A dog jumps into the pool during the "Paws in the Pooloza" event at the Crawford Park pool in Cedar Hill, Texas on Saturday, August 12, 2017. (Andy Jacobsohn/Dallas Morning News/TNS)
As you plod along on a summer day, or dash from air-conditioning to car and back again, you're doing all you can to not pass out from the heat. There's a water bottle in your hand, shoes on your feet to protect them from hot concrete, and sweat-wicking clothes (as few as possible) on your body.
Your pets feel the heat, too.
"Pets can be in danger in so many ways," says Maura Davies, vice president for marketing and communication for the SPCA of Texas. "Use your common sense. If you're hot, your pets will be hot."
Dallas veterinarian Kathryn Sarpong works at the Metro Paws Animal Hospital location close to White Rock Lake. "I see people all the time going around the lake with their dogs when it's 95 degrees," she says. "They're playing a little with fire."
Dogs are much more heat-sensitive than humans, she says. "They cool down by breathing and panting. When the temperature is over 90 and they're panting, they're heating themselves up and not cooling themselves."

