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Keeping your animal companions safe, comfortable, and included during the festive season

Pets and the Holiday Season

For the hundreds of millions of families worldwide who share their homes with pets, the holiday season brings particular considerations. Veterinary clinics report significant spikes in emergency cases during the major holiday periods — the result of animals encountering food, decorations, and situations they would never face in ordinary family life. At the same time, pets are family members, and most pet-owning families want them to be part of the celebration rather than simply managed around it. This guide addresses both the safety considerations and the genuine inclusion of animal companions in holiday life.

Food Safety: What Pets Must Not Eat

Dogs

Holiday foods that are toxic or dangerous for dogs include: **Immediately toxic**: Chocolate (especially dark chocolate and cocoa powder — the theobromine is highly toxic to dogs); grapes and raisins (including Christmas pudding, mince pies, and fruit cake — can cause acute kidney failure); xylitol (artificial sweetener found in sugar-free foods and some peanut butter brands — causes rapid insulin release and liver failure); onions, garlic, leeks, and chives (destroy red blood cells even in small amounts). **Dangerous in quantity**: Macadamia nuts (cause weakness and vomiting); alcohol (even small amounts cause serious intoxication in dogs); bones from cooked meat (can splinter and cause internal injury, unlike raw bones); overly rich or fatty foods (can trigger pancreatitis, which can be life-threatening). **Common hazards**: Guests who don't know these rules are a significant risk. A brief word at the start of a gathering — 'We'd love you to interact with our dog, but please don't give him any food — it can make him very sick' — is a simple precaution.

Cats

Cats face similar food hazards plus some cat-specific ones: - All the items listed above for dogs - Lilies (extremely toxic to cats — all parts of Easter lilies, tiger lilies, and daylilies can cause fatal kidney failure even in very small amounts; keep all lily flowers and plants out of any home with cats) - Poinsettia (mildly toxic, causing vomiting and drooling — less dangerous than often feared, but best avoided) - Holly and mistletoe (cause vomiting, diarrhoea, and in the case of mistletoe, cardiovascular effects)

Decoration Hazards

Christmas Trees and Decorations

Christmas trees, both real and artificial, present specific risks to pets. Real tree water (in the stand) may contain fertilisers and bacteria that cause illness if drunk — cover the base. Pine needles, if ingested in quantity, can cause intestinal irritation. Tinsel is a particular hazard for cats, who find it irresistible and will eat it. Once ingested, tinsel can cause a linear foreign body — a surgical emergency. If you have cats, avoid tinsel entirely. Glass baubles should be placed high enough on the tree that a curious dog or cat cannot easily reach them. A broken glass ornament on the floor, especially in a dimly lit room on a festive night, is a paw-injury waiting to happen. Battery-operated candles are significantly safer than open-flame candles in homes with pets. If you use real candles, ensure they are in holders that cannot be knocked over by a curious cat or wagging tail.

Diwali Diyas and Fireworks

The same caution about open flames applies to Diwali oil lamps (diyas). Place these in locations where pets cannot reach them, or use battery-operated alternatives. Fireworks — central to Diwali, Lunar New Year, Guy Fawkes Night, and many national holiday celebrations — are one of the most significant sources of stress and injury for pets. The high-frequency sounds of fireworks are intensely frightening for most dogs and many cats.

Managing Noise Anxiety

Fireworks Anxiety

For dogs with significant fireworks anxiety, the most effective interventions include: - Keeping pets indoors in a room with drawn curtains and background music or television to muffle the sounds - Providing a safe 'den' (a covered crate with familiar bedding) where an anxious dog can retreat - Calming wraps (like Thundershirts) — effective for some dogs - Veterinary-prescribed medication for severely anxious dogs (discuss with your vet well in advance of the holiday season) - Pheromone diffusers (adaptil for dogs, feliway for cats) plugged in several days before the fireworks period begins

Large Gatherings

Many pets find large holiday gatherings stressful, even if they are normally sociable. The volume, unfamiliar faces, and disruption to routine can cause anxiety that manifests as hiding, snapping, excessive barking, or inappropriate toileting. Providing a quiet retreat room where the pet can go voluntarily — with water, food, bedding, and a familiar toy — is the most effective strategy. Brief, calm introductions rather than immediate immersion in the group helps dogs and cats adjust at their own pace.

Including Pets in the Celebration

Safe Holiday Treats

Many pet-safe holiday treats are available commercially, or can be made at home. For dogs: plain cooked turkey or chicken (no skin, no bones, no seasoning), carrots, green beans, plain pumpkin. For cats: plain cooked fish or chicken, catnip, commercially made cat treats. Some pet bakeries produce elaborate holiday-themed treats — dog-safe gingerbread men, cat-safe 'turkey' biscuits — that allow pets to have a holiday treat that parallels the family's.

Holiday Photos

The family holiday photograph with pets requires patience and good humour rather than prolonged restraint. Brief, positive exposure to any costume or prop, with immediate reward, creates a pet more likely to cooperate. Never restrain a distressed animal for a photograph — the resulting image will not be worth the trust cost.

Conclusion

Pets enrich holiday celebrations with their unconditional presence, their genuine enthusiasm for company and warmth, and their absolute indifference to the decorations, the table settings, and the guest politics. In return, they ask only for safety, predictability, and the occasional treat. Getting the safety basics right takes minimal effort and prevents significant suffering. Beyond safety, including pets fully in the warmth and togetherness of the season is one of the small but genuine pleasures of sharing a home with another species.
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