Your Dog Got Bitten by a Rattlesnake. Do This Now.
Rocky came off a March trail last year shaking his head so hard I thought he’d pulled a neck muscle. A foxtail had lodged deep in his left ear canal. Two hours at the emergency vet, sedation, and $380 later, the seed was out. That same week, he started scratching raw patches into his belly from pollen exposure I hadn’t even thought about yet. Winter brain. I was still watching for ice.
Spring doesn’t ease into danger the way summer does. It hits from multiple directions at once: foxtails emerging in dry grass, pollen counts spiking, snakes waking up, and post-winter trail debris hiding under every step. Miss any one of these and your dog is off-trail for weeks.
Here’s the hazard-by-hazard breakdown with specific prevention and gear for each threat.
Quick Reference: Spring Trail Hazards for Dogs
Hazard Peak Window Severity Primary Defense Foxtails / Grass Awns March-June High Dog boots + toe checks Seasonal Allergies March-May (tree), May-July (grass) Medium-High Paw wipes + vet antihistamines Rattlesnakes March-October, peak April-June High Avoidance training + leash control Sharp Debris / Rocks February-April Medium Boots or paw wax Ticks / Fleas March-November, nymphs peak April High Prescription preventative Bottom line: Spring is the season with the most overlapping hazards. One trail can expose your dog to all five in a single outing.
Foxtails are grass awn seeds. They’re small, barbed, and shaped to move in one direction: forward. Into tissue. They don’t back out. A foxtail that enters the skin between your dog’s toes can migrate through muscle, into the lymphatic system, and according to the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, has been documented traveling to the lungs and spinal cord.
That’s the extreme case. The common case is still bad: a painful abscess between the toes, a foxtail embedded in the ear canal requiring sedation to remove, or seeds inhaled into the nasal passage causing violent sneezing fits that won’t stop.
When they’re dangerous: Foxtail grasses grow green and soft in early spring. By late March and April in most western states, the seed heads dry out and become rigid. Dry foxtails are the dangerous ones. That brown grass that looks dead and harmless? That’s peak foxtail season.
Where they hide: Trail edges, meadow crossings, unmaintained fire roads, any area with wild barley or cheatgrass. Rocky picks them up on the edges of singletrack where grass brushes his legs and paws.
Your defense:
I covered foxtail basics in our spring mud season guide, but the key update for 2026: an early warm spring across most of the West means foxtail grasses are maturing ahead of schedule. If you normally start boots in April, consider moving that up to mid-March.
Dogs don’t get runny noses from pollen the way humans do. They get itchy. Intensely, miserable, can’t-stop-scratching itchy. Canine atopic dermatitis shows up as red, irritated skin on the belly, paws, ears, and groin after trail exposure to pollen and mold spores.
The 2026 pollen season is tracking worse than 2025. Climate Central reports that warmer springs are extending pollen production periods and increasing allergen concentrations. AccuWeather’s 2026 forecast flags 29 states for above-average pollen levels, with the Ohio Valley and Pacific Northwest expected to be hit hardest.
Signs your dog is reacting on trail:
Trail-day management:
Rocky’s allergy flare-ups happen almost exclusively in April and May. I keep unscented baby wipes in the truck and do a quick paw and belly wipe before he gets back in. It’s cut his post-hike scratching by about half.
Rattlesnakes and other venomous species emerge from brumation when daytime temperatures consistently hit the mid-60s F. In the Southwest, that’s February or March. In the mountain West, April or May. The early weeks after emergence are when snakes are most commonly found basking on warm rocks and open trail surfaces, exactly where your dog is walking.
A rattlesnake bite to a dog is a genuine emergency. Envenomation causes rapid tissue swelling, intense pain, potential organ damage, and can be fatal without antivenin treatment. Treatment costs routinely run $2,000 to $5,000.
Your defense:
Rattlesnake avoidance training. This is the single most effective prevention. Programs like Get Rattled and Natural Solutions use controlled exposure with muzzled or defanged snakes and e-collar stimulus to teach dogs to recognize and avoid the sight, sound, and scent of rattlesnakes. Sessions take under 30 minutes. Annual refreshers are recommended.
The training typically runs $75-$125 per session. Compare that to a $3,000+ envenomation treatment. The math is straightforward.
On-trail snake protocol:
Rocky did avoidance training two years ago and got a refresher last spring. On a trail near Moab, he locked up and reversed direction before I even saw the snake sunning on a flat rock. That training paid for itself in one moment.
For a full rundown on leash control in wildlife areas, see our wildlife encounters guide.
Winter storms drop branches, expose sharp rock edges through erosion, and scatter debris that gets buried under snow for months. When snowmelt hits, all of that gets uncovered at once. Early-spring trails are often littered with hazards that weren’t there in October.
Sharp rock edges exposed by freeze-thaw cycles. Broken branches with jagged ends at paw height. Rusted metal from old trail infrastructure. Glass from winter storm damage to nearby structures. Rocky sliced a pad on a rock edge in March that was completely hidden under mud on a trail we’d done dozens of times.
Your defense:
I covered tick prevention in detail in our spring tick prevention guide, so I won’t repeat the full breakdown here. The critical points for this hazard overview:
Nymphal ticks emerge when soil temps hit 45 F. That’s weeks before warm-weather hiking feels like tick season. Nymphs are the size of a poppy seed and carry higher infection rates than adult ticks. Lyme disease, Anaplasmosis, and Ehrlichiosis are all transmitted during the spring nymphal peak.
Get your dog on a prescription preventative before March. Do a full body check after every hike. Those two habits handle 95% of the risk. Read the full tick guide for product comparisons and the body-check protocol.
Fleas also ramp up in spring as temperatures rise. Your tick preventative likely covers fleas too (K9 Advantix II, Bravecto, and Seresto all do), but confirm with your vet that you’re covered for both.
Here’s what should be in your pack from March through May that might not have been there all winter:
Essentials:
Strongly Recommended:
Seasonal Prep (before the first spring hike):
For full gear recommendations, our best new spring hiking gear roundup covers the 2026 options worth looking at.
Run through this before your first spring trail outing:
Spring is the season where conditions change fastest. A clear morning can become a pollen-heavy afternoon. A warm day brings snakes to open rock. Mud softens what looked like solid trail.
Pull the plug early if:
There’s no trail worth a vet bill. Rocky and I have turned around plenty of times. The trail doesn’t care.
Pick the hazard your dog is most exposed to and handle that one first. In the West, that’s probably foxtails: get boots fitted this week. In the Southeast, it’s ticks: confirm your preventative is active. In snake country, book avoidance training before spring sessions fill up.
Spring hiking with dogs is some of the best trail time of the year. Cool temps, low crowds, dogs that are fired up after a winter indoors. Just don’t let winter brain carry you into spring without switching your hazard awareness. The threats are different, and they overlap more than any other season.
Field experience with Rocky (50 lb Australian Shepherd mix) on Colorado and Utah trails, spring 2023-2025. Foxtail information referenced from UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine. Pollen forecasts from Climate Central and AccuWeather 2026 reports. Snake and tick guidance informed by regional wildlife and veterinary sources. Consult your veterinarian for dog-specific medical decisions.