• I have one but my b always manages to slide out of it. After that I have kind of given up on it. Maybe there is a more secure one I can use.


  • Thanks for the tip wizard, I think I will give this one a try. I had a pretty good experience with using a harness in the car until the day we had to leave Chance in the car for a couple of minutes.

    We saw a boston terrier running loose on the street by our house, so I stopped the car and went to rescue her before she got hit by another car.

    While we were trying to capture the boston terrier, Chance was getty impatient in the car, so he chewed through the seatbelt first and then the harness, because I think he somehow got tangled in it while trying to see whats going on outside. Now I only have one seatbelt left to try a new harness on.

    For long trips he rides in the crate.


  • I have been debating a harness for Sol. He would probably tolerate it well, because he is an amazingly adaptable basenji, but he spends most of any drive curled up on the seat, asleep– and I assume he can't do that in a harness. I have a tiny regular cab Tacoma, so a crate is out of the question-- When I visit my mom and she drives us to visit relatives he always travels in a crate in the back of her SUV.

    Kris


  • See in my car I have enough room in the backseat for his crate but the crate ends up on a slant & he is constantly sliding about the crate which really is annoying if he happens to pee during transit! He's done this a few times…

    I have been using a harness that attaches to the buckle & it works alright but he gets himself tangeled up very frequently so I have to keep trying to untangle him en route. It's more annoying than anything.

    I don't strap him in if we're only going to the store or dog park, both within 5 miles of where we live. He has gotten to the point where he just sits in the back seat looking outside 🙂


  • I have found it easier to just run the seatbelt through the loop on the martingale harness. Although I only did that a few times, and he loves to sit in the front seat. Now I have a dog guard in the back, and he just gets his normal leash hooked in the hatch of my car so he doesn't run out when I open the door.


  • Oh wow I feel really lucky now. I have a Subaru station wagon, so I just bought a gate for the back area when I first got charlie. That way the whole back of the car belongs to the dogs


  • That's what i have. He gets his own toys just for the car, and a high sided bed for the back as well (but he's usually looking out the windows). The bigest problem I have come across is that he leaves nice sized smudges on the inside of the rear window that annoy me.


  • @etzbseder:

    That's what i have. He gets his own toys just for the car, and a high sided bed for the back as well (but he's usually looking out the windows). The bigest problem I have come across is that he leaves nice sized smudges on the inside of the rear window that annoy me.

    Oh yes Charlie does that all the time. Zaire's nose isn't big enough yet to cause too much damage <g>. It seems like I have an extra 15 min every time I clean the car that goes to cleaning off the back windows. (Ah the things we do for these furbabies)</g>


  • The harness I bought has an adjustable seat belt strap - I think maximum length is 2 feet. It's plenty long for EL D to curl up on the seat and turn around and around, etc but it keeps him from jumping into the space behind the seats or onto the dash (which he used to like to do). EL D doesn't like to be confined - he chewed through his leash at the vets during the time the assistant filled a syringe - and he has never complained about this harness once. The harness has a pretty decent sized D Ring high on the back so he can twirl around to find just the right spot and not get tangled up - the seat belt strap just flips over his head while he's twirling.


  • @wizard:

    The harness I bought has an adjustable seat belt strap - I think maximum length is 2 feet. It's plenty long for EL D to curl up on the seat and turn around and around, etc but it keeps him from jumping into the space behind the seats or onto the dash (which he used to like to do). EL D doesn't like to be confined - he chewed through his leash at the vets during the time the assistant filled a syringe - and he has never complained about this harness once. The harness has a pretty decent sized D Ring high on the back so he can twirl around to find just the right spot and not get tangled up - the seat belt strap just flips over his head while he's twirling.

    If this is the same one you had previously suggested, I bought it. Somehow Dallas still ends up all tangled up in it. I think it's because he struggles to get out of it but ends up getting his legs out of one hole & in another, etc etc. I've been just leaving his leash on him & pulling my back seat down, attached the loop of the leash to something in my trunk & then shutting the back seat. This has allowed him plenty of room but he isn't able to get into the front seats of the car.


