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Chloe’s Clicks: Dog travel links we liked this week

Last year I wrote a post about how the Four Seasons is the only hotel on Las Vegas’s Strip that accepts dogs. None of the casino hotels on the Strip welcomes dogs. In Reno, however, the story is a bit different. According to a letter to the editor of TheUnion.com, Reno’s Sands Regency Casino Hotel is pet-friendly — and sure enough, when you visit the casino’s web site, you learn that dogs are indeed allowed in the casino hotel (though still not in the casino itself).

That’s pretty great, but here’s even better news: There’s a spa in Santa Fe — and a good one, with rapturous reviews — that’s dog-friendly. Yep, you read that correctly. Check out this great post from ohmidog!’s John Woestendiek about the visit he and his dog Ace made to the Ten Thousand Waves spa.

Elsewhere in the U.S., Jersey Bites wrote a fun post about their beloved Dog Beach (official name: Fisherman’s Cove Conservation Area) in Manasquan, NJ; Rose Flores Medlock, the Portland Pet-Friendly Places Examiner, wrote about three more dog-friendly places to eat in wonderful Portland, OR; and DogFriendly.com posted its choices for the top 10 dog-friendly resort areas in the U.S. Frankly, I don’t view the Black Hills, St. Augustine, Virginia City or Chattanooga as “resort areas,” but there are tips to be picked up from even the most flawed of lists.

Here’s a link without a link, alas. Orange Coast Magazine included a useful article in its June 2010 issue about pet-friendly hotels in Orange Country, sent in by alert reader Tony. Though the issue is on-line, that particular article isn’t, so I’ll tell you that it lists the following nine hotels, and provides details about their pet policies and amenities: Balboa Bay Club, Fairmont Newport Beach, Hilton Waterfront Resort, The Island Hotel, Montage, the Laguna Niguel Ritz-Carlton, Shorebreak Hotel, Monarch Beach Resort, and the Westin South Coast Plaza.

This week’s final link is by way of FIDOFriendly, whose August 2010 issue includes an article about taking your dog to see a movie at a local drive-in theater. Doesn’t that sound like fun?! You’ll need to grab an issue to read the article itself, but here’s a teaser from the FIDOFriendly website. Author Carol Bryant suggests that you visit www.driveintheater.com to find out what drive-ins are still going strong in your part of the country, and so do I (but be sure to double-check; in Washington, for example, at least two of the listed theaters are in fact closed).

Photo Friday: Cooper’s new car seat

Blogging, I’ve learned, can be a bit lonely — I hit the “publish” button, a tree falls in the forest, and I wonder if anyone hears…. As a result, I cherish every comment people write about my posts, and I spend a really unconscionable amount of time on Twitter, making contact with other dog/travel enthusiasts. So you can imagine how excited I am when someone actually Takes My Advice — or maybe you can’t. Boy, I’m excited. This week’s picture is of the truly charming Cooper, in his new car seat (a medium-sized Snoozer Lookout I recommended by, yes, me! in a guest post on Will My Dog Hate Me? just over a week ago). Cooper is a Maltese/Yorkie mix, and his human is the proprietor of alldogboots.com, which offers every kind of dog footwear you can imagine.

Please send me links to your favorite dog travel photos! They’ll get listed below, for everyone to click on and view. Here’s how it works:

  1. Every Friday, I’ll put up a post like this one, sometime during the morning (Pacific time).
  2. If you have a blog or a website, post a dog travel photo on your site on Friday and link back here to the current week’s “Photo Friday” post so that your readers can see other great dog travel photos. Please take a moment to make sure that you are linking directly to your photo post instead of your homepage.
  3. If you don’t have a blog or a website, simply post your photo to Flickr (or Facebook, Twitpic, etc.).
  4. Using the inlinkz button below, paste in the link to your photo or your blog post. That way, Dog Jaunt will link back to you. Please include a few words in the “Name” box describing where you took the photo (in this case, “Name” refers to the name of your photo, not your name!).
  5. Alternatively, heck, just e-mail me your picture ([email protected]) and I’ll post it for you!

