With temperatures soaring into the 90s and beyond, The Humane Society of Central Oregon (HSCO) would like to offer tips to keep your pet safe in the high desert heat. The best spot for your pet is inside a safe, cool house. Dogs and cats cannot cool their body temperatures as efficiently as humans.ย ย ย
Tips to Protect Your Pets in Hot Weather:
If your pet is outside during the day,ย provide shade and fresh, cool water. Older pets, short-muzzled breeds and overweight animals are at greater risk of overheating during hot weather. You can provide a wading pool to aid in cooling.
Leaving your pet in a parked car can be a deadly mistake.ย Temperatures inside a car can reach over 100 degrees in minutes. Even partially open windows wonโt protect your pet from heatstroke.ย
Exercise your dog in the morning or evening when temperatures and pavement are cool. Hot pavement can burn paw pads and melted tar can get stuck to pads and hair. Try the โ10-second ruleโ by pressing your hand on the ground; if itโs too hot for you, itโs too hot for your pets. Hiking trails and dirt also retain the heat.
Dogs in truck beds can suffer injury or heat stroke. Never transport dogs in uncovered truck beds during hot weather. The metal can cause serious burns, and dogs are at risk of falling out or being injured by road debris. If you wouldnโt sit barefoot in the truck bed, neither should your dog.
โMost people want to do right by their pets. Itโs easy to underestimate how quickly heat can become dangerous. Temperatures can quickly exceed 100 degrees in a parked car, even with the windows cracked, which is just not a safe temperature for animals to be inโ said Amber Kostoff, HSCO Executive Director. โWith high temperatures forecasted to be in the mid 90โs here in Central Oregon, please plan appropriately to keep your pups safe and out of the car during the heat of the day.โ
HSCO offers free educational materials for businesses and community members, including posters and car windshield flyers with signs of heatstroke and tips to prevent it. These materials are available at the shelter.
The Humane Society of Central Oregon is located one mile south of Reed Market Road on 27thย Street in Bend. The shelter is open Tuesday through Saturday 10:00 am to 5:30 pm. For more information, call the Humane Society of Central Oregon at 541.382.3537 or visit hsco.org.
This article appears in Source Weekly July 3, 2025.










If I ran the world…….leaving a dog in your car would be a $5000 fine and a week in jail. See it ALL THE TIME around down. Idiot tourists.
Couple years ago we called the cops on the same car/dog TWICE in the span of 2 days.