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Do dogs know you're coming back when you go on vacation?

Maggie Casper
Maggie Casper
2025-06-29 05:21:20
Count answers: 9
Your dog can sense how you are feeling, and instinctively knows that you are about to come through the front door. Your dog knows that something is up the second your luggage comes out of the closet. Dogs are able to recognize things by a combination of an object’s appearance and scent – their favorite squeaking toy, your favorite sneakers. Just as your dog has a relationship with his most loved ball, he also has one with your suitcase. However, in this case, the association is not a happy one, and the sight of that luggage will trigger certain negative behavior patterns. Your dog’s anxiety when he knows you are going somewhere without him is the result of associated learning. Your Dog Does Know When You’re Going on Vacation. He will start acting out and pull out his big guns—the pleading puppy dog eyes and the whining—hoping that his sorrowful look and sounds will convince you not to go. Dogs and humans relate to time differently. However, a study found that dogs have a more limited sense of how time passes. It found that dogs definitely feel the excitement when their owners return, but the length of the absence doesn’t seem to make a great deal of difference in the level of the emotion.
Demond Harber
Demond Harber
2025-06-29 02:52:27
Count answers: 2
Dogs perceive time through changes in their body, observation, and smell. They can’t understand time by devices like clocks, but they can perceive morning as a change from dark to light. Your dog can use the level of your scent to predict your return home. A scent wafting in the air and getting increasingly stronger may tell a dog that someone may arrive soon. Yes, dogs can experience time passing. However, they don’t know how many specific hours, days, or weeks have gone by. They can’t tell how many hours, days, or weeks you have been absent. But they can sense the passage of time through many mechanisms while you are gone. Because dogs tend to focus on the current moment, it could be a case of you either being there or not. But when studied, more greeting behaviors were observed upon the owner’s return from an absence greater than two hours. Dogs have a higher metabolism than humans, and thus experience time more slowly. Our 60 minutes translates to about 75 minutes for them. If you go on vacation for a week, when you and your scent arrive home that will trigger an olfactory, or scent, memory.
Hassie VonRueden
Hassie VonRueden
2025-06-29 02:09:44
Count answers: 7
They already know. Even before the carry-on suitcase comes out of the closet, they know. The more things I do to prepare to leave town on a business trip, the more depressed and glum-looking my dogs get – especially on these work-related trips where I leave my husband behind to take care of the dogs. It seems as if they are focused solely on conveying how much they’d like to come with me or demonstrating how miserable they are going to be while I’m gone. It’s likely all these things – certainly the cumulative effect of all of these things.