BOZEMAN, Mont. — On a recent cross-country ski trip in the Bridger Mountains, I noticed my dog was walking a little funny. It was a frigid day and close to a foot of snow had fallen the night before. Kato, who burst out of his kennel with his usual exuberance at the car park, was looking chilly on the trail.
At first, Kato — a 9-year-old mixed breed cattle dog — was pausing to chew the snowballs out from between his pads. I’d seen him do this plenty of times in the past and thought little of it, but then he began to sit down, and finally he started to seek out spots beneath the trees that weren’t snow covered.
While Kato has always been a trooper, I grew concerned.
“If it is below zero, you might want to really think about being outside with your dog,” said Dr. Spencer Anderson of Baxter Creek Veterinary Clinic in Bozeman. “It is very dog dependent, and a lot of it has to do with acclimation, but you need to know your dog.”
Anderson said he rarely sees cases of hypothermia in dogs. Many breeds, such as Labrador retrievers, Siberian huskies, Chesapeake Bay retrievers and Alaskan malamutes, are built for the cold. Even in shorthaired dogs such as Hungarian vizslas and German shorthaired pointers, which generally have low body fat in addition to a fine coat, hypothermia is uncommon.