+1 My son knew a girl in college who had her service dog with her. It would alert her when her heart rate reached a certain point. |
Totally. Dog people here sound like entitled lunatics. F! No to pit bulls on planes. Comparing A dog favorably over a baby is a new state of crazy. |
No, they don’t do that. When you buy a ticket for your pet to fly cargo, they won’t let you buy it if the weather is below a certain temp or over a certain temp in any area where you are flying. And they also tell you that if the temp unexpectedly goes above or below that temp, they will NOT take the dog in the plane and you will be SOL. You also need a layover of more than a certain time but less than a certain time (I think between 1 and 3 hours) as they don’t want the dog to miss the connection or to have to take care of the dog for a long layover. It’s actually super hard yo fly a dog cargo. For a brief moment there was a plane company that only flew dogs but I think they went out of business very quickly. This is one reason a lot of people give up their pets when they move — it’s really hard to transport them if you’re not driving cross country. |
This nearly identical post was posted in July. I think op is just a troll. https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1215401.page |
Says the expert. ![]() Barking, whining, pawing, agitated behavior, etc. can all be trained alerting behaviors, idiot. You think the dog is going to speak English? "Pardon me, Susan, but I wanted to let you know that your blood sugar is going low." ![]() The dog flew on a plane, and you didn't like it. That's the whole story, and you sound absolutely unhinged for trying to make more of it than it was. |
There is a devoted anti-pit poster or two, and they will drag out any clickbait news article to rant out their pit hate. If there isn't recent news, we get these "eyewitness reports" of pit bull sightings. Pit bull seen on plane (simply being a dog)! News at 11... ![]() |
I mean, we do remember the stories of people getting mauled by pit bulls and "lab mixes," right?
Being in a enclosed, noisy environment with lots of strangers is a difficult situation for not properly socialized dog (i.e., fake service dog). I love dogs and have owned many GSDs through the years, and I absolutely would not want to sit next to an agitated pit bull, GSD, etc. A little yappy/snarly chihuahua in a carrier? Annoying, but not worrisome. |
I'd rather sit next to the dog than next to most people on airplanes. |
Take your xanax and handle it. You have a phobia. That doesn't make a dog breed a credible threat. Besides, this isn't even the reality being described. The dog was fine. Sorry you're not. Get help, if needed. |
+100 |
Sigh. That is such an inflammatory response. This dog was fine, nothing happened, the world moved on. However, I do think that airlines should crack down on fake "service" dogs... because every 3 or 4 years, an onboard dog does end up biting another passenger. So, yes, the OP should contact the airline to complain. |
Service dogs perform all kinds of functions that you may not recognize - it's not just leading the blind. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10670951/ And there aren't any "official" service dog vests. I flew two days ago and there were no dogs on my flight. I'd have loved to sit next t the dog on OP's plane. |
The real headline is that they were on a plane and nothing happened |
It is very easy (for me, at least) to tell if a dog is a real service animal or a fake. The big, patient service dog at the symphony who just stood up once to shake off and then lie back down? Totally legit. The panting, whining goldendoodle who is pulling on the leash trying to greet/sniff other people at the grocery store? Fake. |
Well I guess it's a good thing that you know so much about dogs. DOGE should hire you with all your well informed insight. |