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Pro Pet Sitter

SecurePet provides professional pet sitting services for Wimberley, Blanco, Driftwood, and surrounding areas in Hays County, Texas. If you are looking for a pet sitter that will meet your needs, give us a try.

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SecurePet Pet Sitter, Wimberley, Texas

Welcome to the SecurePet.biz web site and blog!

Find out more about SecurePet pet sitting within the pages of this site and learn how your animals can be well taken care of the next time you are away from home for business or pleasure. At long last, leaving pets at home has never been more hassle-free!

Smylee Dog Quigley Cat Oscar Lizard Elvira Donkey Lola Macaw
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This is your local service ... one that is provided to you personally by me, Gyvel Young, the principal owner and sitter for SecurePet (please learn more about my pet sitter qualifications here).

What service areas do I cover? SecurePet covers the Wimberley, Texas area (and other select areas within Hays County such as Blanco, Driftwood, and more) and provides sitter services to conscientious pet owners who need their animals tended to when they are away. What's the best part? Your animals get to stay in the comfort of their own home!

Contacting SecurePet is simple. Just follow the link to my online pet sitter contact form and send me a message about you and your animals. I will respond to your pet sitting request by phone or email in less than 24 hours.

Once your needs are determined, I will visit with you in person to meet you and your pets, prior to the actual pet sitting assignment. At that time, the needs of your pets will be assessed and the scope of the services you require defined.

I look forward to hearing from you and taking care of all your pet-sitting needs in the Texas Hill Country area. Until then, feel free to browse my site and meet some of the wonderful animals that I have taken care of as a pet sitter. And, be sure to take a look at my informative and fun articles and learn all about the wonderful animals we call pets ...

For your reading enjoyment, my most recent blog follows:



OverHeating Kills!

August 12, 2008
Please—don’t leave your dog in the car! A parked vehicle can become an oven that will literally bake your dog …

Never leave your dog or other pet in a parked car, not even to run in for a “quick” errand. The inside temperature of your car is about 20 degrees hotter than the outside temperature. This means that on an 85 degree Fahrenheit day the interior of your vehicle is 102 degrees F. Even if you leave the windows cracked open or park in a shady spot the interior temperature will continue to rise. This is because the vehicle’s ambient heat is retained by its windows and upholstery— the dog’s own body heat will also add to this rise in temperature.

A few minutes in a hot car can kill your dog!

A few minutes in a hot car will kill your dog!

Unlike humans, dogs have no way of expelling heat from their body except through their paws and their tongue. In addition, their internal temperature is between 101 degrees and 102 degrees, much higher than a humans. If heat is not expelled rapidly enough his internal temperature will keep rising. It only takes a rise of 3 degrees to put your dog into the danger zone.

When a dog’s internal temperature reaches 108 degrees F. all the internal organs begin to rapidly break down. Even immediate treatment and rapid cooling (to bring the temperature down) can leave a dog with permanent organ and brain damage.

Did you know that a parked car’s temperature can rise 34 degrees a minute? A parked vehicle becomes an oven that will literally bake your dog from the inside out. Even a quick errand into the store on a 95 degree day can result in the death of your pet. Think about it, if the outside temperature is 90 degrees F. your car’s interior will hit 110 degrees within just a few moments and it will keep rising! If it is 100 degrees outside (as it often is here in Texas) your dog will be roasting in a 120 degree car!

If you see a dog locked inside a car on a hot day do not hesitate to call for help, if the outside temperature is 80 degrees or hotter than please break open the window and release the animal immediately!

Overheating kills. Don't let a dog suffer in a hot car.

If you witness an animal locked in a car during hot weather and you live in Austin call 311. If you are using a cell phone and you are reporting an incident in Austin you can call 515-972-4738. Otherwise call your local Sheriff’s office or other local authorities and for the sake of the animal take immediate action to rescue it.