Dog Surfing: How to Get Started This Summer
If your dog was just bitten: flush the wound, leave it open, get to a vet within 6 hours.
You heard the snarling before you saw anything. A dog came off a side trail at speed, no recall, no owner in sight. Ten seconds. The dogs separated. Your dog is back at your side, shaking. You’re scanning for blood and the initial check looks almost okay — a small puncture on the neck, maybe two, nothing dramatic. The attacking dog is gone. The other hiker is apologizing from thirty yards back. That small puncture on the neck is a dog fight bite wound — and the instinct to cover it is wrong.
Here’s what most trail handlers do next: they reach for the first aid kit, pull out gauze and tape, and cover the wound. It looks like the right call. Stop the bleeding, protect the site.
It’s the wrong call. According to VCA Animal Hospitals, small puncture wounds from dog bites should be left open — not covered, not closed — so that infection can drain. Bandaging a bite puncture traps the bacteria below the skin surface, turns a contaminated wound into an abscess, and converts what was a painful but manageable injury into something requiring surgical debridement.
And that’s the post. Everything else is context.
Dog-on-dog bites are a common and underappreciated source of serious trail injuries — one that gets less attention than rattlesnakes and wildlife hazards in most trail safety resources. From April through June, as hikers return to trail systems they haven’t used since fall, the encounters multiply and many don’t go well — because unknown dogs on restricted singletrack is exactly the high-pressure scenario for defensive aggression.
This is the eighteenth post in the trail emergency series, alongside rattlesnake bites, heatstroke, altitude sickness, paw lacerations, CCL tears, and twelve others. Same format: immediate action first, then the biology, then what not to do.
Quick Reference: Dog Fight Bite Wound on the Trail
Factor What You Need to Know Primary injury type Puncture wounds — small surface entry, deep tissue damage below Infection risk All bite wounds are considered contaminated; bacteria from the mouth are injected below the skin surface with every bite Key bacteria Pasteurella multocida, Capnocytophaga — both anaerobic, both thrive when wounds are sealed off from air The counterintuitive rule Do NOT bandage or close puncture wounds in the field — open drainage is the correct management What you’re missing Puncture wounds look minor on the surface; the real damage is deeper in tissue, often hidden by fur The 6-hour window Wounds cleaned and assessed within 6 hours of injury heal significantly better than those left until morning When to go to emergency vet Punctures on neck, chest, or abdomen — same day, no exceptions When regular vet next-morning is acceptable Limb or flank wounds, actively draining, no signs of respiratory distress or shock What NOT to do No bandaging, no closing, no hydrogen peroxide inside the wound, no waiting to see how it looks tomorrow Bottom line: Flush the wound with clean water. Leave it open. Get to a vet same-day for anything on the body core, immediately if the dog shows any respiratory change or shock signs.
The surface presentation of a dog bite is almost always an undercount of the actual damage.
Merck’s veterinary wound management guidance is direct about this: because of the slashing nature of dog bite injuries, the major tissue damage is usually found beneath the surface. Small puncture marks or bruising may be all that’s visible on the skin while ribs are broken or internal organs are damaged underneath.
That’s the iceberg pattern. The tooth enters, penetrates through skin, travels through subcutaneous tissue, and leaves a small hole on the way in and a small hole on the way out. The wound channel between them is invisible from the surface. In heavy-coated dogs, even finding the puncture entry points takes deliberate searching.
On the neck, where most dog fight bites land, the anatomy is especially deceptive. The skin is thick. The underlying structures include the trachea, esophagus, major vessels, and the spine. A puncture that looks like a minor scrape on the surface of a Golden Retriever’s neck may have penetrated into these structures. You cannot assess depth by looking at the entry hole.
This is why the “it looks okay” reading at the trailhead is unreliable. It’s not that you’re missing something obvious — it’s that the surface genuinely doesn’t show you what’s there.
Dog mouths carry a dense, complex bacterial load. Pasteurella multocida is present in the oral flora of most dogs and is the primary cause of post-bite infections in both dogs and humans. Capnocytophaga species are also present and can cause serious infections, particularly in immunocompromised individuals. When a dog bites, these bacteria are injected directly into subcutaneous tissue under pressure.
VCA’s bite wound guidance is categorical: all bite wounds are considered contaminated and at risk for infection. That’s not a probabilistic statement — it’s a biological one. The bacteria were introduced into the tissue. The question is whether the wound environment allows them to multiply.