Rent a French canal boat, and bring your dog along for the ride

Photo by fran.west

So you saw my review of Narrow Dog to Carcassonne, you’ve read the book, and now you want to spend a week or two (or longer!) cruising along the canals of France, or perhaps elsewhere in Europe. You can, absolutely, and you can bring your dog with you. I contacted five of the better-known companies that rent canal boats in France/Europe, and all of them allow you to travel with your dog on board. There may be a fee, but it’s generally small (in the neighborhood of €20-30). Please note that all of these companies invite even new boaters to take a canal vacation: There is no license requirement, and although previous cruising experience would likely be useful, it’s not required.

If, by some chance, you haven’t yet read Narrow Dog, check out this description of a family’s week on the Nivernais Canal, and this article about a trip on the Burgundy Canal, for inspiration.Be sure, too, to look at this Seattle Times article from someone who had mixed feelings about his family’s week on a canal boat in the Loire Valley.

All of these boat rental companies allow you to travel with your dog:

Le Boat (France, Germany, Italy, Ireland, Belgium, Holland, England, Scotland)

Locaboat (France, Germany, Holland, Ireland, Italy, Poland)

France Afloat (Central, West and South France)

Nicols (France, Germany, Portugal)

Travel book review: Narrow Dog to Carcassonne

This was an impulse purchase. I found it while I was looking in the travel literature section for a book I’d heard about at the TBEX travel bloggers conference, describing one man’s search for Jesus’s foreskin (stolen in 1983 from a Northern Italian village church). I now know that that book, David Farley’s An Irreverent Curiosity, is shelved in an entirely different part of the store, and I’ll return for it, but in the meantime I’ve been happily absorbed in the story of a couple who sail their English narrowboat from their home in Stone, Staffordshire to the edge of England, then across the Channel (madness, in a narrowboat) and down the length of France (also madness, in places) to Carcassonne. The “narrow dog” of the title is their whippet, Jim, who loathes boating, but is otherwise an enchanting companion.

Terry Darlington must make other first-time authors bang their heads against walls. His writing is graceful, poetic, and achingly funny — I’m only going a little overboard when I tell you that reading Narrow Dog is like reading the funnier, more accessible bits of Ulysses. Here, I’ll show you by opening the book at random — at every turn you run into passages like this one:

After dinner I will go and see the crayfish, I said. Jim and I will stun them with the light from our kitchen torch and then we will catch some and have them for lunch tomorrow. Alas, monsieur, said madame, they are fearful, they back away. She backed away from our table, à reculons, à reculons, and with a twitch of her tail she was gone.

The book isn’t perfect, but it’s a great delight, and I’ll be snapping up the sequel (Narrow Dog to Indian River) when I go back to the bookstore for An Irreverent Curiosity.

It’s appropriate that Jim is the focus of the book’s title, because he’s crucial to the tale. “Cowardly, thieving, and disrespectful” he may be, but the Darlingtons’ progress through England, and then Belgium and France, is lined with people who throw themselves to the ground to greet Jim. He keeps his people amused, fit, and socially-engaged. The Darlingtons are sociable people in their own right, and they both speak serviceable, even fluent, French, but their experience, and ours, would be poorer without Jim.

So will we be retiring, buying a narrowboat (or a péniche), and setting off with Chloe? Unclear. Though they laugh at their skills, the Darlingtons, I suspect, are actually good, experienced sailors, and we certainly are not. Our French needs years of help. And the impression you get of life on the canals is not romantic. The Darlingtons are by turns stressed, hot, bored and homesick, but they also experience moments of great beauty and King of Rock and Roll triumph. We might rent a canal boat, and add ourselves to the crowd of hire boats that cross paths with the Darlingtons — who knows where that might lead? And we’ll certainly bring Chloe with us.

Amazon links:
Narrow Dog to Carcassonne
Narrow Dog to Indian River
An Irreverent Curiosity: In Search of the Church’s Strangest Relic in Italy’s Oddest Town

Taking a dog from Washington D.C. to New York City by public transit? Almost….

This topic came up yesterday in a tweet from a new follower who wondered if I knew of a way for her car-less aunt to get from her new home in D.C. to NYC, with a dog. I’ve written about this before, but the details are buried in several posts about public transit pet policies. So here’s what I’ve learned, in an easy-to-reach location.

