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NCR Heatwave Dog Safety: 7 Urgent Steps to Save Your Dog from Heatstroke

NCR has hit 46°C with an IMD Orange Alert until May 26. Pamper Paws’ CEO Shalini Navin shares 7 urgent steps every dog mom must take this week to prevent fatal heatstroke.

dog heatstroke prevention, NCR heatwave pets, summer pet care India, dog cooling tips, pet safety extreme heat
NCR Heatwave Dog Safety: 7 Urgent Steps to Save Your Dog from Heatstroke


URGENT, NCR HEATWAVE ALERT - READ BEFORE YOUR NEXT WALK

With temperatures crossing 45-46°C across Noida, Gurgaon, and Delhi NCR, your dog has no way to sweat it out. Three days of record heat and the IMD says no relief until May 26. Here’s what every dog mom across the NCR must do today.

“At Pamper Paws, we strongly believe pets are family members, especially during extreme weather conditions like the current NCR heatwave. Through awareness initiatives like this, our goal is not just grooming, but responsible pet wellness and care.” - SHALINI NAVIN, Co-Founder, Pamper Paws

NCR’s Confirmed IMD Temperatures - Last 3 Days

Orange Alert - No relief until May 26

The Numbers Every Dog Mom Needs to Know

        50%  - share of dogs with heat stroke that don’t survive (Jnl. Vet Internal Medicine)

        41°C - a dog’s danger zone (normal body temperature: 38.5°C) (Cornell Univ. Vet School)

        4 paw pads - the ONLY way a dog sweats (Cornell Univ. Vet School)

        90 minutes - vet delay beyond this sharply raises the risk of death (Hebrew Univ. Vet Study)

A Personal Message from Our CEO

Hey Mama! I’m writing this as NCR faces one of its worst heatwaves this decade — 46°C today with no relief until May 26. Your dog has no sweat glands except on their 4 tiny paw pads. They cannot cool down the way we do. And when heat stroke hits, 1 in 2 dogs doesn’t survive even with vet care.

Please read every step below. Share it with every dog mom you know. Act today not tomorrow.

- Shalini Navin, CEO & Co-founder, Pamper Paws

Why This Matters to Us at Pamper Paws

As a team that works closely with pets across Noida, Gurgaon, and Delhi NCR every day through our mobile grooming services, we have personally seen the impact of rising temperatures on dogs, from dehydration and heat exhaustion to burnt paws during daytime walks. The cases we encounter every summer aren’t statistics to us; they’re the dogs we groom, the families we know, the homes we visit each week.

Pamper Paws currently operates premium doorstep grooming services across Noida and NCR and is gradually expanding into broader pet wellness initiatives focused on comfort, hygiene, and preventive care. This article is one such initiative, written not to sell a service, but to share the patterns we keep seeing on the ground, in the hope that even one more dog stays safe this week.

Warning Signs of Heatstroke in Dogs

If you spot any of these, treat it as a medical emergency.

        Excessive panting

        Drooling

        Vomiting

        Red gums

        Weakness / lethargy

        Collapse

Your Heatwave Action Plan: 7 Steps That Can Save Your Dog’s Life This Week

Step 1 - Fresh Water, Every Hour

In 46°C heat, your dog needs 3x more water. Dehydration sets in fast.

Fact: A dog can lose critical fluids in under 30 minutes in extreme heat.

How to keep them hydrated:

        Place water bowls in every room - don’t make them search

        Drop 2–3 ice cubes in each bowl

        Carry a collapsible bowl on every walk

        Try frozen watermelon pieces - 92% water, dogs love them

        Check water every hour - bowls heat up in the sun

Step 2 - Indoors by 10 AM, Back by 7 PM

Across Noida, Gurgaon, and Delhi NCR, pavement hits 70°C in direct sun. Paw pads burn in under 60 seconds.

Fact: Hold your hand on the pavement for 5 seconds. Hot? It hurts their paws too.

Indoor safety:

        Keep AC or fan running in their rest area

        Draw curtains to block the afternoon heat

        Place a damp cooling mat on the floor

        NEVER leave them in a parked car temps hit 65°C+ in 10 minutes

        Check the balcony floor before letting them out

Step 3 - Walks Only Before 8 AM

NCR evenings are staying above 38°C even at 6 PM. Morning is the only safe window.

Fact: Dogs can develop heat stroke in as little as 15 minutes outdoors in this heat.

Walk rules this week:

        Walk only between 5:30-7:30 AM this week

        Keep walks to 10-15 minutes maximum

        Stick to grassy, shaded paths only

        If they slow down, go home immediately

        Dog booties protect their only 4 sweat points - their paws

Step 4 - Cool Them Down, the Right Way

Ice-cold water can send a dog into shock. Here’s the safe way to cool them fast.

Myth: Ice water constricts blood vessels and actually slows cooling. Use cool water only.

Safe cooling:

        Cool damp towel over the neck and armpits

        Set up a shallow kiddie pool in the shade

        Wet paws and belly with cool (not cold!) water

        Fan them after wetting their fur

        Cool bath every 2–3 days to reduce baseline body heat

Step 5 - Make Frozen Treats Today

Cooling from inside out, the easiest way to lower your dog’s core temperature.

