Tips to Keep Your Home Safe From Trees During Hurricane Season

Some of the tree types that SavATree recommend to look out for are:

  • Trees with dense canopies
  • Dead or dying trees
  • Trees with co-dominant trunks
  • New plantings and young trees

The Sun Sentinel also has an article that details some of the best and worst trees to have in your yard during a hurricane, based on a study done by landscape designer Pamela Crawford and researcher Barbara Hadsell that was published in the book Stormscaping.

Some of the worst trees include:

  • the Australian Pine
  • the Ficus tree
  • the Laurel Oak
  • the Slash Pine
  • and the Queen Palm

These trees are among the worst because they generally have shallow roots, therefore making them much more likely to be uprooted with the strong gusts of wind that accompany hurricanes.

Among the best trees are:

  • the Live Oak
  • Foxtail Palms
  • the Crape Myrtle
  • and the Gumbo Limbo

Although these tips can help to prevent some damage during hurricanes, it is always best to be prepared for anything. With proper preparation, it is possible to avoid the often disastrous problems that a hurricane can leave in its wake.

SOURCE: Marketwire, SavATree, Free Press Release, Sun Sentinel

PHOTO SOURCE: Mark Robinson, “the palm tree shot.jpg.” Hurricane Digital Memory Bank

Canine swim caps? Don’t laugh! Water in the ears can cause infections; caps can prevent these and wore.(PRODUCT REVIEW) web site swim caps

Whole Dog Journal December 1, 2011 | Puotinen, C.J.

Chloe, my eight-year-old Labrador Retriever, loves to swim. When we lived in New York, she spent almost every morning in streams and lakes, diving from high granite boulders in summer and breaking through ice in early winter. But when we moved to Montana, finding clear, open water for swimming was a challenge. Then we discovered the therapeutic pool at Apex Animal Hospital and signed up for recreational swims. Now every Tuesday Chloe swims laps while retrieving a tennis ball.

But her wet ears bothered Chloe and she spent part of every swim and much of the day after shaking her head. Her ears weren’t infected; they just did a lot of flapping.

I went online to see whether anyone makes ear plugs for dogs and discovered something even better, swimming headbands. I bought both types: the AquaBandit from AquaBandit International and the Swim Snood from DogLeggs Therapeutic & Rehabilitative Products – and left them at the pool for other dogs to try. Rehabilitation practitioner Jennifer Hill and veterinary technician Adele Delp tested them on several swimmers.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] I think dogs are more comfortable when wearing a headband,” says Delp. “Instead of shaking their heads, they relax and focus on swimming.” When Casey, a six-year-old Border Collie, started swimming, he was intent on getting the ball, hypervigilant, and wild in the pool. “We tried a swim band on him,” says Delp, “and we were amazed at how focused and calm he became. Whenever we took it off, he became a wild man again. This led us to speculate about the band’s applications in thunderstorms and other stressful situations.” The AquaBandit comes in five sizes and two colors at prices under $25. It works well for Chloe and other dogs as long as we readjust it frequently, for with activity it slips toward the back of the head and exposes the ears. Hill and Delp give the AquaBandit 3 stars.

Swim Snoods are custom made for the dog’s head measurements. Longer, wider, and with a larger Velcro area than the AquaBandit, the Swim Snood stays on more securely. Its price is $43.50. Hill and Delp give the Swim Snood 5 stars. web site swim caps

Like Chloe, most swimming dogs adjust quickly to head bands. And they work. Chloe seldom flaps her ears any more.

In addition to protecting the ears of swimming dogs, swim bands can be used during dental procedures to protect the ears from fluids. Dogs with long ears can wear them at meal time to keep their ears from being soiled by food. Dogs sensitive to the sound of a dryer during grooming or after swimming can relax without being stressed, and the compression these bands provide has a calming effect on most dogs.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Puotinen, C.J.

 

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Comments

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