You can almost travel between New York and Washington D.C. via pet-friendly public transit systems, except for a 35-mile gap between Perryville, MD and Newark, DE. Here’s how: Starting in New York City, you’d take NJ Transit into the Philadelphia area. You’d change systems, and take a SEPTA train (the R2 regional rail line) to…not quite all the way to…the MTA Maryland system, which would bring you (via the Penn Line MARC train) in to Washington’s Union Station and into the arms of D.C.’s WMATA system. It would take a long time. Your dog would have to be small, and in a carrier. But it would work, except for that pesky gap between the MTA Maryland system and the SEPTA system.

Please note that the gap is currently bridged by a DART bus (#65), which will take you from Newark, DE to Elkton, MD, where you can catch “The Bus — Perryville Connection” to the Perryville, MD MARC station. However, DART does not allow pet dogs on board — only service dogs.

Until DART sees the light, or the gap between Newark and Perryville is otherwise bridged by a pet-friendly transit system, your best alternatives are to send your dog to New York or D.C. via Pet Airways (currently about $99 for a one-way trip between NYC and D.C.) and follow her by train or bus or other ground transportation; or get on Craigslist and catch a ride with a dog lover heading your direction; or rent a car.

This would all be so much easier if Amtrak once again welcomed pet dogs on board. As I said in a comment on a friend’s blog post calling for Amtrak to reconsider its 1976 policy change, “instead of carrying pets in sleeping compartments (which would require extensive clean-up) or baggage cars (which would require heating/cooling baggage cars), why not allow only small pets in carriers in coach cars, as they do on planes? I think even long-distance train travelers would be thrilled, even though they’d have to doze upright in coach seats, to be allowed to bring their small dogs on board with them. The issue, then, would be to provide enough time at stops, every so often, for pet owners to take their dogs out for a quick break — and those designated stations would need to have a patch of grass or gravel and be equipped with one of those poles bearing poop bags and a small trash can that you see at airport pet relief areas.”

Chloe’s Clicks: Dog travel links we liked this week

Let’s start this week — why not? — in Massachusetts. Fido Loves posted an enthusiastic report about the dog-friendly beaches at Brant Rock (southeast of Boston, near Duxbury), and the Hawthorne Hotel in Salem proved it’s dog-friendly with pix of a visiting pair of Schipperkes.

Heading south, ClubPlanet described the five best pet-friendly bars in New York City — how helpful that would have been two weeks ago, when Chloe and I could both have used a drink or three — and Raleigh Pop (“Dog Blogging from Two Bitches in Brooklyn”) weighed in with a vote for Brooklyn’s Mission Dolores Bar (click on “Blog” after following the link Raleigh Pop provides to see today’s draft choices).

Here’s a blog I hadn’t seen before: Eddie Eats Out offers reviews of dog-friendly restaurants — anywhere Eddie encounters them, presumably, but so far in New England and California. I haven’t eaten at any of the places he lists, so I can’t compare my opinions with his, but I like the idea.

Speaking of restaurants, Your Florida Home wants potential Florida homeowners to know about seven dog-friendly restaurants in and around Cape Coral (near Fort Myers). I will never own a Florida home, but I’ll make my Florida-based mother-in-law come to Pinchers with me and Chloe for a crab fest.

We can’t go much farther south, so we’ll go west instead and check in with the Take Paws Winnebago: Rod and Amy Burkert posted two joyous reports about visiting Milwaukee and Door County, WI with their dogs that have me scratching at the door and whining to join them.

Before we leave the U.S., check out the suggestions Apartment Therapy offers for pet-friendly getaways around the country (Nantucket, Asheville, Seattle, Carmel, and Austin) — they’re brief, but inspiring.

And we’re off, starting with a fun interview on And A Small Dog of Turner, the expet of expat Tiffany Jansen, whose blog Clogs and Tulips has been featured before on Chloe’s Clicks. Turner and Tiffany talk about bringing a dog into the Netherlands, and getting used to life with a dog in the Netherlands. Good stuff!