Fact: Watermelon is 92% water and totally safe for dogs, the perfect NCR summer snack.

3 easy frozen treats:

        Freeze low-sodium chicken broth in ice cube trays

        Blend plain yogurt + banana, freeze in molds

        Stuff a Kong toy with peanut butter, freeze for 2 hours

        Cucumber slices straight from the fridge

        Feed main meals in the morning or after 7 PM

Step 6 - Groom Smart, Don’t Shave

Many dog moms shave their dog thinking it helps. It can actually make things worse.

Warning: Shaving double-coated breeds (Huskies, Pomeranians) removes their natural sun protection.

Summer grooming:

        Daily brushing removes dead undercoat and improves airflow

        A light trim is fine - NEVER shave double-coated dogs

        Pet-safe sunscreen on the nose, ears and belly for light-furred dogs

        Check paw pads daily for cracking or heat blisters

        Book a professional de-shedding treatment this week

Step 7 - Know Your Vet’s Emergency Number, Right Now

This is the most critical step. Dogs treated within 90 minutes of heat stroke have significantly better survival odds. Save that number before you need it, tonight.

Fact: A delay of 90+ minutes to reach a vet dramatically increases the risk of death. (Hebrew Univ. Vet Hospital Study, 2006)

Do these 3 things right now:

        Save your vet’s emergency number as "DOG EMERGENCY"

        Note the nearest 24-hour pet clinic address

        Ask your vet today if they have a summer emergency line

        Keep a pet first-aid kit ready: thermometer, cool packs

        Share this article with your dog mom group - another mama may need it today

Heat Stroke Emergency Protocol

If your dog is panting uncontrollably, stumbling, or collapsing, you have minutes. Do these in order:

1.      Move them to AC or shade immediately. Every second at 46°C is damage.

2.      Pour cool (not cold!) water on their body - neck, armpits, groin and paws.

3.      Fan them continuously. Don’t cover with a towel - it traps heat.

4.      Offer small sips of cool water. Do not force it if they can’t drink on their own.

5.      Call your vet RIGHT NOW and get moving - the 90-minute window is everything.

Is Your Dog Extra Vulnerable This Heatwave?

Some dogs are fighting harder than others right now. Here’s what you need to know based on your dog type:

Flat-Faced Breeds (Pugs, Bulldogs, Shih Tzus) - HIGHEST RISK

Their compressed airways mean they can’t pant efficiently, their only cooling method. Keep them in AC 24/7. At 46°C, even 5 minutes outside can push them into crisis. Cancel ALL outdoor time this week.

Thick-Coated Breeds (Husky, Pomeranian, Spitz) - HIGH RISK

Thick double-coats trap heat in their undercoat. Daily brushing to remove dead undercoat is critical this week. DO NOT shave their coat, it also protects them from the sun. They must stay in AC during all peak hours and need extra water constantly.

Small Breeds (Chihuahua, Maltese) - MODERATE-HIGH RISK

Small breeds heat up extremely fast and look "fine" right until they’re not. They’re also closest to hot pavement. Keep walks to 5 minutes max, carry them when possible, and check on them hourly. The good news: they cool down quickly when brought indoors.

Large Breeds (Lab, Golden, GSD) - MODERATE RISK

Large breeds like Labradors and Golden Retrievers will push themselves even when overheating. Don’t let them run or play fetch this week. Their larger body mass also takes longer to cool down. Enforce rest and provide large water bowls.

Senior Dogs & Puppies Under 1 Year - HIGH RISK

Senior dogs and puppies can’t regulate body temperature properly. Check on them every 30 minutes. Keep them exclusively in cool, AC spaces this week. A vet check-in call during a heatwave is always a great idea for seniors.


Today’s Survival Checklist

Can you tick all 8 before 10 AM? Your dog is counting on you, mama.

        Refilled all water bowls with fresh cool water + ice cubes

        Walk done before 8 AM (or safely skipped today)

        AC / fan switched on in their resting area

        Curtains drawn to block afternoon sun

        Checked paw pads for redness or heat cracks

        Prepared a frozen treat for afternoon

        Vet’s emergency number saved on phone

        Shared this article with my dog mom group

 

A Note to Close - From All of Us at Pamper Paws

A little extra care during summer can make a huge difference to our furry companions. Staying informed and proactive is the best way to ensure pets remain healthy, comfortable, and happy throughout the season. The dogs of Noida, Gurgaon, and Delhi NCR don’t choose the weather they’re born into — but we get to choose how gently we walk them through it.

NCR’s heatwave is brutal, but your love for your fur baby is stronger. These next few days matter - please don’t wait until something goes wrong. A little extra care today could save their life this week. Stay cool, stay vigilant, and keep those tails wagging.

With all my love and a very worried mama heart,

Shalini Navin - CEO, Pamper Paws

"We Care. They Deserve."

 

Sources: IMD / Skymet — NCR temps May 19–22, 2026 • Cornell Univ. Vet School • Jnl. Vet Internal Medicine (Bruchim et al., 2006) • Hebrew Univ. Vet Teaching Hospital Study



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