Your Dog Got Bitten by a Rattlesnake. Do This Now.
Your dog just went into snowmelt. Get the dog out of wind, strip any wet gear off, dry the coat with whatever you have, wrap the dog in an emergency blanket, and press your body against theirs. Do not rub hard. Do not apply direct heat. Start walking toward the trailhead.
That’s the short version. Here’s why each piece matters and what happens if you skip one.
I wrote yesterday about spring creek crossings killing dogs: how to assess whether a crossing is safe and when to turn back. That post was about prevention. This one is about what happens when prevention fails. When the ice shelf collapses. When the current grabs your dog mid-crossing. When your dog misjudges a bank and slides into fast water it wasn’t ready for.
Rocky went into a creek on the Mount Falcon trail two springs ago. Not swept. He slipped on an icy bank approach and dropped into thigh-deep snowmelt that was moving faster than it looked. He was in the water maybe forty-five seconds before I pulled him out by his harness handle. Forty-five seconds. By the time I had him on dry ground he was shaking so hard his teeth were clicking audibly. His gums had gone pale. He stood there stiff-legged and glassy-eyed while water poured off his coat.
I didn’t know what I was looking at. I thought he was just cold and scared. He was hypothermic.
Quick Reference: Cold Water Hypothermia in Trail Dogs
Factor What You Need to Know Normal dog body temp 101–102.5°F Clinical hypothermia begins Below 99°F Life-threatening Below 94°F — organ function starts failing Wet coat insulation loss Up to 90% — a soaked dog is functionally naked Time to hypothermia in 40°F water Under 15 minutes for most dogs. Faster for small, thin-coated, young, or old dogs Spring snowmelt temp range 34–45°F across most mountain regions right now Key field response Get out of wind → strip wet gear → dry coat → wrap in emergency blanket → share body heat → restrict movement Bottom line: A wet dog in cold air loses heat faster than a dry dog in freezing air. Time and wind are working against you the moment the dog leaves the water.
Here’s the math that matters. A dry coat traps a layer of warm air against the skin. That’s how insulation works — fur, fleece, down, doesn’t matter. The material itself isn’t warm. The trapped air is.
A wet coat loses up to 90% of that insulation value. Ninety percent. The water displaces the air, and now instead of an insulating layer, your dog is wearing a heat-wicking compress. Water conducts heat away from the body roughly 25 times faster than air at the same temperature. So a soaked dog standing in 40-degree air is losing core heat at a rate that has nothing to do with the air temperature and everything to do with the water in the coat.
Rocky’s double coat is one of the better natural insulation systems in the dog world. Aussie mix, thick undercoat, decent water resistance when dry. Soaked through after that creek fall? Useless. The undercoat that normally keeps him comfortable at 20°F was now a wet sponge pressed against his skin, pulling heat out of him with every gust of wind.
A greyhound, a whippet, a pit bull, a short-coated pointer — those dogs have less insulation dry and almost none wet. A 30-pound dog with a thin single coat in 38-degree snowmelt is in serious trouble in under ten minutes. Puppies and seniors lose heat faster too. Less muscle mass, less efficient thermoregulation. My 50-pound Rocky handled it. A senior greyhound at half his weight would not have.
This is where people get fooled. A dog that just had a stressful water crossing is going to look stressed. Panting, wide-eyed, maybe reluctant to move. That all looks like normal post-scare behavior. It’s easy to think your dog is just rattled and needs a minute to calm down.
But there’s a difference between scared and hypothermic, and you need to know it.
You’re not going to have a thermometer on the trail. I don’t carry one either. What you have is observation. If your dog is shivering hard after coming out of cold water, that’s the body fighting to rewarm. It looks bad but it means the system is still working. If the shivering fades while the dog is still cold and stiff — move faster. You’re running out of time.
I learned this from a veterinarian at Colorado State after Rocky’s creek incident, and I’ve rehearsed it enough times that I could do it with numb hands in wind. Which is exactly the conditions you’ll be doing it in.
Wind is the enemy. A wet dog in still air loses heat. A wet dog in a 15 mph breeze loses heat dramatically faster. Wind chill isn’t just a comfort metric — it’s a survival variable for a soaked animal.
Get behind a rock. Into a tree cluster. Below a ridge. Anything that breaks the wind. If you’re on an exposed trail with nowhere to shelter, use your own body as a windbreak. Crouch on the upwind side of your dog.
If your dog is wearing a harness, pack, vest, collar with a bandana — anything that’s holding cold water against the body — take it off. Wet fabric and webbing against the skin are actively cooling the dog. A soaked harness across the chest is the last thing a hypothermic dog needs.
Use whatever you have. A bandana. Your buff. A shirt off your back. A pack towel if you carry one (I do now, specifically for this). You’re not going to get the coat dry. You’re trying to remove the worst of the standing water so the emergency blanket in the next step has something to work with.
Blot and squeeze. Don’t scrub. Gentle pressure, working from the body outward. Pay attention to the chest and belly where the coat is thinnest and the skin is closest to the surface.
Every dog first aid kit should have one. A mylar emergency blanket. They weigh two ounces, pack to the size of a deck of cards, and they reflect body heat back toward the dog instead of letting it radiate away.
