly, when you put the frosted bowl “lid” on the water bowl, you have to ease it into place, burping the silicone as you go, like a Tupperware container. Sure enough, I planned poorly and filled the water bowl first — which meant that I inverted the entire lower structure, sloshing with water, over the grey lid. It’s a testimony to the product that that’s workable — no spills at all.

Mia, a loyal Dog Jaunt reader, left a comment asking if I would make a video to show how all this works, and here it is:

httpvh://youtu.be/-uuW8nAiuTk

In fact, the set, assembled and full of water and food, is extremely tidy. As I mentioned, life caught up with me and my set rattled around my car and a tote bag, being toted hither and yon, for a couple of weeks. I had put the set in a Ziploc bag, fearing the worst, but at the end of all that activity, there were only a couple of drops of water in the Ziploc bag. If you were planning to keep the set level, you wouldn’t need a Ziploc bag at all.

How about food smells seeping through the seals? Our cats Otto and Bella live for food, and can sense its presence through most packaging — we have to put new, unopened bags of dog/cat kibble and treats in storage bins, or they’ll chew right into them. Only towards the end of the two-week period did our cats start investigating the Yummy, nibbling through the surrounding Ziploc bag. For the first couple of days that it was full, I left it out (completely naked — no Ziploc) for Bella and Otto to inspect, and neither of them was interested.

A few things give me pause for thought about this set. The lip on the water bowl surely does cut down on spills, but it also makes it tricky to empty out all the water, and you need to be mindful of that crease when you’re cleaning the bowl. The fact that the frosted bowl functions as the lid of the water bowl means that the frosted bowl will have a wet base when you disassemble the set. And, stepping back a bit, I’m having a hard time coming up with a scenario where I’d actually need this set-up.

It might make sense if my husband was taking Chloe to work with him — say he didn’t have a kitchen in his office, or say his kitchen didn’t have substantial bowls he felt comfortable using for the dog — and she was on a schedule where she needed to eat during the day. And what if we were driving somewhere with Chloe, and we didn’t know what the facilities were like on the other end (or we didn’t want to bother our hosts with dog-related demands right off the bat), and we wanted to be able to feed and water her as soon as we arrived? The Yummy might be a good thing in that situation too.

Despite Sleepypod’s best efforts (“serve wet and dry food separately”), I don’t feel the need for two food bowls. Someone traveling with two pets, though, might be thrilled (they’d have to be small pets, though, since the set only holds a small amount of food at a time).

It has to be mentioned, too, that the set is bulky. It’s the size of a substantial soup bowl, and, empty, it weighs just shy of a pound. I find myself wondering if I’m not happier with my two little stainless steel bowls, a Ziploc baggie of kibble, and water from the water bottle we’re usually carrying with us.

I want to love the Yummy, partly because it’s well-constructed and partly because it comes in colors that make me happy (as always, when given the choice, I went for bright orange, but it also comes in hot pink, lime and aqua). Perhaps in time it will weave itself into my travel routine. If you can see a need for it in your life, I have no hesitation recommending it.

Amazon link:
Yummy Travel Bowl

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

This week it’s nearly entirely about places to go with your dog, with two exceptions: The first is a useful post from Wildfowl Magazine about traveling with hunting dogs. Given how hard they work, and how wet they get, hunting dogs have special needs that I know nothing about. I appreciate the practical details, and the view into a different world of dog travel.

The second is a welcome announcement from Edie Jarolim, of Will My Dog Hate Me?, that she is starting a Pet Travel Book Club, writing reviews of pet travel books for A Traveler’s Library and for her own blog. That’s excellent news, because Edie’s a discerning reader and a delightful writer. For an interview about the project, check out this post from A Traveler’s Library.

And the places to go with your dog? The Kimpton Crawl team wrote an enticing post about a dog-friendly hike near the Grand Teton National Park. As they point out, national parks are often dog-unfriendly, and the trick is to find “dog-friendly hikes and recreation areas that are near the big fancy national parks, but not necessarily inside of their boundaries.”

Heading west, The Travel Oregon Blog posted a description of a glorious, unleashed visit to Todd Lake, in the Cascade Mountains: “The Deschutes National Forest unleashes its restrictions on dogs each autumn, and that means you and your pup can run amuck in the Three Sisters Wilderness Area.” May I just mention, too, how much I appreciate a post like this that includes links to nearby dog-friendly places to stay?