This is where bandaging becomes the mistake.
Anaerobic bacteria (the kind most responsible for deep wound infections and abscess formation) thrive in low-oxygen environments. A sealed, bandaged puncture wound is exactly that environment. The wound is warm, moist, full of tissue fluid and bacteria, and with the surface closed off, there’s minimal oxygen exchange. The bacteria multiply. The tissue breaks down. What presents at the vet two days later is an abscess — a pocket of purulent material under skin that looks superficially healed, requiring lancing, flushing, and often systemic antibiotics or surgical debridement.
An open wound, by contrast, allows drainage. The exudate — the fluid, bacteria, and debris pushed out by the body’s inflammatory response — has somewhere to go. The wound still needs veterinary treatment, still needs antibiotics, still needs proper irrigation. But the bacteria aren’t sealed in.
This is the counterintuitive rule that handlers consistently get wrong. Covering a wound feels protective. For most injuries — abrasions, lacerations, paw wounds — covering and protecting is correct. Bite punctures are the exception.
On a short-coated dog: The puncture holes are visible. Typically round, small — often less than a centimeter across — with slight bleeding or dried blood. The entry wounds look almost benign. The surrounding tissue may have subcutaneous bruising that’s not immediately visible, swelling that develops over the next few hours, or none of the above if the injury is recent.
On a heavy-coated or thick-furred dog: The punctures are hidden under the coat. You may see parted fur, matted blood, or nothing at all. Running your hands over the dog’s entire body — including the sides, neck, chest, and hindquarters — is the only reliable way to find all the wounds. Dense coats can hold blood against the skin with minimal visible evidence at the surface.
On the neck: The most common bite location in dog fights. One dog establishes a grip and the other pulls away. The result is often a series of puncture wounds clustered on one side of the neck. These look like small holes in fur. They may be through-and-through, with exit wounds on the far side. They are the highest-priority wounds in any fight assessment because of the underlying anatomy.
On the limbs: Less immediately dangerous than body core wounds, but still require same-day veterinary assessment. Punctures on legs can penetrate joint capsules, especially near the stifle or carpus — and joint infections are serious orthopedic emergencies.
Don’t reach into an active fight with your hands. Grab a leash, your jacket, a water bottle, your pack — anything to interrupt the fight before you’re in it. Two dogs fighting will bite whatever is between them without intent. Once the dogs are separated, get your dog to you and assess from there.
Lay hands on the whole dog. Start at the head and neck — part the fur and feel for punctures, for moisture that might be blood, for swelling. Move to the chest and ribcage. The abdomen. The flanks. The hindquarters. Every surface. Dog fights are chaotic and the dog may have been bitten in multiple places you didn’t see during the incident.
Pay particular attention to:
Any wound that produces a sucking sound when the dog breathes is a chest puncture. This is an immediate emergency. Keep the dog calm, do not let it run, and get moving toward a vet right now.
Clean water is the right irrigation tool. If you have a water bottle with a sport cap, squeeze it directly into the puncture wounds with moderate pressure — enough to flush debris and dilute the bacterial load, not enough to force contamination deeper into tissue. If you have a needle-less syringe in your trail first aid kit, even better.
Do not use hydrogen peroxide inside the wound. Hydrogen peroxide is cytotoxic to fibroblasts — the cells responsible for tissue repair — and degrades the tissue environment in ways that impair healing. It feels like it’s doing something. It’s not. Saline or clean water, flushed through the wound channel.
Betadine (povidone-iodine) diluted to the color of weak tea is acceptable for surface cleaning. Concentrated betadine directly in the wound impairs healing the same way hydrogen peroxide does.
Don’t apply a bandage over puncture wounds. Don’t pack the wound with gauze. Don’t close the wound edges with butterfly strips, tape, or anything else.
If there’s active bleeding — more than minor ooze — apply gentle direct pressure with a clean cloth until the bleeding slows, then leave the wound open and visible. Puncture wound bleeding is usually not the primary concern. The infection process that follows is.
Post-fight adrenaline is real in dogs, and high-drive dogs especially will seem fine immediately after. Don’t let that fool you. Short leash, controlled pace, move toward the trailhead.
Adrenaline masks pain. A dog acting normal 10 minutes after a fight is not necessarily uninjured. The assessment you did on the trail is preliminary — a vet does the real evaluation.
Not all bite wounds carry the same urgency. Location is the primary triage factor.