  • Ninabeana – No actually its a differnt brand. There was a shipping problem when I ordered that first one and the order got messed up so I went with a different brand - Therapet Secure Traveling Harness from dog.com. I think the trick maybe is to make sure the harness is adjusted properly for snuggle fit so he can't get his legs out. Or maybe your dog is just more rambunctious than EL D :).


  • Could be. Allow I would consider Dallas more on the mellow side. I have it as small as it can be but I suppose it's still a little too big on him. Hopefully it won't be such an issue when he fills out a little more since he is still on 5 months old!


  • I just got one of those this weekend. She is learning to be able to sit still. Before I would let her go around in the car but my thighs are now full of pinhole bruises. It took her a while to get used to it but shes doing better now. I a, not sure of the brand that I got but I like it because it is a fleece lined harness and I can also use it when I take her out of the car to walk or hike with her (or when we go to the pet store to pick out a new treat!)


  • i bought one, fender slipped it in oh about 10 seconds. i left him in the car while i went inside a gas station to potty and he chewed up a seatbelt. he loves to make me feel like a fool.


  • EL D doesn't like to be tied up either – so I make sure to unhook it when I head into the gas station or library or whatever -- but he's fine when we're moving. He can chew through those "tuff" nylon straps in no time - once at the vet, he chewed through the leash before the vet tech could get his vaccine ready. I like the harness though because it keeps him from climbing on the dash (which he liked to do) and keeps him from jumping over me when we stop at the park.


  • I use the ruff wear harness and one of those seatbelt leashes Indi doesn't seem to even notice. I make it just long enough that he can get his front paws on the center console and ride there.

    http://www.arcatapet.com/item.cfm?cat=14384 - harness

    http://www.arcatapet.com/item.cfm?cat=11392 - seat belt


  • We currently use the lease and gentle leader method. I wrap the leash around the head rest of the car so he is totally strapped in and won't escape. The only problem is that he gets tangled if he's restless and sometimes chokes himself which is so NOT what I want. I LOVE taking him with me in the car and he seems to really like the car but those harnesses Mick escapes from. My car is to small for a crate. I'm going to try the harness Wizard suggested. I'll give anything a whirl that will make for a safe and happy car ride.


  • While a harness can be great… I have to say, for any travel, crates work best... IMO.. (and noted that there are just some B's as with any dog, that will not adjust to crates), but 99% will, especially for travel... I think the best case "study" would be for lvoss's Nicky... who has a crate phobia... but will and does ride in a crate in the car.... cause he knows it is for a good thing... 99% of the time.


  • TanZa,

    Why do you think crates are better? This is my first pup and I am afraid that when in the crate if we are in an accident he will get slammed up against one of the sides of the crate and get hurt.

    Also…the car harness and seatbelt leash method let me gauge when he needs to go outside when on a long car trip.

    Interested to hear the low down,
    Rachel


  • Though the dog may be tossed against the side of its crate during an accident, the chance of serious injury is actually pretty small. The dog may end up a little bruised and sore but otherwise okay. The big advantage to a crate is that they are contained, so after they accident there is no worry about them getting loose and getting injured or killed by another car. Even if the dog is normally fine with their seatbelt harness, if you are injured and perhaps even unconscious, would your dog who will probably be quite fearful at that point stay in the harness?

    It is true that my boy Nicky has always had issues with his crate. Even at 10 1/2 years old he still does not like being crated alone. He will happily get in his crate in the car though and sleeps during the ride. He will occassionally whine when we are on surface streets but not too often anymore. Our first few trips with him in the car were quite traumatic for all of us, he would scream and pitch a fit for the whole ride, even the whole 2 hour trip to Dillon's Beach the second weekend we had him. He did pretty quickly learn that 99% of the time we were going someplace really fun and calmed down considerably.

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