On the other side of the country, my friend Michele Hollow, blogging at Pet News and Views, visited Alexandria, VA and praised the local Kimpton hotel and a number of pet-friendly shops and restaurants. Other friends, the Take Paws team, photographed their way around dog-friendly Victoria, B.C., and hosted a useful guest post from Dee Mason about visiting the U.K. with your pet dog.

And speaking of abroad, the Montecristo Travels team is having an outrageously good time in Italy as I write. I’m confident that they’ll be writing posts on their blog about their travels, but in the meantime they’ve been kind enough to share lots of wonderful pictures and bits of info with us on Dog Jaunt’s Facebook page. Please visit and check out the pictures of Montecristo in Florence and Pisa and Rome and Siena. If I weren’t so happy for them, I’d be insanely jealous.

Photo Friday: Emma in New Hampshire and Maine

Jane is a long-time friend of Dog Jaunt — she won a giveaway last year, and Emma, her Norfolk Terrier, was featured in a Photo Friday earlier this year. This summer, the family vacationed in New Hampshire and Maine, and Jane sent pictures and a report, which begins in “the heart of the White Mountains,” in Jackson, NH:

We stayed at the Christmas Farm Inn and they were very dog friendly. Emma was not allowed in the main inn, but we did have a nice room (with an antique quilt I immediately took off the bed!). The cost for her was a flat $25 — we stayed 2 nights. We also looked at another inn in the White Mountains, called the Omni Bretton Arms Inn. This place was hot when we walked in, and probably had window A/C units. The rooms were smallish but every single one is dog friendly, so one can book on a reduced rate hotel web site and be assured you will have a pet friendly room. With this hotel, you had access to the Mount Washington Hotel amenities which included very nice restaurants and transportation to get you there. No dogs at the big hotel….

We ventured to North Conway for our third night, this time without a reservation and there are places to stay, but in the height of the summer tourist season it was hard to find a place. We did, at the Hampton Inn, and they were very friendly to her and us. It was the most expensive Hampton Inn I’ve stayed in, but there was no dog fee there. We checked out the Stonehurst Manor — it is a beautiful place but had no availability. We had dinner there and the food was very mediocre despite the wonderful aroma of pizza in a brick oven.

For fun, we drove up to the top of Mount Washington in the rental car, so Emma was able to do that, and to hike around at the top with us. She was allowed on the Wildcat gondola and the train to Crawford Notch, pictures below:

Emma and Jane on the Wildcat Mountain gondola (Pinkham Notch, NH)

Emma looking out the window of the historic Crawford Notch train

All around the White Mountain National Forest are pull-off areas to hike and explore and we took her to these places. Some required a $3 pass for the day that allowed us to all of the areas we wanted to see. I had read some places didn’t allow dogs, such as ‘The Flume‘ but these did. She had a great time.

And then it was on to Maine, where they were staying with family. They reported favorably on Portland‘s Eastland Park Hotel, however, which let them leave Emma in their son’s pet-friendly room while they went out to dinner.

While we were in Maine, we did a whale watch tour out of Boothbay Harbor and she could have gone with us. We didn’t know, so we left her behind, but it was just as well since we had to keep getting up and moving to one side or the other of the boat to see the whales. I did see a sunset sail in Bar Harbor that allowed dogs, too. That would be fun.

What a great trip — I love how Jane and her husband found activities that interested and pleased both them and Emma. One last picture completes the story:
Thanks so much for sharing your trip journal and pictures, Jane! It really helps to see how other travelers make their plans, and hotel reviews are so useful. Anyone else have pictures to share this week? Please post them on Dog Jaunt’s Facebook page, so we can all see them!

Tips from Dog Jaunt readers: Packing a crate, improving chances for in-cabin carrier

I have a stack of great stuff in my in-box from Dog Jaunt readers, and I’m making progress on sharing it with you. Here are two tips from a couple of fellow travelers, and one from me.

