The Reality of Hitting the Road With a New Family Puppy


You have been planning a road trip for weeks. The playlist is ready, the hotel allows pets, and the kids are excited to bring the new puppy along. Then the first hour of driving happens. The puppy whines, drools, throws up on the back seat, and your tween is holding the crate door shut because the latch is flimsy. The aesthetic family road trip you imagined is now a cleanup operation.

Traveling with a new puppy is doable, but it takes preparation that most families avoid. Here's what you need to know before setting out.

Your Puppy Needs Car Practice Before the Trip

Most puppies have limited experience with car rides. If the longest trip your puppy has taken is the drive home from the breeder, the puppy will be overwhelmed by a four-hour drive on the highway. Start with short drives around your neighborhood a few weeks before the trip. Five minutes the first time, then ten, then twenty.

Feed the puppy at least two to three hours before each practice drive. A puppy with a full stomach is likely to vomit in a moving car, and cleaning that up in a parking lot with your kids watching isn’t a memory anyone needs.

If the puppy still gets carsick after several practice sessions, talk to your veterinarian. They can recommend anti-nausea medication that's safe for puppies and advise you on dosage based on the dog's weight and age.

You Need a Separate Bag for the Puppy

You wouldn't leave for a trip without packing your kids' essentials, would you? Plan just as properly for the puppy, with its own puppy diaper bag of sorts, lol. 

Put together a dedicated bag containing a leash and collar with an ID tag, poop bags, a portable water bowl, the puppy's regular food (not a new brand), and any prescribed medications. You may also want to add a familiar blanket or toy, paper towels, enzyme-based cleaner for accidents, and a copy of the puppy's vaccination records. Keep this bag where you can easily retrieve it.

If you’re crossing state lines, check the destination state's requirements for pet entry. Some states require a health certificate from a licensed veterinarian issued within a specific timeframe before travel. Your vet can tell you what documentation you need.

Photo by Hirurg from Getty Images Signature on Canva.

You Should Pick a Travel-Friendly Breed

Some breeds handle road trips and new environments better than others. If your family takes frequent trips and you've not yet chosen a puppy, factor travel temperament into your decision.

Smaller breeds are easier to manage in cars, hotel rooms, and restaurants with outdoor seating. Breeds with calm, adaptable dispositions do better with the disruptions of travel. Take Dachshunds, for example. They're compact enough to fit comfortably in a travel crate that sits on the back seat, and they tend to bond closely with their families, which helps them stay calm in unfamiliar places.

If you’re still deciding on a breed, you can find a Dachshund with HonestPet. Make sure to review health records and photos before committing. Puppy listings on HonestPet also include relevant documentation from the breeder, so you can evaluate the dog's background before you add a travel companion to your household.

Regardless of breed, avoid bringing a puppy younger than four months on a long trip. Very young puppies are still building their immune systems and may not have received all of their vaccinations yet. For them, any exposure to rest stops, hotel floors, and other dogs is riskier.

Many of Your Stops Will Revolve Around the Puppy

On a road trip with only adults or older kids, you might push through four or five hours between stops. With a puppy, plan to stop at least every 2 hours. Puppies need to relieve themselves frequently, stretch their legs, and drink water.

Choose rest stops with a grassy area away from the main parking lot. Highway rest areas often have a designated pet relief zone, but keep the puppy on a leash and avoid letting it interact with unfamiliar dogs. Your puppy may not have received all of its vaccinations yet, and you don't know the health status of other animals at the stop.

Bring water from home or from your supply rather than letting the puppy drink from communal bowls. Bacteria and parasites can be present in shared water bowls at rest stops.

Hotel Rooms Aren't Puppy-Proofed

A pet-friendly hotel isn't a puppy-proofed hotel. When you arrive, examine every book and cranny of the room before you let the puppy off leash. Check for accessible electrical cords, open trash cans, gaps between the bed and the wall where a puppy could get stuck, and anything at nose height that the puppy might chew or swallow.

Bring the puppy's crate into the room and set it up in a corner before you unpack. The puppy will feel more settled in its crate, which is familiar and contained. If you leave the room for dinner, crate the puppy rather than leaving it loose. A stressed puppy alone in a hotel room will chew furniture, scratch doors, and bark until someone complains.

Put a towel or blanket under the crate in case of accidents, and keep the enzyme cleaner within reach. If the puppy does damage the room, report it to the front desk yourself rather than waiting for housekeeping to find it.

Sometimes You Have to Cut the Trip Short

Sometimes the puppy is not ready. If the dog is vomiting repeatedly despite medication, refusing to eat or drink, trembling for extended periods, or showing signs of diarrhea that you cannot manage on the road, turn around or stop for the night. Pushing through a long drive with a sick puppy is miserable for your kids, and potentially dangerous if the puppy needs veterinary attention in an unfamiliar area.

Know the location of emergency veterinary clinics along your route before you leave. Save their addresses and phone numbers on your phone so you do not have to search for them in a crisis.

Final Thoughts

The car practice, the separate bag, the frequent stops, and the hotel prep all take effort upfront, but they prevent the kind of meltdowns that ruin a trip for everyone in the car. Do the work before you leave, and adjust your expectations. Your family can still have a good time, even if the schedule is slower and the stops are more frequent than you planned.

No comments

Post a Comment