Emily's Country K9s

Emily's Country K9s Hey I'm Emily the founder of Country K9s, We strive to make sure your animals get the best care possible.

~Fully insured.
~Canine first aid trained.
(1)

02/06/2026

Do you have a wedding in 2026 and want your dog to be apart of your special day!

Emily’s Country K9s is giving you the chance to have your best friend at your wedding 💍💒

For more details, all questions and enquiries please feel free to message or give us a ring 🐶💒
07562422846

With tomorrow reaching highs of 31 degrees all walks with be cancelled and replaced with drop ins and gentle enrichment....
25/05/2026

With tomorrow reaching highs of 31 degrees all walks with be cancelled and replaced with drop ins and gentle enrichment.

If you’re off to work tomorrow or going to enjoy the rear Devon sunshine and are leaving your dog at home for a ‘few’ hours and need someone to check on them or even just top up water bowls. Even if you’re not a client of ours we are happy to help ☀️🥵🐶

Don’t take the risk ⬇️
Please don’t hesitate to call or text us!
07562422846

25/05/2026

Hot Forecast Due 🌅

Is it true that if we use cold water on heat stroke pets they will go into shock?

One of the most common things we still hear is that we can only use tepid water on a pet with heat stroke, incase they get some complications like hypothermic overshoot, peripheral vasoconstriction hindering a cooling response, and cardiogenic shock...

We have heard not to use cold water in case it causes shock... this rarely happens!

But guess what? In a recent study over 26% of dogs presented with heat stroke died, with flat faced breeds making up nearly half of heat stroke cases seen in the study.

You should:

💧Get someone to call the local veterinary practice and tell them you're going to travel down with a heat stroke patient
💧Pour, hose or if possible immerse the pet in very cold water (this should obviously be done under constant supervision, ensuring the head is fully above water and immersion should not be attempted if the animal is too large, at risk, or you are unable to do so without hurting yourself)
💧Note: If using a hose pipe, make sure it has run through until cold, as they can often contain water that is extremely hot in the tubing initially
💧Do not drape in towels and leave them in situ. Keep the cold water flowing.
💧Move to a cool, shaded area
💧Prepare to transport to vets in a cold, air conditioned car

In studies they found that:

🌅International consensus from sports medicine organisations supports treating EHS with early rapid cooling by immersing the casualty in cold water.
🌅Ice-water immersion has been shown to be highly effective in exertional heat stroke, with a zero fatality rate in large case series of younger, fit patients.
🌅Hyperthermic individuals were cooled twice as fast by Cold Water Immersion as by passive recovery.
🌅No complications occurred during the treatment of three older patients with severe heat stroke were treated with cold‐water immersion.
🌅Cold water immersion (CWI) is the preferred cooling modality in EHS guidelines and the optimal method applicable to UK Service Personnel
🌅Studies suggest using either ice-water or cold-water immersion

The best intervention is PREVENTION, but if you find yourself with an animal with heat stroke, using cold water either by pouring, hosing or ideally (if safe) immersion then this may help reduce their temperature to safe levels while you transport to a veterinary practice.

Read more below:

https://www.vetvoices.co.uk/post/cool-icy-cold-or-tepid

And listen to our podcasts on Vet Voices On Air

Too Hot to Handle: The Truth About Canine Heatstroke

Heatstroke is one of the most lethal yet most misunderstood emergencies in veterinary medicine—and it doesn’t only happen on scorching summer days.

In this in-depth episode Robyn from Vet Voices on Air is joined by two leading voices in the field: Dr Emily Hall, primary care vet, educator, and researcher whose PhD focused on the epidemiology of heatstroke in UK dogs, and Emily Cockerill, referral RVN and Lowland Rescue search dog volunteer with extensive real-world experience managing dogs working in extreme conditions.

Together, they unpack what heatstroke actually is, why it’s so dangerous, and why time and temperature matter more than almost anything else. Using clear, evidence-based explanations, they explore what happens inside the body when temperatures rise—how proteins “cook,” organs fail, and why once a critical threshold is crossed, the damage is irreversible.

The conversation tackles long-standing myths head-on, including:
The belief that cold or ice water causes “shock”

➡Why wet towels can worsen overheating
➡The dangers of lemon juice in brachycephalic dogs
➡Misconceptions around double-coated breeds and clipping
➡Why ice cubes might not meaningfully cool dogs but can be used for indoor and cool enrichment

Crucially, the episode highlights that exertional heatstroke is the most common cause, not hot cars—and that heatstroke can occur in winter, during travel, stress, anaesthesia recovery, or even inside veterinary practices. Certain breeds and health conditions increase risk, but any dog (or cat, rabbit, or other small animal) can be affected if heat production exceeds the body’s ability to lose it.

Listeners will come away with clear, practical guidance on:

➡Recognising early and late signs of heatstroke
➡What owners should do immediately at home or in the field
➡Why pre-cooling before transport dramatically improves survival
➡Current best-practice protocols for active cooling in clinic
➡When to start and stop cooling based on body temperature
➡How prevention, timing, and informed decision-making save lives

If you’ve ever wondered when it’s too hot to walk your dog, how heatstroke presents beyond “just panting,” or what the evidence really says about cooling, this episode is essential listening—for veterinary professionals and pet owners alike.
Because when it comes to heatstroke, minutes matter—and myths can kill.

Listen Here on Vet Voices On Air

https://open.spotify.com/episode/5MMO1STWzFzyhYiExBp9gN?si=achtyAFISSSt8bwmykDHqg

Happy weekend everyone, as you will have seen the weather next week is look rather hot with highs of 31 degrees. With th...
23/05/2026

Happy weekend everyone, as you will have seen the weather next week is look rather hot with highs of 31 degrees.

With this being said I will be keeping an eye on the heat and walks maybe replaced with drop ins or cancelled if necessary.

Enjoy the long weekend, I’ll be back to work Tuesday 🌸☀️

This week we welcomed two new members to the country k9 gang 💕💪🏽
15/05/2026

This week we welcomed two new members to the country k9 gang 💕💪🏽

Another mum to be I love this job 😍🐶
13/05/2026

Another mum to be I love this job 😍🐶

We are back into the swing of thing 🐶🐶
13/05/2026

We are back into the swing of thing 🐶🐶

Microchipping available this week any animal £10 per animal 🐶🐈
11/05/2026

Microchipping available this week any animal £10 per animal 🐶🐈

Congratulations to snip who’s expected puppies end of June 💕🐶
11/05/2026

Congratulations to snip who’s expected puppies end of June 💕🐶

🐶 2026 We have space for group walks 🐶🐾We have morning slots and afternoon slots. We make sure all group dogs are the pe...
26/11/2025

🐶 2026 We have space for group walks 🐶🐾

We have morning slots and afternoon slots. We make sure all group dogs are the perfect fit for each other.

Have a nervous dog you want to introduce to a group walk we can help with this ☺️

All Question and enquiry welcome
Call or text Emily ⬇️
07562422846

Address

Godfreys Gardens
Crediton
EX176HT

Opening Hours

Monday 7am - 6pm
Tuesday 7am - 6pm
Wednesday 7am - 6pm
Thursday 7am - 6pm
Friday 7am - 6pm
Saturday 8am - 5pm

Telephone

+447562422846

Website

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