Packing a crate

As you may already know, Chloe is crate-trained, and we carry a medium-sized version of her big metal crate with us when we travel. It occupies half of her enormous Samsonite suitcase, but I’ve never really begrudged the weight or the space — it gives her a safe place to retreat to when we’re on the road. Reader Bev (who reported on the under-seat space in a Sun Country 737) also travels with a crate for her dog, a Shih Tzu, but she prefers the hard plastic Vari-Kennel type crate. Here’s her recommendation:

“What I do is take their plastic crate that comes apart (top half and bottom half) and put it inside my suitcase — then pack my clothes inside the crate, socks, shampoo in ziploc bag, etc along the gap between crate and suitcase. If you don’t have room, considering buying a suitcase just for the crates and send it through as checked baggage…less time consuming than going to buy one when you reach your destination, but buying one at your destination is an option too.”

Bev’s dog has a sensitive stomach, by the way, so she gives her bottled water while they’re traveling, and she ships ahead a 5-lb. bag of the dog food she knows her dog likes.

Leave your old tag on your in-cabin carrier

This is an idea I’d never have thought of, because I’m one of those people who instantly pulls the airline’s tags off our suitcases as soon as they come off the carousel. Thank goodness for reader Kristine, who pointed out that if you approach a ticketing agent with a carrier that’s obviously already been accepted on a flight, the chances are better that the agent will approve it for another flight:

“After the first flight, I left the airline claim tag on the strap, so when I got to my next flight, they could see that the carrier was already on a prior flight. I’m gonna leave this tag on until we travel again and let the ticket agent remove it so there is no question — and they have no reason to try and sell me ‘their’ carrier, cause mine won’t fit.”

I love that idea, and have started implementing it myself. Chloe’s SturdiBag, currently at my feet, still has its tag from our September Southwest flight, and I’m going to leave it on there until our next flight in December. That also happens to be on Southwest, but I think the psychology would work even if our next flight was on United or one of our other preferred airlines.

Carry a picture of your dog’s carrier fitting under an airplane seat

Kristine included pictures of Hooper, her 8-lb. Havanese, in his large (and red!) SturdiBag carrier, under a row of Southwest seats — oriented both front-to-back and side-to-side. This is a tip I’ve posted before on Dog Jaunt’s Facebook page, but seeing Kristine’s pictures reminded me that I should post it here as well: Consider bringing along a picture of your dog in your carrier, fitting under an airline seat (preferably on the airline you’re flying on). That way, you can show a ticketing or gate agent the picture, and they can see for themselves that the carrier fits.

If you don’t already have a picture of your own, carry someone else’s picture — as long as the airline and the carrier are the same, it should be equally persuasive. Here are Kristine’s pictures, and I’ve pledged to start posting more pictures of Chloe in her carrier on the reports I file about airline under-seat spaces.

Large SturdiBag, and Hooper the Havanese, oriented front-to-back in a window seat space on a Southwest 737

Oriented left-to-right in this picture, under a middle Southwest seat

And the last of the trio -- Hooper and carrier under a Southwest aisle seat

Snapshot Saturday: Nico at Snoqualmie Falls

Yep, I missed Friday again — but Saturday is just as good, and this photo makes me happy. Reader Lenox contacted me because she and her husband were planning to travel from Colorado to Seattle, via Southwest, with Nico, their Rat Terrier. Nico’s just about exactly Chloe’s size (she’s about 12″ tall at the shoulders, and about 13.5″ long; she weighs 10 lbs., though, so she’s slimmer than Chloe) — but Southwest told Lenox she’d be too tall to travel in cabin. Hogwash, I told Lenox, and suggested (what else?) the large SturdiBag carrier.

Lenox took the plunge, and here’s her report: “Thanks in LARGE part to the incredible resources on your blog, we had a wonderful trip from Colorado to Washington with our Rat Terrier, Nico. While she had some anxiety on the plane (panting heavily and shaking), she perked right up once we got off and didn’t whine or bark. And the pet relief area at Sea-Tac was a godsend!” I’m sorry about Nico’s stress — perhaps she might be one of the lucky dogs that responds well to D.A.P. (the wipes are TSA-friendly, and the collar is very intriguing) or Rescue Remedy or Travel Calm, though Chloe isn’t, alas. I’m delighted to hear, though, that Lenox plans to take more trips with Nico.