Elsewhere, The House of Queens‘ Lord Fernandez wished his dogs were with him to enjoy dog-friendly Tokyo, and milagroswire’s blog listed ten favorite dog-friendly international destinations, complete with tips on how to satisfy local immigration rules. The suggestions include Paris, Lake Lucerne, Madrid, Brussels, Playa del Carmen and Costa Rica. Love it!

Photo Friday: The Central Park stroller ladies

We met friends at Le Pain Quotidien in Central Park for breakfast last weekend, and halfway through my (delicious) oatmeal I realized that this crowd of ladies and dogs and pet strollers had gathered on the lawn across the path. I put down my spoon, darted over, and took their picture. They told me that one of their dogs has a bad leg, and has to be chauffeured (the other strollers were not explained — I think the ladies just think they’re fun). This was clearly a group that met regularly in this spot — they chatted, their dogs romped, and then they all packed up and went their separate ways.

Small dogs, their people, and their strollers in Central Park

Please send me links to your favorite dog travel photos! They’ll get listed below, for everyone to click on and view. Here’s how it works:

  1. Every Friday, I’ll put up a post like this one, sometime during the morning (Pacific time).
  2. If you have a blog or a website, post a dog travel photo on your site on Friday and link back here to the current week’s “Photo Friday” post so that your readers can see other great dog travel photos. Please take a moment to make sure that you are linking directly to your photo post instead of your homepage.
  3. If you don’t have a blog or a website, simply post your photo to Flickr (or Facebook, Twitpic, etc.).
  4. Using the inlinkz button below, paste in the link to your photo or your blog post. That way, Dog Jaunt will link back to you. Please include a few words in the “Name” box describing where you took the photo (in this case, “Name” refers to the name of your photo, not your name!).
  5. Alternatively, heck, just e-mail me your picture ([email protected]) and I’ll post it for you!

Two more dog-friendly Seattle restaurants: Chutneys and Vios

Summertime has finally arrived in Seattle, and the restaurants have activated their outside dining. That’s good news for us and for Chloe, because we don’t have air conditioning and there are days when I’d sooner stick forks in my eyes than cook — and when we go out to dinner, Chloe gets another walk. In the past, I’ve told you about a number of dog-friendly restaurants in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood, including Monsoon, Olympic Pizza, Samui Thai and Volunteer Park Café. Here are two more you should know about: Chutneys Grille on the Hill (which I desperately want to spell “Hille”) and Vios Café and Marketplace.

Hubs and Chloe at the edge of Chutneys' patio

Chutneys is officially one of a small, local chain of Indian restaurants, but the locations seem to be pretty autonomous. The Capitol Hill location (on 15th Ave. E., across from The Canterbury) is a little down at the heels but essentially attractive, and serves reliably good Northern Indian food. The service is friendly and welcoming, and there is — drumroll, please — a parking lot. We go there often, in part because we find Palak Paneer and Kasturi Chicken comforting (the Tandoori Halibut is also a winner), and in part because it’s never crowded or noisy. Now that it’s summertime, we can go there with Chloe, because she’s welcome on the big patio in front.

Counter at Vios (with cool Hipstamatic effectz)

The salmon special

Vios is a Greek restaurant at the corner of Aloha and 19th, just down the street from Monsoon. The food is delicious — last night, for example, we had their outstanding Greek Salad (no stinting on the feta here) for starters, the Copper River salmon special (English pea puree, green beans, cherry tomatoes, roasted potatoes), and the walnut olive oil cake with roasted apricots for dessert. It’s family friendly (make that Family Friendly, since the rear portion of the restaurant is a play area for children), and dogs may sit with their owners outside, as long as they stay outside the fence that surrounds the sidewalk seating area. Choose one of the three tables that are lined up against the fence, and secure your dog to you, your table, or the fence. Alternatively, consider getting takeout from Vios and walking it up the hill to Volunteer Park for a picnic. And don’t forget the gelato, conveniently located in a case next to the door….

Chutneys Grille on the Hill
605 15th Avenue E.
Seattle, WA 98112
T: 206-726-1000

Vios
903 19th Avenue E.
Seattle, WA 98112
T: 206-329-3236
Open for lunch and dinner Tues. to Sat.

