Should dogs put their heads out car windows? Florida bill says no
Dogs love cars almost as much as humans love dogs. They will gladly hop into a car or truck and then seemingly enjoy the ride. There are few sights that more quickly elicit a smile than a dog sticking its head out a vehicle’s window, nose into the wind, ears flapping. Sometimes, the dog even looks like it’s grinning.
Under a new animal-welfare bill proposed by Florida senator Lauren Book (D-Broward), letting Fido or Rover catch a breeze could catch you a moving violation in the Sunshine State.
Dogs aren’t the only animals covered by Senate Bill 932, which prohibits the declawing of cats (except for therapeutic purposes) and increases the penalties for animal cruelty, though canines are the only species covered with restrictions when being transported in a motor vehicle. The idea isn’t just to protect dogs by keeping them crated or harnessed; it’s also to protect humans from getting struck and injured by an unrestrained pet in the event of a collision.
In addition to making it a traffic violation to allow a dog to extend its head or any part of its body outside the window of a car operating on a public road, Florida Senate Bill 932 also would prohibit a driver from holding a dog in their lap, letting it sit on the gas tank of a moving motorcycle, transporting a dog in a towed vehicle, or transporting a dog in an enclosed cargo space like a trunk or on a fender, hood, roof, or running board.
The dog must be either secured in a crate or with a harness or pet seatbelt. Dogs in the beds of pickup trucks must be secured in a crate that itself is secured to the bed and has sufficient interior room and protection from the elements.
The part about transporting a dog on the roof of a car may be an oblique reference to a somewhat infamous event in the family history of 2012 Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney. (While on a 12-hour road trip from Massachusetts to Ontario, the Romneys put their Irish Setter, Seamus, in a carrier on top of their car.) Senator Book is, after all, a Democrat, and most motor vehicles haven’t had running boards since the 1930s. The ones found today, on high-riding trucks and SUVs, retract once the doors are closed.
It’s possible that Book is referencing early car accessories that in fact did transport dogs on the running boards of cars. An advertisement published in the June, 1936 issue of Modern Mechanix magazine says that your dog could ride “safely and comfortably” in a large canvas sack (with a “hole for head”). The sack would be suspended by hooks from the frame of a rear window and secured to the running board with two C-clamps fastened to a wooden board sewn into the bottom of the sack.
An earlier, 1920s take on the same general idea was the Bird Dog Palace, a small cage that was also clamped to the running board and promised “Traveling Comfort for the Dog.” From the name “Bird Dog Palace,” and the advertisement’s mention of “sportsman’s equipment,” the intended occupants were hunting dogs. In such pursuits, the animals can get dirty and wet, so the driver’s comfort was also likely a factor. Driver convenience? Not so much.
The Bird Dog Palace took up most of the running board, blocking the driver’s door. The Palace was made of “high quality automobile materials” and finished with “genuine DuPont Duco paint,” while its interior wooden parts were covered to protect them from dogs’ urge to gnaw. Made in Golden, Missouri, the single-dog version was priced at $12.50. A Palace with room for two was a half dollar more.
In more recent years, even before you started seeing paw-shaped “Dog Mom” stickers on the back of crossovers, the auto industry had taken note of the needs of dogs and their owners. Already popular with dog owners because of its easily hosed-down interior, in 2007, Honda introduced the “Dog Friendly” version of its Element utility vehicle.
This vehicle highlighted a family of Dog Friendly accessories for the Element that included second-row and cargo-area pet restraints, a cushioned and elevated pet bed in the cargo area with space for a spill-resistant water bowl and a nearby fan for cooling off pets, all-season rubber floor mats, and an extendable cargo area load-in ramp—like you’d find on a U-Haul truck—to make it easier for dogs to climb into the Element. Also included were a leash and collar, dog tag, a tote bag, and a dispenser for plastic bags.
(After thousands of years of humans manipulating the dog genome so our four-legged friends could assist us, humans now can’t walk their dogs without carrying a plastic bag to bring home the dogs’ waste. Anyone else find that ironic?)
Dogs like to chase cars, and now automakers like to chase dog owners.
In 2017, Nissan introduced the X-Trail 4Dogs SUV, billed as “the ‘pawfect’ car for family adventures.” Like the Dog Friendly Element, the 4Dogs X-Trail had an access ramp, along with dedicated cargo space to keep up to two dogs comfortable and safe, a two-way “dog cam,” and a built-in pet shower and dryer.
Unlike the Dog Friendly Element, the X-Trail 4Dogs was not actually available to the 90 percent of car owners who, a Nissan survey showed, wanted more dog-friendly features; it was only a concept vehicle.
Having found, in crash testing, that an unrestrained dog can hit passengers with a force equal to about 40 times its body weight, Volvo offers a line of official dog accessories that includes rear-seat harnesses as well as dog gates and cargo area crates designed, with a Swedish touch, to integrate with the interior styling. As a matter of fact, at one Volvo auto-show press conference, swag given to journalists included a dog car harness that attaches to a second-row seatbelt.
After that bit of car canine history, you might wonder why dogs like to stick their heads out of car windows in the first place.