Here’s Nico at the Snoqualmie Falls park (“leashed pets are allowed”):

The falls are gorgeous, and they’re only a short drive east of Seattle. Perched above them is the historic Salish Lodge & Spa — it’s a delightful place to stay, and it has dog-friendly rooms. (Does it look spookily familiar to you? You too probably watched Twin Peaks back in the day. In real life, the Lodge is warm and cozy and inviting and not a bit spooky.)

Thanks to Lenox for the picture and the report (and, of course, the praise!). If you have pictures of your own to share from this week, please post them on Dog Jaunt’s Facebook page so we can all see them!

Reader’s report: Pet relief area at Austin-Bergstrom International Airport (AUS)

My friend Jenny, whenever she sets off on a trip, kindly asks whether I have the info I need about the pet relief area for the airport she’ll be visiting — and this time, she was visiting Austin, TX. After drying my tears of gratitude, I told her that I had the information the airport provides on its site (“The dog walk is located outside the lower level, to the far, east end of the terminal past column numbered 6”). Are those directions accurate and useful? And what does the pet relief area look like? Here’s what she sent me:

“Your description is accurate. Just a few additional detailed notes:
  • The dog park is indeed at the end of the terminal just beyond column 6 which is clearly marked. If you’re coming out of the terminal take a right all the way down.
  • The grass was quite patchy as you can see from the photos and the drinking fountain worked just fine. I tested it :-)”

The famous Column 6, outside Baggage Claim on the lower level

The pet relief area, from a distance (see the red and green boxes?)

And up close (please note the water fountain on the left, being visited by a crow).

Thank you so much, dear Jenny. I’ve added this post to Dog Jaunt’s ongoing series of reviews of airport pet relief areas. To see others, visit Dog Jaunt’s handy guide to airport pet relief areas.

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

Let’s be honest. I started collecting these links on September 2, so this is really an entire month’s collection. By now it’s old news that TripAdvisor posted a list of its ten most pet-friendly hotels in the U.S. — the algorithm is a little sketchy (“accommodations which have four or more circles out of five on TripAdvisor, and feature the greatest number of TripAdvisor traveler comments describing them as pet- or dog-friendly”), but I loved learning about The Paw House Inn, a Vermont hotel that charges extra for visitors without a dog.

We touch down briefly in Fort Myers, where the Montecristo Travels team checked out the airport pet relief area, and then head west to Boulder (where the Kimpton Crawl team reported on a dog-friendly-ish Whole Foods — your dog can’t come inside, but there’s a water fountain and a patch of grass to comfort her while you shop) and Salt Lake City (Sara, Marty and Oscar, heading west themselves, found a truly dog-friendly farmer’s market).

And then it’s out to my part of the country with the Take Paws and youdidwhatwithyourweiner teams. The Burkerts wrote a very useful post, with tons of pictures, about visiting the Olympic Peninsula with a dog, and Jessica and team saddled up two bikes, two dachshunds, two trailers, and several panniers, and went on “a cycling tour of the North Oregon Coast.” The link takes you to Part I of their journey, packed with pictures — don’t miss Part II, and check out, too, their thorough review of dog-friendly things to do in Astoria.

We’ve run out of U.S., so we head abroad, first with Helen Fazio and Raja, who posted details about their trip to Machu Picchu (yes, Raja got in!) and about Peruvian dogs, and what it was generally like traveling with a dog in Peru. Sign me up, is what I say…. Sign me up, too, for a dog-friendly beach in Italy — here are Venere Travel Blog‘s five picks, located in San Vincenzo, Rimini, Fiumicino (the Bau Beach profiled last August by a Dog Jaunt reader), Abisola Mare, and Cagliari.

Speaking of abroad, check out this article from Lynn Braz, syndicated on BlogHer, about traveling with Jersey, her Shih Tzu, from New York to the Côte d’Azur (and, more generally, about the joy of traveling abroad with your dog — but I particularly enjoyed hearing about how she dealt with Air France’s weight limit for in-cabin dogs). Please note, however, that while she’s right about Australia and New Zealand’s tricky quarantine requirements, the U.K. is very do-able, and will shortly become downright easy.

Still speaking of abroad, here’s a useful link, courtesy of Luxury Paw: I hadn’t heard of wotif.com, mentioned in a link in an article Janine liked, but this Australian company has a page of links to international hotels that accept pet dogs.

