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No Pet Left Behind: The Sherpa Guide for Traveling with Your Best Friend
No Pet Left Behind: The Sherpa Guide for Traveling with Your Best Friend
No Pet Left Behind: The Sherpa Guide for Traveling with Your Best Friend
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No Pet Left Behind: The Sherpa Guide for Traveling with Your Best Friend

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A comprehensive guide to traveling with your furry (or feathery or scaly) friend, whether across town or across the world.

Never leave your pet behind again!

Life is much more fulfilling when you take your pet with you. Whether around town or around the world, well-behaved pets are welcome many places. If your pet is of the fur, feather, or scale variety, within the pages of this indispensable guide you will:
  • discover a bounty of pet-friendly solutions, destinations, hotels, and airlines
  • learn the dos and don’ts of car, taxi, subway, plane, and bus travel
  • find out what vaccinations and papers your pet will need for traveling abroad
  • get the scoop on how to create a first-aid kit for your pet, and much more!


Gayle Martz, former flight attendant and founder of the Sherpa Pet Trading Company, uses her years of experience to create this useful guide to traveling with your pet.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateFeb 5, 2008
ISBN9781418573980
No Pet Left Behind: The Sherpa Guide for Traveling with Your Best Friend

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    Book preview

    No Pet Left Behind - Gayle Martz

    1401603440_ePDF_0002_0021401603440_ePDF_0003_0021401603440_ePDF_0004_005

    © 2008 LifeTime Media, Inc.

    All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means-electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or any other-except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.

    Published in Nashville,Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a registered trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc.

    Thomas Nelson, Inc., titles may be purchased in bulk for educational, business, fund-raising, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail SpecialMarkets@ThomasNelson.com.

    Sherpa® is a registered trademark of Sherpa’s Pet Trading Company® and is used by permission.

    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

    Martz, Gayle.

    No pet left behind : the Sherpa guide to traveling with your best friend / Gayle Martz,

    with Delilah Smittle.

    p. cm.

    Includes bibliographical references and index.

    978-1-4016-0344-1

    1. Pets and travel. I. Smittle, Delilah. II.Title.

    SF415.45.M37 2008

    636.088'7—dc22

    2007041996

    Printed in the United States of America

    08 09 10 11 12 13 RRD 5 4 3 2 1

    A LifeTime Media Production

    LifeTime Media, Inc.

    352 Seventh Avenue

    New York, NY 10001

    www.lifetimemedia.com

    Editor: Karyn Gerhard

    Illustrator: Dee Densmore D’Amico

    Designer: Roger Gorman

    contents

    Preface

    Introduction

    part 1

    ready, set...

    chapter 1: Things to Remember

    chapter 2: Train Your Pet

    chapter 3: Pet Etiquette

    chapter 4: The Things Pets Do

    part II

    ...go!

    chapter 5: Domestic Travel

    chapter 6: International Travel

    chapter 7: The Best Places to Travel with Your Pet

    chapter 8: If Your Pet Gets Lost or Sick

    Resources

    Checklists

    Acknowledgments

    Index

    About the Authors

    preface

    a tail of love and commitment

    I love my pets, and I love to travel. And I cannot imagine having to choose between the two. Globetrotting with my pets has become my way of life, but not so long ago, things were very different.

    In 1987, Sherpa, an adorable gray Lhasa Apso given to me by my fiancé, became my everything when my fiancé tragically died in his sleep a month before our wedding. Without a signed will, I wasn’t entitled to any of his estate and had to leave our New York home. To make matters worse, after two decades as a flight attendant, I had recently been laid off during a strike. At thirty-seven years old, my entire world had been turned upside down.

    Feeling alone and distraught, I wanted to spend some time with my mother, who lived in California, but I hesitated because the only way that Sherpa could accompany me on the plane was in a small hard-sided pet carrier that would be uncomfortable for her and cumbersome for me. I finally decided to leave her with a friend.

    After arriving in California, I was appalled to learn that my friend’s husband had placed Sherpa in a kennel. (Kennels then were not what they are now.) But worse than that, I felt completely lost without my little best friend; I realized I was the victim of a travel industry that had caused me to separate from my pooch during the time I needed her most.

    At that moment, a new commitment was born. I vowed to devote my energy to broadening the industry’s pet-in-cabin policy to accept an alternative to the hard-sided carrier. My diverse international travel experiences, coupled with the time I had spent as an aspiring professional photographer in the handbag industry, laid the groundwork for an idea that would revolutionize pet travel: The SherpaBag®—a soft-sided pet carrier.

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    I designed and developed my first The Sherpa Bag® with my Sherpa’s comfort and ease of travel in mind. It provided proper ventilation to keep her comfortable, had plenty of pockets for water bottles and toys, included a detachable leash, and most important, fit perfectly under an airline seat. That pet carrier encouraged those airlines that did not accept small pets in the passenger cabin to change their pet-in-cabin policies. I lobbied the airlines myself, one by one. American and TWA were among the first to officially approve The Sherpa Bag® for onboard use, and others soon followed. My Sherpa Bag® became the first officially approved in-cabin soft-sided pet carrier.

    I had little business experience and absolutely no financing. I borrowed five thousand dollars from my mother to have the bags made and then pounded the pavement, selling them from store to store on my own. I targeted the stores I knew—Bloomingdales, Saks, Macys, and Hammacher Schlemmer. I designed the bags, distributed and shipped them, and handled the business from my 800 number. In the process, I spread awareness about traveling with pets. During that difficult but exhilarating time, my satisfied customers made it all worthwhile—and helped me spread the word about this revolutionary approach to pet travel!