Favorite car restraints for a small dog

“…I don’t want to be too graphic, but I do want to convince you that securing your dog to the car and limiting her range of motion is important not only for your dog’s safety, but for yours. Even a 2 lb. dog becomes a missile in an accident: At 50 mph, little Fluff will hit you with the force of 40 lbs. At the same speed, a 20 lb. dog will hit with the force of 440 lbs. Fluff won’t survive, and neither will you. Other hazards? A small, active dog may distract you, or even dart under your brake pedal, at a crucial moment.

Our dog, Chloe, is a 13 lb. Cavalier King Charles Spaniel. We drive with her around town and on road trips that depart from our driveway, but we also fly with her to distant destinations and then drive with her in rental cars. We’ve had the chance to consider and try a variety of solutions for those situations, and here are my favorites.”

The rest of this article — describing my favorite dog booster seat, for car trips that leave from our driveway, and my favorite system for keeping Chloe safe in rental cars — appeared today on Will My Dog Hate Me?, my friend Edie Jarolim’s blog. Edie is the author of Am I Boring My Dog? And 99 Other Things Every Dog Wishes You Knew, reviewed (ecstatically) in an earlier Dog Jaunt post. She is also, among many other things, Pet Travel Correspondent for KVOA-TV in Tucson. Please check out my guest post, which is part of a series of posts Edie’s published over the past few weeks about making car rides safe and comfortable for your dog, even an anxious traveler like her dog Frankie.

Teaching your small dog to use a bike attachment

All six of Kim's dogs

This is a guest post from Kim Garrison, a friend I met through Twitter (follow her at @kimhalligan1 or @jerseyshoredogs). Kim is the guardian of six (6) dogs, including three Lab mixes (mom Sequel and two of her pups, Stanley and Stella), two Japanese Chins (Oscar and Spencer), and Olive the Chihuahua. Kim bikes with some of her dogs, including the Japanese Chins, which are about the same size as Chloe — so of course I asked her to send me an e-mail telling me how it works.

Hi, I’m Kim. I love to bike with Sequel and Stella, two of my Lab mixes (Stanley doesn’t like the bike, so we do other stuff together). I’ve just starting biking with my two Japanese Chins, Oscar and Spencer. It’s a fun way to get around with your dog, and you get a lot of looks!

I found the bike attachment we use at a local store, and it clips onto my bike’s back wheel. [Editor’s note: From the pictures, it looks like a Sunlite bike attachment. Kim reports that hers, like the Sunlite, attaches with a Velcro strap, so that may be the brand she has. Kim says that she’s also heard good things about the Springer bike attachment.]

I recommend using a harness for your dog with a clip in front [like the Easy Walk Harness] rather than one with a clip behind your dog’s shoulders. If you have a harness that fastens in back, however, clip the bike attachment leash to the side of the harness. That’s what I do for my two Japanese Chins, and it works fine. I do not recommend clipping the bike attachment to your dog’s collar, because it would be too hard on your dog’s neck.

I started by clipping the bike attachment to my dog’s harness and just walking the bike, to see if he was okay with it. You can figure out pretty fast if they like it or not. If they’re comfortable with walking next to the bike, the next thing I do is jump on the bike and pedal slowly with them. My Japanese Chins only needed a minute of walking alongside the bike to get comfortable, and then we were off.

Go only a short distance at first, since your dog’s paw pads need to adjust to running on pavement. Be sure to check your dog’s paw pads regularly, looking for any sign of irritation. Oscar and Spencer are small dogs, so we don’t go far — just down the street and back (our Labs will run alongside for about two miles).

Kim and Oscar the Japanese Chin

I asked Kim if she feels wobbly on her bike when she has a dog alongside, especially her bigger dogs, and here’s what she said: I’ve never felt like the dogs (the biggest one I bike with weighs 42 lbs.) make the bike wobbly. It just doesn’t happen. I have a cruiser bike, which is a heavier bike. Sequel, our black Lab mix, used to pull something awful on the bike, and it still wasn’t a problem.

Kim and Sequel the black Lab