I’ll leave you with a thought-provoking post from Fido Friendly — it’s about a program (Personalized Emergency Training Services) offered by Wag’N Enterprises to pet boarding and day care facilities, and it raises an issue I hadn’t previously considered: Is your dog’s boarding facility prepared to handle a disaster like Irene or, God forbid, Katrina? Or will you find yourself a country (or several) away from your dog, wondering if she’s okay? Consider asking your favorite boarding facility if they’re prepared for a [insert your local disaster], and if they look at you blankly, consider letting them know about this PETS program.

Traveling with a dog: How to be a good houseguest

I spent three weeks driving around New England with Chloe this spring, visiting half a dozen friends I hadn’t seen in a while (I hadn’t seen one girl since the Era of the Padded Shoulder, when we were both 17). I stayed in a couple of hotels, but mostly I stayed with my friends, or I visited their homes.

Chloe and I have been houseguests before, but this trip was different because nearly all of my hostesses had dogs of their own. One also has a pet indoor bunny, and another has a bad-ass guinea pig. The presence of other pets added a layer of complexity to our visits. Here are my six best suggestions for being a good houseguest-with-dog:

Make it crystal-clear that you’ll have your dog with you

Wouldn’t you think I’d have gotten this right? And yet the first friend I visited this spring hadn’t realized that Chloe would be with me, and booked the four ladies who were meeting into a lovely resort hotel that didn’t accept pet dogs. I got a room in a nearby Hampton Inn, and listened sadly to my friends’ tales of spa treatments and late-night chats.

Talk to your host about the best way to introduce the pets

If nothing else, talk about it through the screen door when your friend answers the doorbell. Most of my friends simply invited Chloe in for a thorough sniffing — and Chloe is a very tolerant, non-threatening dog, so that worked for her too — but one friend knew that Agatha Christie, her Shih Tzu, would be worried by Chloe’s arrival and arranged for the dogs to meet on-leash in her foyer, in a shower of treats and praise. By the end of the visit, both dogs were off-leash and Agatha had warmed a bit to Chloe, but we took it slowly.

Thank goodness we took it slowly with my college roommate’s pet bunny, since Chloe suddenly went all red in tooth and claw over it. Deb’s own dog, a Border Collie, clearly understands how much in trouble he’d be in if he gets anywhere near the bunny — but Chloe didn’t, and I was grateful that she was leashed for the meeting. (In the next house we visited, Chloe approached the resident guinea pig with the same agitation, but was buffaloed by his complete lack of concern. Every situation is different.)

Be aware of what might irritate the host dog

Every household has its own routine, and I think that dogs get used to it. I think it’s a good idea to be conscious of that routine, and to try not to muddy it. Try to get in sync with your host dog’s walk schedule and eating schedule, if possible, both for the dogs’ sake (so their energy levels are similar) and for the host’s sake (so it doesn’t seem like someone is always doing something with a dog). Keep out of the way of your host’s leashing-up routine; in those moments of great excitement (we’re going OUT NOW!!!), it’s best to be off to one side.

I feed Chloe in her crate, which I set up in the guest room, so it doesn’t occupy any of the host dog’s space. Chloe’s a food poacher, so I ask that the host dog’s food bowl be put out of her reach — ideally it’s still within the host dog’s reach, but if it’s not, it’s usually better than running the risk that Chloe will annoy her new friend. No one has seemed to mind sharing a water bowl with Chloe.

It wasn’t an issue in any of the households we visited, but some dogs are uncomfortable sharing their toys with other dogs, so I suggest that you talk to your host about whether that might be a concern. Chloe can’t resist a dog bed, which is understandable but unfortunate — to a woman, my hosts said “don’t worry, leave her be,” but to me that’s like letting your dog sit in another dog’s favorite chair. Wouldn’t you be annoyed?

Be aware of what might irritate your host

It probably goes without saying, but bring your own gear with you, so you can care for your dog independently. You’d bring your own food, of course, because you have no idea if your host dog’s food would agree with your dog’s digestion, but you’ll earn big points by also bringing your own food and water bowls, bedding for your dog’s crate, and towels and cleaning supplies (both dog shampoo and enzymatic cleaner in case of disaster). Pack, in fact, as if you’re staying in a hotel (here’s Dog Jaunt’s comprehensive packing list to help you).

