Thursday, February 15, 2018

Nearly a New Year’s Ball Drop

A few weeks ago a young man walked into our Tampa office asking to ship his pet from Tampa to Dubai via Paris the next day with a Monday arrival. Well that Monday happened to be New Year’s Day. No way, Jose!


He’d worked on this move for months on his own without realizing that on worldwide holidays passenger airline connections can be undependable. Airlines also often cancel or limit live animal shipments during busy holiday travel times. Our international pet move manager explained everything. With Air Animal’s help, our new client traveled to the UAE as scheduled. His pet stayed with a friend in Tampa and boarded a flight from Tampa to Dubai connecting through Frankfurt the following week. Do it yourself snafu solved.

Our pet movers know the drill. They keep track of holidays, regulations, local customs and details so you don’t have to. Pet Moving Made Easy®. It’s our passion, our focus and your peace of mind.

Photo courtesy of Lufthansa

Monday, February 5, 2018

Woolf Featured in Pet Care Pro Quarterly

It's great receiving recognition as, "The Man Who Makes Dogs Fly." from Pet Care Pro Quarterly, published by the International Boarding & Pet Services Association.

Dr. Woolf shares the power of saying yes, knowing your purpose and mining the data. Being at the right place, at the right time and having the right attitude helps, too.

<READ THE ARTICLE> beginning on page 8.


Air Animal EVP Named to Tennessee Relocation Board

Andrea Woolf Parker, executive vice president of Air Animal Inc., has been elected to the board of the Tennessee Relocation Council where she will oversee sponsorships.


Andi works closely with Air Animal’s corporate relocation clients, and is a graduate of the University of Florida. She is a past president of the Southeastern Regional Relocation Council. Air Animal serves pet parents moving across the U.S. or around the world and provides U.S. Customs clearance for pets entering the U.S. through any major gateway. Learn more about Andi.

Delta, Others Change Emotional Support Animal Rules

Delta, United and American airlines are implementing new rules for emotional-support animals.

Delta's policy 
United's policy
American's policy

The airlines and passengers complain poorly training and uncertified support animals increasingly disrupt flights. The animals misbehave, wander the cabin, defecate and sometimes bite passengers.

On Delta, passengers must provide a veterinary health form or vaccination record for either both service and emotional support animals. For comfort animals and psychiatric-service animals, passengers must also provide:

  • A letter signed by a doctor or licensed mental-health professional stating the passenger’s need for the animal.
  • A signed letter stating the animal is trained to behave without a kennel.


“This new policy is our first step in better protecting those who fly with Delta with a more thoughtful screening process,” said John Laughter, Delta’s senior vice president for corporate safety, security and compliance.