Immediate emergency — go now, call ahead:
Same-day veterinary care — don’t wait until tomorrow:
Regular vet next morning is acceptable:
When in doubt, call the nearest emergency vet from the trailhead. Describe the wound location, the dog’s behavior, and whether there’s any respiratory change. They’ll tell you whether to come in tonight. The call is free.
Don’t bandage puncture wounds. The whole post says why. Saying it again: bandaging a bite puncture creates the low-oxygen environment where infection bacteria accelerate. Leave it open.
Don’t use hydrogen peroxide or undiluted betadine inside the wound. Both damage healing tissue more than they help. Water and saline are the correct irrigation fluids.
Don’t wait to see how it looks in 24 hours. Infection from a bite wound can establish and spread rapidly. VCA notes that wounds treated within six hours of injury have the best chance of healing without complications. Every hour past that window matters for wound contamination level.
Don’t let the dog lick the wound. Dog saliva introduces more bacteria into an already contaminated site. An e-collar from the kit, or improvised from materials in your pack, stops licking on the walk out.
Don’t assume size equals severity. A puncture wound the size of a pencil eraser on the neck is not a minor injury. The entry hole size tells you nothing about tissue depth, proximity to critical structures, or bacterial load.
Dog bite infections move fast. Pasteurella multocida in particular has a rapid replication cycle in warm, moist tissue. Within 12–24 hours of an untreated bite, a localized infection is typically established at the wound site. Within 48–72 hours, an abscess can form — sealed off under skin that may look healed from the outside.
The dog that had a “small bite” that “seemed fine” on the trail is the dog that shows up at the vet three days later with a swollen, hot, painful mass that has to be surgically opened, flushed, and drained.
Veterinary antibiotics started within that first six-hour window — ideally within the first few hours — significantly reduce the infection risk. The vet will also do something the trailhead assessment couldn’t: probe the wound depth, check for tissue tracking (the spread of infection along fascial planes), evaluate the underlying structures, and flush with proper irrigation under controlled conditions.
This is not a wait-and-see injury. The six-hour window is real.
Most trail emergencies have a peak period. For dog fights, it’s April through June, for the same reason spring hiking carries elevated risk for most dog-to-dog encounters: trail volume spikes before trail behavior normalizes.
Dogs that spent winter on neighborhood walks are now on narrow single-track, moving toward unfamiliar dogs at close range, on leash, with no room to create social distance. The high-density spring convergence on popular trails creates exactly the encounter conditions — restricted space, controlled approach, high arousal, unfamiliar dogs — that produce conflict. Most encounters are fine. Some aren’t.
The spring trail hazards guide covers the full hazard landscape for this season. But dog-on-dog bites are the gap in that guide and in most trail safety resources, which tend to focus on wildlife, environmental, and toxin hazards. Dog-on-dog encounters on trail produce bite injuries that most trail safety guides underemphasize relative to wildlife and toxin hazards. The threat is often the one you pass on the trail.
Practical prep for the spring encounter season:
When you reach the clinic, the information that matters most:
If you got the other owner’s contact information at the incident, bring it. Vaccine history on the attacking dog changes the vet’s wound management decisions.
Trail emergency guides: rattlesnake bites, heatstroke, paw lacerations, seizures, bloat, fractures, cold water hypothermia, tick paralysis, altitude sickness, near-drowning, choking, eye injuries, CCL tears, and more.
Dog fight puncture wounds are in a different category from most entries in this series because the management instinct — cover the wound, protect the site — is actively wrong. With heatstroke, the instinct (cool the dog) is right. With rattlesnake, the instinct (get out fast) is right. With bite wounds, the instinct to bandage produces the exact environment the bacteria need to do real damage.
The wound is already contaminated the moment the teeth break skin. Your job on the trail is not to prevent that — it’s already done. Your job is to flush what you can, leave it open, and get to a vet within that six-hour window. The vet does the rest.
Small puncture. Open wound. Six hours.
Bite wound contamination, infection risk, and wound management protocol referenced from VCA Animal Hospitals — Bite Wounds in Dogs and the Merck Veterinary Manual — Management of Specific Wounds in Small Animals, last reviewed July 2023, modified September 2024. Six-hour treatment window from VCA Animal Hospitals bite wound guidance. Iceberg injury pattern (surface presentation underrepresenting tissue damage depth) from Merck Veterinary Manual wound management section. Bacterial organisms (Pasteurella multocida, Capnocytophaga) consistent with veterinary microbiology and infectious disease literature on dog bite wound flora.