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International Health Certificates for Military Pets — What You Need Before You Move
International Health Certificates for Military Pets — What You Need Before You Move The USDA-endorsed health certificate is one of the most misunderstood documents in military pet relocation — and one of the most consequential. Get it right and your pet boards the plane with you. Get the timing wrong, use the wrong form, or…
Read MoreWhat Are the Pet Health Requirements for Military Moves and Overseas Deployments?
What Are the Pet Health Requirements for Military Moves and Overseas Deployments? Moving a pet on military orders involves a layer of health documentation that civilian movers rarely encounter. The requirements vary significantly depending on whether you’re relocating domestically within the continental United States, moving to Hawaii or Guam, or receiving OCONUS orders to Japan,…
Read MorePCS-ing to Coronado? Here’s How to Transfer Your Pet’s Veterinary Records and Find a New Vet Fast
PCS-ing to Coronado? Here’s How to Transfer Your Pet’s Veterinary Records and Find a New Vet Fast When you PCS to Coronado, your pet’s veterinary records don’t follow you automatically — and the gap between your last vet and your new one is a window where things fall through. A prescription that can’t be refilled…
Read MoreThe Best Veterinary Hospital Near NAS North Island — What Every Military Family in Coronado Should Know
The Best Veterinary Hospital Near NAS North Island — What Every Military Family in Coronado Should Know Finding a veterinary hospital in Coronado when you’re a military family isn’t the same as finding one when you’re settling somewhere permanently. You need a clinic that can get your pet established quickly, understands the documentation demands of…
Read MoreLethargy in Senior Pets: When to Worry and When It’s Just Age
Lethargy in Senior Pets: When to Worry and When It’s Just Age Senior pets do slow down — and that’s real, normal, and worth accepting. But “slowing down” and “something is medically wrong” can look remarkably similar on any given Tuesday afternoon, and that ambiguity is one of the most genuinely difficult things about caring…
Read MoreMy Dog Is Tired After a Beach Day — Normal or a Warning Sign?
My Dog Is Tired After a Beach Day — Normal or a Warning Sign? A dog who crashes after a full day at the beach is almost always just a dog who had a really good day. Running, swimming, socializing, and navigating uneven terrain in the sun is genuinely exhausting — and healthy exhaustion looks…
Read MoreSigns of Valley Fever in Dogs — What Coronado & San Diego Pet Owners Should Know
Signs of Valley Fever in Dogs — What Coronado & San Diego Pet Owners Should Know Valley Fever — the common name for coccidioidomycosis — is a fungal infection caused by Coccidioides immitis, a pathogen that lives in the desert soil of the American Southwest, including parts of San Diego County. Dogs contract it by…
Read MoreMy Cat Is Hiding and Won’t Come Out — Is Something Medically Wrong?
My Cat Is Hiding and Won’t Come Out — Is Something Medically Wrong? A cat who suddenly starts hiding — retreating under the bed, into a closet, or behind furniture and refusing to come out — is often trying to tell you something. Hiding is one of the primary ways cats respond to illness, pain,…
Read MoreWhy Is My Dog Suddenly Lethargic and Not Eating?
Why Is My Dog Suddenly Lethargic and Not Eating? When a dog who is normally active and food-motivated suddenly becomes sluggish and disinterested in meals, it almost always means something is wrong. Lethargy and appetite loss together — especially when they come on suddenly — are two of the most reliable signals that your dog’s…
Read MoreWhen to Call a Vet vs. Wait It Out: Vomiting in Dogs & Cats
When to Call a Vet vs. Wait It Out: Vomiting in Dogs & Cats The answer to “should I call the vet?” isn’t found in symptom checklists alone — it’s found in the full picture: what your pet is doing between vomiting episodes, who your pet is, and how the situation is evolving over time.…
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