So Ruby Doo and I are driving to the vet, there to get her conjunctivitis checked. Actually, I'm driving. She's riding in her crate, which is supposed to protect her in the event of a highway mishap. The crate is tied down with the only credible tool I have to use as a tie-down: to wit, clothesline rope.

Not far into this journey, one of my Fellow Homicidal Drivers (you have to live in Arizona to appreciate this nomenclature) tries to kill us. In maneuvering out of reach, I jerk around a bit.

We escape a collision. But Ruby's crate breaks loose and freaking FLIPS OVER!

She does not scream, she does not squeal, she does not even yelp. I utter some choice sounds, but they are not for print. We make our way onto a neighborhood street, where I park with the emergency flashers flickering and run to the back of the van. Free Ruby from her prison and carry her away from the vehicle. She's shaking but seems not to be injured. Good thing we're on the way to the vet, eh?

During the rest of the trip, my mind wanders to the contraption I had (briefly) for securing Anna the GerShep in the car, supposedly safely: a doggy seatbelt.

This, it developed, was a sturdy harness that threaded through the car seatbelt, which you were supposed to use to secure the dog into an automobile seat. It never worked well, for two reasons:

1. It was a horror show to get onto the dog. Very, very difficult, and the dog hated it.
2. The Dog Chariot had six captain's chairs. A 90-pound dog does not fit well onto a captain's chair.

It might have worked better had the car been equipped with bench seats. But it was not. So I would drive Anna around loose in the car, praying for luck every inch of the way. Fortunately, the gods smiled upon us.

I still have the Dog Chariot, an ancient Toyota Sienna rounding on 15 years of age and still running like new. I've taken all but one of the back seats out, since I never use it to drive friends around. It is, indeed, a dog chariot and cargo van. The seats attach to these sturdy metal loops built into the car's body. They are freaking unbreakable.

Hmm... Harness. Belt. Unbreakable metal loops... Could I make my own dog seatbelt, and could it improve on the commercial variety?

Dropped by the Petco and picked up a nylon harness, a very simple version that tells you: left foot HERE; right foot HERE; connect THIS. Adjustable. Fits perfectly. Then found an adjustable-length leash, wide nylon, very sturdy.

So the invention goes like this:

Place harness on dog. Attach short leash to the unbreakable metal loops by looping it through the handle. Snap leash to dog harness. Drive away.

Will this protect the dog in a crash? No better than a crate. Given a few G-forces (which are considerable at 30 mph and grow exponentially for each new mph), a dog will slam around inside a crate. Enough G-force and the crate will break loose from whatever is holding it down and fly around the car.

I believe this thing will keep the dog from flying into the front seat and slamming into the human or crashing through the windshield. A serious wreck will inflict serious injuries, but then a dog in a crate will be seriously injured, too. In a minor wreck, the dog will probably survive and may be OK. In either event -- this is huge -- the panicked dog will not be able to run off into the hinterlands the instant the door is opened.

The next car will probably be a Toyota Venza. These things do have bench seats, and better yet, they have side airbags, something barely imagined back in 2000, when the Dog Chariot came into being. It should be fairly easy to attach the shortened leashes to the Venza's seatbelts, which will place the dogs right about where a side airbag will engage them.

Vet thinks Ruby's conjunctivitis in allergic. Produced meds. To call this evening about the un-housetraining issue. Thus, possibly more to come...

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Comment by Vicky Hay on August 24, 2014 at 10:16am

@ Jane: I wonder if when those side airbags deploy, they would be enough to stop a crate from bouncing around in the vehicle.

Right now I'm driving an ancient Toyota Sienna minivan with most of the back seats out. So it's a big empty cargo space in back. There are tie-downs where the seats were, which can be used to secure a couple of crates -- but that relies on having tie-downs that won't snap under a collision's g-forces. But the vehicle predates the whole side airbag idea. So the only thing that could protect the dog would be the crate itself and whatever secures the crate in place.

{grump!} I need to get a new vehicle. As if i had nothin' else to spend money on. ;-)

Comment by Jane Christensen on August 24, 2014 at 8:47am

I always use a crate. I have a Prius and it also has side airbags that do carry warnings. I feel the best is the protection in a crate.

Comment by Vicky Hay on August 24, 2014 at 1:18am

Hee!  She does not look even faintly pleased. It's an interesting lash-up and looks like it would at least protect the dog from slamming into the seat in front. But what about a side impact?

Thanks for this information. It certainly confirms my suspicions about doggy seatbelts, which just from the look of them are suspect. And 30 mph is NOT very fast. Around here the speed limit on most city streets is 40, and because you have to be going 11 mph over the limit, most people drive 45 or 50, most of the time.

The official types who urge you to secure your dog in the car will occasionally let it slip that they're less concerned with the dog's safety than they are with the driver's and human passengers' safety. A loose dog flying around in the car is a projectile that could injure or kill you. The seatbelt may not protect the dog, but it will keep the dog from slamming into you.

Forbes reports on the Center for Pet Safety study you mention here: http://www.forbes.com/sites/hannahelliott/2013/10/28/the-best-seat-...  Hair-raising!!!

When you go to the SleepyPod site, it looks like getting the dog into the thing is a major hassle and, as you point out, the dog is likely to complain. Major hassles tend to be counterproductive for me: after a while, I just quit engaging them. Who has time or patience for that?

The Variocage is impressive...but there's no way I could lift a 75-pound box, to say nothing of figuring out how to secure two of them in the back of the van. Securing even the normal crate is a problem...I'm not sure where to get those straps you see in the images for these two products.

A-n-n-d...it seems to me a 20-pound crate containing a 25-pound dog flying around the inside of a car would be very, very dangerous, indeed. So unless there's a way to secure the thing -- REALLY secure it -- I feel almost as dubious about crates as I do about ridiculous doggy seatbelts.

Ruby's crate tipped over even though I wasn't going very fast. I dodged out of the way of an oncoming vehicle; a sharp turn was enough to flip the box over. If I'd been going any faster, or if the other vehicle had hit mine, that thing would have flown all over the inside of the van. So either way, you've got a projectile, a dead dog, and very possibly a dead or seriously injured human.

Not a good thing. Just now my strategy is to avoid driving with the dogs as much as possible. Between now and the next time Ruby or Cassie has to go to the vet, I need to figure out how to get better tie-downs.

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