View Poll Results: Would you allow your dogs to ride in the bed with stacks?
Yes, should be no problem



25
58.14%
No (please elaborate)



11
25.58%
If you get the stack cover you should be fine



7
16.28%
Voters: 43. You may not vote on this poll
Stacks and dogs *POLL*
as far as the securing them in the bed goes (i assume you mean tieing them to the bed with a leash) a local had his dog tied to his headache rack, and the dog got pitched off the side, well the leash was to long to keep the dog on the truck, and too short for the dog to reach the ground. So needless to say he hanged his dog. He just couldnt get the truck stopped soon enough. If the dog wouldnt have been tied on, he probably would still be alive.
The stuff nightmares are made of- but thankfully my dog survived. She went over by the tire and the road rash from it was pretty severe. Took some extensive care for months. Best solution? Crate 'em. Mine ride in the back but in large crates now. Lightweight enough to get in and out easily (though mostly stay where they are) but safer than a leash. (The crates are secured in the bed.) And you won't have to worry about them touching the stacks!
as far as the securing them in the bed goes (i assume you mean tieing them to the bed with a leash) a local had his dog tied to his headache rack, and the dog got pitched off the side, well the leash was to long to keep the dog on the truck, and too short for the dog to reach the ground. So needless to say he hanged his dog. He just couldnt get the truck stopped soon enough. If the dog wouldnt have been tied on, he probably would still be alive.
One of my border collies has fallen off of the back of my flatbed (more than once) around 35 mph on asphalt and was just fine. The pup was more concerned about being left behind than the fall.
I'm not saying to not leash them, just make sure its short.
One of my border collies has fallen off of the back of my flatbed (more than once) around 35 mph on asphalt and was just fine. The pup was more concerned about being left behind than the fall.
I'm not saying to not leash them, just make sure its short.

I will be securing my dog to the gooseneck hitch (I have a DrawTite). Yesterday i measured the distance needed to allow them to peek out the bed, but not be able to get their foot over the bed. I surely don't want to hurt or fatally injure one of my babies. I have a crate, but that defeats the purpose for why i wnat my dogs to ride in the first place. I don't want them to think they're going to the vet. I live out in the country, traffic isn't terrible (besides the semis) and i would be taking the dogs on a lot of back roads where max speeds are below 60mph.
I surely don't want to hurt or fatally injure one of my babies. I have a crate, but that defeats the purpose for why i wnat my dogs to ride in the first place. I don't want them to think they're going to the vet. I live out in the country, traffic isn't terrible (besides the semis) and i would be taking the dogs on a lot of back roads where max speeds are below 60mph.
For what it's worth- mine dont' associate the crate with the vets- they associate it with RIDE!!! BUT I don't have a plastic hard side crate- I have a large all metal wire crate. Both fit in the same crate.
Just some more for you to think about. We now live with the motto **** HAPPENS. That dog has all four legs but only has full use of three. And everytime I look at her I have to ask myself what I could've done differently. Sucks.
Thanks for the info, I will surely keep that in mind. I'm just pondering the idea. I guess I failed to mention i would be using a body harness instead of a collar, but that would eliminate the choking issue. I'm aiming for the safest possibility w/o a cage.
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