We allow Chloe on our sofas and chairs in our own home, but when you’re traveling, your host’s rules win. My mother, who never allowed the dogs of my childhood indoors, kindly welcomes Chloe — but I sweeten the deal by swaddling my parents’ furniture in the sheets and throws we carry with us. Friends of ours have a leather couch, and while I regard leather as super dog-friendly (easy to clean! doesn’t hold hair! scratches add character!), they would like it to remain glossy and unscratched. Thank God I noticed their twitch of concern in the nick of time and learned about their preferences. Now I try very hard to remember to ask about furniture well in advance.

We always clean Chloe’s feet after a walk by sticking her in a sink or tub. Chloe gathers dirt like a sponge, but even if your host assures you it’s not necessary, it’s a thoughtful thing to do. Carry your own supply of towels with you (we use ShamWow towels, but keep in mind that you’ll have to let them air dry somewhere between uses — if you don’t have your own guest bath, consider using paper towels instead). I use whatever soap is at hand, but a better approach would be to put the dog shampoo you’ve brought near the door, so you can grab it as you come in. Ask your host where you can wash your dog’s feet — we wash Chloe in the kitchen sink at home, but my brother was appalled by that idea, and our leather couch friends shooed us towards the laundry room sink.

Be vigilant

The fact is, no matter how comfortable you may be with your hosts, you’re not at home. Chloe still disgraces herself in remote corners of the house she lives in, so I keep a very wary eye on her in other people’s homes. Keep your dog in view, and perhaps even on a leash, regardless of what your host says. No one, no matter how laid-back and loving, really wants their carpets soiled. Consider, too, that these dogs are still strangers to one another, and the sight of your dog poking around new territory, away from human supervision, might suddenly rub the host dog the wrong way.

At home, I know roughly when to take Chloe outside for bathroom breaks. On the road, I probably double our trips outside, partly because I don’t know how the time difference will have affected her insides and partly because I absolutely don’t want her to have an accident. (As I mentioned above, carry a bottle of your enzymatic cleaner with you, and respond promptly to accidents — be sure, though, to clear it first with your host, who may prefer to clean the priceless silk carpet some other way.)

Make every effort to sense your host’s preferences. Remember how our friends twitched when Chloe headed for their leather couch? They love us, and they love Chloe, and they desperately didn’t want to offend us — but they also didn’t want her claws on their naked sofa. Do your best to rescue your hosts from that kind of unpleasantness by anticipating what would make them comfortable. That’s why we started washing Chloe’s feet every time we return home — either your host will be relieved, or they’ll be impressed by your level of concern for them and their possessions. (Even then, though, we almost missed a cue once — we’d washed and towel-dried Chloe’s paws and set her on the ground, thinking, as we do at home, that clean damp paws are a non-issue. Our hosts twitched, and it turns out that in their hearts, they preferred her to stay on the tiled kitchen floor until her feet were dry. Phew!)

Exercise is the answer

A well-exercised dog is a good houseguest. Our tidier, more house-proud hosts have only seen Chloe dozing — it’s just safer that way. I understand that it takes time to wear out your dog, time that you may not want to spend away from your hosts (who you have, after all, traveled all this way to see).

The best way to handle that dilemma is to go for a long walk with your dog and your hosts — we can all use the exercise, and you may well be doing your host a favor by introducing them to a park or a trail they hadn’t tried before. Alternatively, fit your dog’s exercise needs around your host’s schedule. Do research ahead of time and locate a nearby dog park, or get a recommendation for a route to run or walk, and slot that outing in where it won’t interfere with your host’s plans.

If that means you get up earlier than you’d like to, or you miss the afternoon nap you yearn for, so be it. The etiquette books I read when I was a girl (my mother has a collection, and they’re fascinating, especially the ones from the first half of the 20th century) all pointed out that guests must work at being good guests, just as hosts work like crazy to make a visit a success.

So there you have it — my thoughts on what makes a houseguest with a dog welcome for a return visit. My friend Edie Jarolim wrote a post on the same topic a while ago that I didn’t reread before writing this, for fear of copying it — take a look and see what she suggests. What would you add that I’ve missed? I’m always looking for good ideas, and I’d be grateful for your thoughts.