For the owner of the joyful dog who falls apart the second the sky turns loud.
Storms. Fireworks. The chaos they can hear coming before you can. The big, confident dog who guards your front door is suddenly trying to crawl inside your skin. Tens of thousands of owners just found out why nothing they tried ever fully worked.
The night you both end up on the bathroom floor.
The sky cracks open, or the neighborhood starts sounding like a war zone, and your dog, the one who normally acts like they own the place, is pressed against your legs shaking so hard you can feel it through the couch cushions.
They are panting. Drooling. Trying to climb somewhere, anywhere, that feels safer.
Maybe they have broken the blinds trying to get out. Maybe you are both on the bathroom floor right now because the cold tile is the only place they will settle. Maybe it is 2am, you have work in the morning, and they are a disturbed animal trying to fit in your lap.
You have held them. You have talked to them. You have put the vest on them. You have tried everything you could think of.
They are still shaking.
And the part that stays with you, long after it goes quiet outside, is the look in their eyes. They are not misbehaving. They are not being dramatic. They are completely, physically terrified, they do not know why, and they cannot tell you.
That look is why you are here.
It was never one problem. It is two at once.
Your dog does not start panicking when the first firework goes off. They start long before it. Dogs sense a storm rolling in well before we hear a thing, and by the time the noise actually arrives, their body has already been bracing for an hour.
Their body is flooded with the same fight-or-flight signal a trapped animal feels. That is the trembling, the pacing, the trying to escape.
Their ears are taking the full force of every crack, boom and bang with hearing four times sharper than yours. To them it is not loud. It is physically overwhelming.
So when you wrap their body and their ears are still wide open, you have calmed one half of them while the other half is still under attack.
That is the piece almost every product on the market misses.
Tick every one you have seen.
If you ticked three or more, your dog is not "a bit nervous." They are in genuine distress, and what comes next explains why everything you have tried so far only ever worked halfway.
The first dog anxiety garment designed around the truth that panic is two problems, not one. Calming body compression and a soft, built-in ear hood, working together in one piece your dog wears like a second skin.
Body and ears. Covered at the same time, by the same garment, for the first time.
Not just the body, like a vest. Not just the ears, like an ear cover. Treating only one half is exactly why everything you tried before only ever worked halfway.
Two halves of the panic, closed by one wrap.
Gentle full-body compression
The Wrap hugs your dog's torso with the same steady pressure Temple Grandin's research is built on. It tells their nervous system, physically, that they are safe and held.
A built-in ear hood
A soft, stretchy snood folds up over their ears and softens the sharp edge of every boom and bang. No more leaving the loudest half of their panic untreated. When the noise passes, it folds right back down.
Two modes, one garment
Everyday mode for car rides, vet visits and general nerves, with the hood down. Full soothing mode for storms and fireworks, with the hood up. One Wrap covers the calm afternoon and the worst night of the year.
Drug-free
No pills. No grogginess. No waiting for something to kick in. You put it on, and the calming starts the moment the pressure does.
Thousands of calmer nights, and counting.
ok, but just look at these faces.
every single one of them is wearing the Wrap.
The next storm is coming. This time, cover both halves of it.
Tell us your dog's size and we'll take you straight to the right fit.
Fill in both to find your dog's size.
- Free shipping on every order
- 30-day returns, free size exchange
- The only wrap built to close both pathways at once
One wrap. The first one built to cover both.