American Pit Bull Terrier Gazette Vol43 I2 | Page 4

Your animals and Weather emergencies The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration satellite photos of Florida Panhandle communities, before and after, flattened by Hurricane Michael. T his is not so easy to talk about, having just been on the biting edge of a terrible storm. We were affected ourselves as well as through family and friends. The takeaway is this.....you need to have a plan. A well thought out and initiated plan for an environmental disaster. Recently, Hurricane Michael graced our shores. Directly hitting Mexico Beach, Panama City, Lynn Haven and Marianna. This was a very powerful storm that held it’s “eye” long after it was on land. Two days prior to the storm landing, there was no gasoline to be found. Animal shelters were saturated with companion pets being surrendered by their families. Hospitals were evacuated because of structural damage DURING the storm. Many people stayed in their homes, some because they had to, and some because they stopped believing in the weather news. Emergency Services sent warnings and evacuation notices to people. I know that because our son got them, and he was notified in time to save himself, his fiancé and their pets. Yes, they had a friendly home to come to that was inland, but regardless, they got out and 4 we are very grateful to the people that put together the emergency warning system. I started thinking about the preparations we have in place to handle an emergency. Year after year of hyperbolic reporting does not make one immune from a storm, but... it does wear you out and make you think “That never really happens, does it?” Hurricane Florence was “catastrophic” before it touched land. What language are they planning to use next, “apocalyptic”? Try to ignore broadcasts that sensationalize news and weather. People complain about this kind of reporting, yet they still listen to it and click on it. If we stop responding to this, they will stop giving it to us. Listen to local weather sources. Make sure you are getting important texts from Emergency Services. Make plans to evacuate, or make hunkering down work. These days, they make it way easier to enter a human shelter with a pet. The shelters here had cages for pets ready two days before Michael hit. Not comfortable for anyone, but you have a way better chance of getting out alive. The fact is that our breed is generally not that attractive in a closed environment, like a shelter. Because people keep more dogs than they can move, the dogs stay in place. In flooding situations, this is horrific. Dogs drowning in place. I think it was 2015, the floods in the Carolinas took the life of many animals. We all remember Katrina, but if you didn’t know... it is estimated that 600,000 companion animals either drowned or starved. Think about that. I know that Who can forget the images of Katrinia