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Superhero cape fights dogs' storm fears

Posted: Thursday, September 11, 2008 5:54 PM

By JoNel Aleccia, health writer

What it is: Storm Defender, a fabric cape for dogs to wear during thunderstorms ($54.99 and $64.99); www.stormdefender.com

Image: Chelsea in her "storm cape"
Carissa Ray / msnbc.com
What it claims to do: Keep your dog from becoming anxious and destructive during a big storm. You tie the cape lined with metallic fabric around the dog’s body at the first hint of thunder and lightning – or the first sign of worried canine behavior. The makers, Storm Defender LLC of Fairfield, Ohio, claim it disperses the static electricity that builds up before a storm, calming the dog (and the owner) without the use of drugs.

My experience:  I was completely unprepared for the reality of a big dog on a dark and stormy night. I’ve been a cat person for most of my adult life, and happily so, until my husband and I allowed our teenaged son to talk us into a puppy. The teenager left for college, of course, and the puppy is now a 112-pound pooch with a sweet disposition – and a morbid fear of thunderstorms.

My history with felines never could have prepared me for the panting, the drooling, the whining or the sight of a giant animal standing on all four legs, looming over me as I lay in bed. A cat might slink behind a chair to quietly ride out a storm, but a dog – or this dog – insisted that everyone share her misery whenever the sky clouded over.

So after a particularly sleepless summer thunderstorm,  I decided to try the Storm Defender.  I was skeptical, but  if the makers were right, it would relieve agitation all around: “Relax, you and your dog don’t have to suffer anymore!” they said.

You know what? They were right.

 A few weeks after the cape arrived, my husband and I were awakened at 4:15 a.m. by the sound of heavy canine breathing as thunder rumbled in the distance. A flash of lightning sparked a round of whining and shaking, so I fumbled for the Storm Defender, pulling it from the drawer and tying it loosely around Chelsea’s neck and torso. The tomato-red cape with its shiny silver lining resembled a Halloween costume I once made for my kids, but I had to admit it did give the Lab-Shepherd mix a rather dashing air.

For the first hour, nothing happened. She paced and panted and tried to climb into the bed between us, all 6-foot-4 of her from nose to tail. I finally went out on the couch, where I fell asleep with one hand on her cape-clad back as she wheezed and trembled on the floor. When I woke two hours later, the storm was still raging, but, amazingly, the dog was not.

She wasn’t completely calm, of course, but she was subdued enough to let me go back to bed for a bit. And, after a while, she grew calm enough to sleep in her own bed at the foot of ours. The next time there was a thunderstorm? Same story, only Chelsea became quieter even quicker. By the third thunderstorm – the makers say it usually takes at least three tries to notice improvement – she seemed almost grateful when the cape came out first sign of a storm.

What the experts say: “It does work sometimes; it does not work all the time,” explained Bonnie Beaver, executive director of the American College of Veterinary Behaviorists.

Whether the Storm Defender succeeds seems to depend on the level of static electricity that builds up in the coats of some medium- and long-haired dogs before and during a storm.

“The static electricity starts to tingle and they begin to dread that feeling when a storm is coming,” she said. “It’s a learned behavior.”

The cape cuts the static, Beaver explained. It may also simulate the comfort of a hug, she said.

Those theories were borne out by researchers at the Cummings School of Medicine at Tufts University who conducted two scientific studies of the Storm Defender. In the first trial, 10 out of 14 dog owners reported a moderate or good effect from the cape, while four reported little or no effect. Preliminary results of the second trial, which compared the Storm Defender with a placebo cape with no metallic lining, showed that two-thirds of dogs in both groups were calmed by the device.

But some dogs don’t feel the static, or don’t react to it, Beaver said. They may not be calmed by the cape because what frightens them about a storm is the loud sounds or sudden lights. For those dogs, a visit to the vet for anti-anxiety medications may be the only solution.

Bottom line: The embarrassment of dressing your dog like a magician is well worth the peace and quiet of a calm pooch on a stormy night.

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Comments

regarding fireworks we took my husky pup at about 4 mos old with us to a local fireworks show and held her in my lap on the grassy lawn. The largest shells were actually set off right across the highway from where we were sitting so it was VERY loud. At first she didn't like all the booms at all but by half way through the show she was snoozing in my lap.
My dog Storm is afraid of Storm but the cape is just another way to get people to spend their money. My dog goes down of the floor and he is fine as long he know where were at. And when it time for bed he is under the blaket or again on the floor. When it comes to Storms he want to be left alone but also know he is loved. So why spend the money for a cape for a dog when that is gas in your car?  
For those of you that think you can just hug and cuddle your dog and they'll feel better, you obviously have no idea what you are talking about!  Try that with a 90-100 lb. hulk that is the most mild mannered laid back dog until a storm hits.  He busted through a wall, let me say that again, he busted through a wall during a thunder storm because he was so scarred! Not to mention kennels and gates and anything else in the way or where he thinks he needs to go.  