Some experts think that it has to do with dogs’ sense of smell. Humans rely primarily on vision, but most canines “see” the world through their olfactory sense. Not only does a dog’s nose have two different air passages, one for breathing and one for smelling, it has as many as 300 million scent receptors, sixty times the number in a human nose. The signals from those sensors are processed by an olfactory cortex in the dog’s brain that is 40 times the size of the comparable structure in humans.
“Dogs receive more olfactory stimulation with their heads fully outside the car versus inside the car,” says Natalie Zielinski, director of behavior services at the Wisconsin Humane Society.
“When sticking their head out the window, they can smell every person in the street, every trash can they go by, every patch of grass, restaurant, and other dogs.” says the ironically named Jennifer Cattet, the owner of Medical Mutts, a service-dog training center in Indianapolis and animal behavior researcher.
“It’s like watching TV for us,” Cattet tells Discover.
That may be a mixed metaphor, since many dogs also have keen vision. An entire family of breeds called “sight hounds,” which includes greyhounds, borzois, Afghan hounds, and Irish wolfhounds, hunt and chase by vision, not just smell. Dogs sticking their heads out of car windows may just be enjoying the view.
Zielinski described an open car window as a sensory trifecta for dogs. In addition to a smorgasbord of sights and smells, the air blowing on their faces and vibrissae, or “whiskers,” is likely a pleasant sensation. Cattet also said basic behavior is also at play, since dogs are naturally claustrophobic.
“When dogs are confined in any capacity, they tend to look for an opening,” she said.
Another explanation of why dogs like to stick their heads out of car windows may be related the same reason humans use a switch to roll down those same windows: to cool off. Dogs don’t sweat like humans. They control their body heat through the pads of their feet and by panting. To use an automotive metaphor, dogs’ long tongues are heat exchangers; putting their heads out of car windows allows those biological radiators to work very efficiently.
What say you, Senator Book?
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If people have this much time on their hands versus looking at real issues – when I should comment 🙂
Looking at all of the pits, dings and previous cracks on my windshield, why would anybody allow their dog to put the heads out?
I close friend of mine had on dog that had an eye taking out from a flying rock. It’s not if it will happen, it’s when…
The world’s a dangerous place! My car, my dog, my vet bill, etc.
Politicians surely can find more important things to spend time on — like getting more campaign donations!
This is the stupidest bill ever. Since it is proposed and sponsored by the minority, I am confident it will not make it to the governor for signature. BTW, I am a registered FL voter
More idiocy from Florida. they seem to have an endless supply.
When I had my Boxer. She was never able to stick her out of a moving vehicle.
That is a perfect way to get anyhing into their eyes.
Also had her seatbelted in.
No need for her to bounce off the interior of the vehicle if anything ever happened
That is why working K9’s (such as Police Dogs, Search and Rescue Dogs) are in those smaller compartments. It is for their safety. They can turn around, but does not let them go flying.
This would be a good article for April 1st. Sadly, being Florida, I suspect it’s real
My dog knows the compromise. When we are in traffic or neighborhoods, the window is down for her enjoyment. When we get to a high speed area, the window goes up. She naps on the highway, but as soon as we start slowing down, she is up waiting for the window to come down. No politicians required.
always been of the opinion that any dog with its head out in the slipstream should be wearing googles like farley mowat’s “the dog who wouldn’t be”.
All of you complaining about this proposed legislation have overlooked one very important fact. Senate Bill 932 was proposed by a Democrat. There is no way on this green earth that the Republican legislature would evacuate the building if she was yelling “FIRE” and the flames were licking at their butts let alone pass a bill proposed by a “D”. This stands no chance of being passed and even if it was DeSantis would veto it for being Woke.
Commonest cause of blindness in dogs. A bug striking an eyeball at 60 mph is not good.
The fun police strike again. If it is a concern that the dog will get something in its eyes (a definite possibility), there are googles for dogs available to take care of that problem. Agreed that the dog should not have the ability to jump from the car (or truck bed), but let them enjoy their all-too-short lives, and stick their heads out the window!
This may well be another example of people treating animals as if they are humans (along with such tripe as “fur babies” and “dog mommies”). I love dogs, and have my whole life, but we need to keep perspective: they are NOT PEOPLE. Their welfare must be evaluated sometimes using different parameters than used for humans.
Dogs produce carbon, they will be banned soon enough.
This is more of a common sense thing than something that needs legislation. Yeah, it’s not smart for you or your dog to hang out the window, but it shouldn’t take an act of the legislature to make it so.
Now for the real irony: in Florida, if you’re over 21, you don’t have to wear a helmet while riding a motorcycle. So apparently welfare of dogs is more important than welfare of bikers…at least to the FL legislature.
It’s arguably the greatest pleasure a dog can experience, and the dangers are worth the risk. ALSO: it’s Florida (so far), how many drivers there can survive driving without all the windows up and the A/C cranking?
Wow, leave it to my friend Tinkerah to interject the most reasonable statement in this entire string of comments (IMHO)! Windows up and A/C cranked – sorry pups!
Put goggles on the dog?