Back-to-school time can be hard on pets

September 16, 2014 at 8:48PM
This Aug. 19, 2014 photo provided by Jill Williams shows first-grader Harry Williams, 7, with his dogs Flora and Gandalf on his way to the bus stop on first day of school in Kanab, Utah. For millions of dogs across the country, summer is gone and so are their best buddies. Most dogs object for a while but eventually adjust to the new hours. But millions of others will feel abandoned, panicky, sad and unable to cope as they look for ways to lash out.
First-grader Harry Williams, 7, with his dogs Flora and Gandalf on his way to the bus stop on first day of school in Kanab, Utah. (Associated Press - Ap/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

If your family pet is misbehaving, it might be suffering from the back-to-school blues.

The kids who kept the dog or cat company all summer suddenly are disappearing from morning through much of the afternoon. And the pets are noticing.

While some pets take changes in schedules in stride, for others, the return of kids to school can mean distress, said Liz Stelow, staff veterinarian in the behavior service of the William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital at the University of California, Davis.

Some dogs panic and engage in such behaviors as scratching grooves into the front door, while others get bored and go looking for shoes — or, depending on the size of the dog, table legs — to chew on.

Bored cats will go looking for something to play with, like a furniture throw or pillow.

Stelow suggested creating diversions for your pet.

"The food-motivated dog can get his meals presented in food toys or food puzzles," she said. "This way, he spends otherwise idle time in the acquisition of food instead of chewing grandmother's hand-woven lace pillow."

For cats, consider a new scratching post or cat furniture.

And leaving a TV or radio on can help animals adjust from the summer's busy, noisy household to one that just got very quiet.

One final suggestion: Tell the kids not to greet the dog too enthusiastically when they return.

"It sends a message that the owner leaving is not as good as the owner returning," she said. □

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Maria Martin, McClatchy News Service

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