It's very hard to keep him confined, even in our arms, so that he doesn't destroy anything or hurt himself.  We haven’t tried the cape yet, but we’ve tried the noise therapy, massage therapy, scented oils, seditatives, anxiety medications, body wraps…with very little affect.  Unfortunately, I think the problem is both noise and the static build up.

It’s very judgmental to imply that all it would take is to spend more time and attention on your dog.  But if by all means, hug your freaked out dog for 4 hours in the middle of the night or at 6 pm during a tornado storm while you’re hiding in the basement trying to keep him from hurting himself and you’re baby who is also scared and clinging to you.  Good luck!  Me, I’ll keep looking for whatever helps him the most.  The hardest part of it all is not what to do while you’re at home with them, but what can you do for them so they don’t freak out when you’re not home and a storm hits.
My mom did a little research on the dryer sheets thing because our three year old puggle just had puppies, and if you use Purex dryer sheets it doesn't hurt the dog. Less chemicals or something along those lines is how she explained it.
For information re injury/illness from dryer sheets,
google Julia Kendall.  From the site at http://users.lmi.net/~wilworks/ehnfs.htm
Fabric softeners, like other fragrant products, contain petrochemicals... These chemicals can adversely affect the central nervous system (CNS) -- your brain and spine....(symptoms include but are not limited to) disorientation, dizziness, headaches, hunger, memory loss, numbness in... CNS disorders include: Alzheimer's...Attention Deficit Disorder...
I am with a greyhound rescue group and have worked with the creator of the cape.  I wrote an article for CG Magazine because the cape worked well on many dogs.  On some it worked like a charm and others, not so well.  They do refund your money.  So if it works your dog will be much happier.  Homeopathic also works well on many dogs.  I do not see that any help to a dog with thunderphobia is a waste of money.  The right thing to do is to try to help reduce your dog's anxiety.  Anxiety is not good for dogs or people and may affect the health of a pet down the road.  The Anxiety Wrap works well with separation anxiety too.  
Some very interesting "pros" and "cons"about how to calm anxious dogs. We have an elderly mix who spent time in our tub when a hurricane came through. She does this or crawls under a bed that is high enough where she can hide.
MBK
I have a lavender-based pillow spray that I use to help me sleep. Whenever there's a thunderstorm, I spray it on my dog's bed. He sleeps right through it, no anxiety or pacing or panting. This was after NOTHING else that I tried worked - hugs and petting, Benadryl, covering him with a blanket, etc.
I rescued an approximately 5 yo golden who was running in a thunderstorm into 6 lanes of rush hour traffic.Shortly afterwards I discovered why no one answered my lost dog ads. I came home from work one day and he had destroyed the interior wood door leading into my attached garage along with the woodwork and dry wall.  He has done this several times and most recently he bit, dug, chewed completely through the door. The hole in the drywell is now large enough to walk through.Once in the garage, he destroyed the frame on the screen door including the metal grate protecting the screen from pet claws. He goes absolutely beserk and destroys everything in his path. Mind you, he was on acepromazine when he accomplished his latest feat. IF u saw the destruction u would swear someone had taken a sledgehammer and a buzz saw to my  home.In addition he has destroyed vinyl siding and trim around my back door, the cedar woodwark around both doors in my great room and a window screen in the front window. An attempt to crate him was a disaster. He totally destroyed a metal crate and the pan and managed to escape with the door still secured. He only does this when it storms or when my moronic neighbors decide it is July 4th on any given day of the year and start setting off cherry bombs, etc.  Outside of giving him heavy doses of acepromazine which seems to sedate him, for a short time, I am out of answers. He also is a barkaholic. He gets along with all dogs unless they are outside his fence. Then he barks until he is hoarse, works  himself into a frenzy and starts snarling and trying to fight with his friends inside our fence. Jolts on the highest setting with a bark collar got his attention but after a few times he barked through it. My vet seems to think he is hopeless and is suggesting euthanasia. I'm really not willing to do that but I can't have my house destroyed either.
My ten year old dog was never afraid of storms until the last few years.  Each year she has gotten worse.
She would sit next to me and paw continually on me, the chair or the wall.
While researching "doggie drugs", I found the cape.
When the first storm came, I put it on her immediately.  Within FIVE MINUTES she was resting comfortably at my feet and fell asleep!
This is worth every penny.... and well worth a try! Especially since they have a full money back guarantee!


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