    By 1994, The Sherpa Bag® was officially approved by ten airlines. Today, The Sherpa® Trading Company manufactures more than a hundred different bags, collars, leashes, pet throws, and car seat covers that are sold in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan.

    Life is all about change, and just a few years ago, another major change took place in my world. My beloved Lhasa Apso, Sherpa, the namesake of my company and my companion for seventeen years, passed away. Though I miss her still, her spirit lives on. When Sherpa was ten years old, I adopted SuNae, my gorgeous Coton du Tulear, whose Korean name means true love. SuNae was originally named Sweetie Pie, but as soon as I met her, I knew a name change was in order. She was to be groomed as Sherpa’s protégé, and Sweetie Pie just didn’t fit. (Although she is a sweetie pie!)

    SuNae is a strong-willed little girl and a source of comfort, inspiration, and friendship to me. I also just adopted a young Shih Tzu whom I named Kartu. Though SuNae is not exactly thrilled about having to share me with Kartu, I’m certain that she’ll soon learn to enjoy Kartu’s friendship, just as Sherpa enjoyed SuNae’s.

    Pets make a huge difference in our lives, and it is up to us as pet lovers to ensure that our pets are not left behind. We haven’t yet reached a point in our society where pets are accepted everywhere and treated as the family members that they are. But we do not have to live with unfair laws and regulations; we can work together toward change and acceptance.

    My reason for writing this book is to share my knowledge and experience concerning pet travel. I wanted to create a kind of pet travel bible—a reliable source that people can trust and turn to when they have questions and concerns, or just want to learn how to travel with a pet.

    Note to readers: Throughout the book I make many references to Sherpa®-branded products because, in addition to being the market leader for pet travel gear, the Sherpa® brand is near and dear to my heart. Though I reference the Sherpa® brand, there are other brands of pet travel gear that are suitable for traveling with your pet. When making your selections, choose a product that best fits the needs of you and your pet.

    introduction

    Who unfailingly loves your cooking, puts pep in your step, a smile on your face, and a song in your heart? Whether it’s a cold, wet nose, a whisper of fur brushing against your ankle, or a chirp or whistle that greets you at day’s end, your most steadfast admirer is also your best friend: your pet. But even though he’s always there for you, your constant cheerleader can become bored with his daily routine, be it life in the not-so-great indoors, a quick game of Frisbee in the backyard, or a leashed walk around the neighborhood.

    Life is so much richer when you take your pet with you on your outings—from the fun places you can explore together to your must-do errands. Pets naturally enjoy the great outdoors, so why not take them out and about as often as possible? The next time you meet your friends for lunch or happy hour, go alfresco—meet them at a sidewalk café and take your best buddy along. Tuck your pocket pet (cats, ferrets, and small dogs) into a stylish, go-anywhere pet tote, and share a spontaneous window-shopping excursion through a trendy shopping district or a relaxing, sunset walk on the beach. Or get out the leash and take your buddy of the larger canine persuasion to a dog park, activity-filled doggie day camps sponsored by a local pet shop, or on a hiking and camping excursion. You may find yourself exploring new-to-you activities as you strategize your pet-inspired day trips, weekend getaways, and even vacations to far-flung island destinations or foreign countries.

    No matter what the species, our pets are part of our family and we want to take them along on vacations—don’t think that if your pet is not a dog, you’ll have to put your travel plans on hold. A well-behaved pet, no matter what the species, is accepted many places—the amazing assortment of certified therapy pets out there bears this out. I’ve even met a pair of guinea pigs and a snake that accompany their owner to children’s story hours and nursing homes. Cats are usually welcome anywhere dogs can go—cats have the advantage of being beautifully lightweight, portable, and quiet. If you start traveling with a kitten or cat as soon as you adopt him, he will accept travel as a normal facet of life with you and look forward to his shared outings.

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    Even your feathered friends can enjoy a day out! If you have a parrot, cockatiel, parakeet, or any of the parrot family members, you know just how faithful and affectionate they are. They enjoy sitting on your shoulder, looking lovingly into your eyes, and preening tendrils of your hair. Since these larger birds usually prefer walking to flying—and, yes, they usually prefer sitting on your shoulder to walking—they are easy to take with you and can even be trained to wear a halter and leash for safety’s sake. Ask people who own cold-blooded pets like lizards and iguanas, and they will testify to their pets’ intelligence and affection, and when their needs for warmth are met, these animals make quiet and curious traveling companions.

    Some pet owners shy away from taking their animals on trips because of certain myths of pet travel that simply aren’t true anymore. As more pets take to the road and to the air, motels and hotels are becoming increasingly pet friendly, with some actually offering pet perks such as complimentary water bowls, blankets, and even room service to lure pet-owning travelers to their establishments. These days, large roadside rest areas have dog walking areas, and some even have fenced-in dog parks. Most airlines accept pet passengers, and those pets small enough to fit in an under-the-seat carrier can travel in the cabin with you. Pet travel has become so commonplace that many airports even have dog-walking areas.

    This guide is destined to become the busiest book on your shelf. In fact, it may never make it to the shelf. You may even want to have two copies—one to pack in your suitcase and one to keep in the house to help you as you plan your trips. But before hitting the road, be sure to tuck one copy into a pocket of your pet carrier, and refer to it to solve the many sudden pet situations, from easing the symptoms of motion sickness to soothing separation anxiety, that pop up while traveling with your pet.

    In this book you will also discover a wealth of pet-friendly solutions, destinations, hotels, and airlines; unravel the mysteries of taxi, subway, and bus travel; find out what vaccinations, medical papers, and government permits your pet will need for traveling abroad; get the scoop on how to create a customized first-aid kit for your pet; learn what carryout and convenience-store foods make good emergency substitutes for pet food; and more.

    So, read this book, enjoy, and take all the surprises out

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