Wrap the dog. Cover the torso, tuck it under the belly if you can. Leave the head out. The shiny side goes toward the dog — that’s the reflective surface. If you don’t have an emergency blanket, use your jacket, a fleece layer, a rain shell. Anything dry between the dog and the air.
This matters more than most people realize. Lie against your dog. Pull them onto your lap. Press your chest and arms against their torso. You are a 98.6-degree heat source. Use it.
Rocky sat in my lap wrapped in my jacket for probably twenty minutes on that trail before he stopped shaking enough to walk. I was freezing. He was alive.
A hypothermic dog should not run, jump, scramble over rocks, or do anything that demands cardiovascular output. Cold blood pooled in the extremities needs to recirculate slowly. Sudden exertion can push cold blood back to the core too fast, dropping the core temperature further — a phenomenon called afterdrop. It can trigger cardiac arrhythmia in a dog that was otherwise stabilizing.
Walk slowly toward the trailhead. Carry the dog if it’s small enough and the terrain allows it. No running. No “let’s hustle to warm up.” The warming needs to happen passively, from the outside in.
These are the mistakes that make hypothermia worse. I’ve seen every one of them suggested in trail forums.
Do not rub the dog vigorously. Aggressive rubbing pushes cold blood from the limbs back to the core before the core is ready for it. It also risks damaging skin that may be frostbitten at the extremities. Gentle drying is fine. Deep-tissue rubbing is not.
Do not apply direct heat to the skin. No hand warmers pressed against the belly. No hot water bottles on the groin. No holding the dog next to a camp stove. Localized heat causes blood vessels in the skin to dilate, which pulls warm blood away from the core and sends cold peripheral blood inward. Rewarm from the center out with insulation and body heat, not from the outside in with a heat source.
Do not give alcohol. This comes up in old-school outdoor first aid for humans and somehow migrated to dog advice. Alcohol dilates blood vessels and accelerates heat loss. It does the opposite of what you need.
Do not put a hypothermic dog in hot water. If you’re at a trailhead with access to warm water, lukewarm is the max — and only on the torso, not the legs. Hot water triggers the same peripheral vasodilation problem as direct heat sources. The temperature differential can cause shock.
Do not assume shivering means the dog is fine. Shivering is the first defense. It means the body is fighting. But a dog can shiver for thirty minutes in cold wind with a wet coat and go from mild to moderate hypothermia while you’re standing there thinking the shivering will take care of it. Shivering buys time. It doesn’t fix the problem.
Not all dogs handle cold water the same way. My Rocky, with his double coat and 50 pounds of muscle, bought himself some margin in that creek. Other dogs wouldn’t get the same margin.
Highest risk for cold water hypothermia:
If you’re hiking with a thin-coated breed near spring snowmelt crossings, consider whether that dog belongs on that trail this time of year. Rocky handles creek crossings in April. A friend’s whippet does not. That’s not a judgment. It’s thermoregulation.
After Rocky’s Mount Falcon incident, I added cold-water-specific gear to my spring and early summer pack. Not much weight. Meaningful difference.
Four items. Maybe a pound total. Rocky’s entire spring creek kit.
Mild hypothermia — the dog is shivering, responsive, walking, improving with field rewarming — you can manage in the field and drive to a vet for a check afterward. Most dogs that get dunked briefly and rewarmed promptly will recover on the trail.
Get to an emergency vet immediately if:
A vet can check core temperature, monitor heart rhythm, and provide active core rewarming with warm IV fluids if needed. Field rewarming has limits. If the core temp has dropped below 94°F, the dog needs more than blankets and body heat.
I split these deliberately. The creek crossings post is about reading water and making the call not to cross. This post is what happens when the call goes wrong — or when there wasn’t a call to make because the bank gave way or the ice broke.
Both posts exist because of the same reality: spring snowmelt in 2026 is running a month ahead of schedule. Creeks are higher and colder than the calendar suggests. Dogs are falling into water that last year at this date was a trickle.
If you only read one, read the creek crossings piece. Prevention is better than field medicine every time. But if your dog goes in despite every precaution — and eventually, on enough spring trails, a dog goes in — knowing the rewarming protocol before you need it is the difference between a scary story and a dead dog.
Rocky dried off, warmed up, and hiked out under his own power that day on Mount Falcon. I carried the shakes for longer than he did. But I didn’t know then what I know now about hypothermia staging, about afterdrop, about why the shivering stopping is the bad sign. I got lucky that his exposure was brief and I accidentally did enough of the right things.
Don’t rely on luck. Carry the blanket. Know the steps. And keep reading spring water conditions before you head out — because this year, the water is ahead of you.
Field experience with Rocky (50 lb Australian Shepherd mix) on Colorado Front Range trails, 2024–2026. Canine thermoregulation thresholds and hypothermia staging referenced from the Merck Veterinary Manual and veterinary consultation at Colorado State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital. Wet coat insulation loss data from thermal physiology research on mammalian fur in aqueous environments. Rewarming protocol consistent with AVMA field emergency guidance for companion animals. Spring 2026 snowmelt conditions from USGS stream gauge data and regional water district reports.