fbp

Cicadas, Climate, and Canine Curiosity: What This Year’s Swarm Means for Vets

Grab your otoscopes and your bug spray, folks – 2025 is giving us a double brood of cicadas, and the dogs are very excited about it.

Two different broods of cicadas are expected to emerge simultaneously this year, covering much of the Midwest and South in a crunchy carpet of insect protein. While entomologists are thrilled, pet parents (and their local veterinary clinics) are left scratching their heads – and possibly dodging vomiting dogs.

What’s the Big Buzz?

Literally? It’s about 90 decibels (the average decibel level for a rock concert is 90-120 decibels). But biologically speaking, cicadas are harmless, fascinating, and…absolutely irresistible to curious canines and opportunistic omnivores. The double brood emergence is a rare phenomenon and an exciting ecological event, but it brings some unintended consequences for pets.

Dogs and Cicada Snacks: A Gastroenteritis Delight

While cicadas aren’t toxic, they’re essentially nature’s crunchy tacos – high in chitin and fiber but hard to digest in bulk. Cue the flood of calls from dog owners reporting vomiting, diarrhea, or that their Labrador has developed an addiction to backyard “barkuterie.”

What to tell Clients:

  • Cicadas are safe in small amounts, but not a dietary staple.
  • Monitor for vomiting, diarrhea, or lethargy.
  • Try distracting your dog with actual food (radical, I know).
  • Don’t panic – just call the vet’s office (that’s you!).

What Vets Need to Watch For:

  • GI Upsets: Most common, self-limiting, but can escalate.
  • Obstructions: Less common, but worth a radiograph if ingestion was excessive.
  • Allergic Reactions: Rare, but a possibility, especially in sensitive dogs.
  • Insecticide Exposure: Some homeowners go pesticide-happy – check for toxicosis signs if ingestion history is unclear.

 

A Teachable Moment

Turn this into an opportunity! This is a great time for clinics to educate clients about safe outdoor behavior, the importance of monitoring what pets eat, and maybe slip in a gentle reminder about flea/tick prevention.

Also, if anyone on staff has entomophobia (fear of insects)…maybe they work inside for the next few weeks.

 

Final Thoughts

We spend so much time dealing with emergencies, burnout, and the unglamorous reality of veterinary medicine that it’s easy to forget we’re living in a world full of weird and wonderful biology. Double cicada broods are a reminder that nature doesn’t do boring – and neither do we.

Stay safe, stay curious, and for the love of all that is holy, tell your clients not to make cicada jerky. Yes, that’s a real thing…unfortunately.

When Burnout Meets Short Staffing: How it Impacts Clinic Performance

When Burnout Meets Short Staffing: How it Impacts Clinic PerformanceThis isn’t about people failing. It’s about systems under strain.  Vet med is no stranger to being busy. But there’s a difference between a busy clinic and a clinic that is running on empty. When...

Things I Say to Cats That Make Me Sound Like a Creepy Old Man

Things I Say to Cats That Make Me Sound Like a Creepy Old ManAn ongoing investigation into my own behavior. There’s a very specific version of me that only exists around cats. That version: Speaks in a tone I do not use anywhere else Says things that cannot be...

Things Practice Managers Secretly Think During Meetings

Things Practice Managers Secretly Think During MeetingsStaff meetings in vet med are meant to be productive, collaborative, and informative.And they are.But they are also…an experience. Because while practice managers are leading discussions, reviewing updates, and...

Managing Difficult Employees in Veterinary Clinics: A Practical Guide for Practice Managers

Managing Difficult Employees in Veterinary Clinics: A Practical Guide for Practice ManagersIf you’re a veterinary practice manager long enough, you will eventually encounter a difficult employee. It may be someone who: Resists feedback Disrupts team dynamics...

Patients Who Believe They Are Human: A Veterinary Field Guide

Patients Who Believe They Are Human: A Veterinary Field GuideEvery vet clinic sees them... The pets who have somehow decided - through a combination of confidence, poor boundaries, and enthusiastic owners - that they are not animals at all.  They are people. These...

The Business Case for Investing in Support Staff (And Why Outside Support Makes Sense)

The Business Case for Investing in Support Staff (And Why Outside Support Makes Sense)Veterinary clinics don’t struggle because their teams aren’t working hard enough.They struggle because demand has outgrown capacity. Phones don’t stop ringing. Schedules stay...

What High-Retention Veterinary Clinics Do Differently

What High-Retention Veterinary Clinics Do DifferentlyStaff retention is one of the biggest challenges in vet med. Clinics everywhere are feeling the impact of burnout, staff shortages, and turnover that disrupts culture, workflow, and patient care.  Yet some clinics...

“Just One More” Appointment: How Tiny Yeses Break Clinics

“Just One More” Appointment: How Tiny Yeses Break ClinicsIt starts innocently enough.  “Can we just squeeze one more in?”“It’ll be quick.”“They’re already here.”“We don’t want to upset them.” One extra appointment doesn’t feel like a big deal. In isolation, it isn’t…...

Dental Month in Vet Med: The Season of Scaling Teeth and Managing Expectations

Dental Month in Vet Med: The Season of Scaling Teeth and Managing ExpectationsDental Month hits veterinary clinics every year like clockwork. The promos go out, the schedules fill up, and suddenly half the clinic is running on dental charts, extractions, and the faint...

The Difference Between a Busy Clinic and a Broken One

The Difference Between a Busy Clinic and a Broken OneVet clinics are busy by nature. High demand, emotional cases, packed schedules, and limited staffing are part of the profession.  But there’s an important distinction that often gets overlooked:Busy does not...

Keys to Success

The Best Call Answering Services utilize documented keys to success. Vet Receptionists starts with the answer. We then solve the callers issues and follow-up with success. How would you like your phones to be answered? Vet Receptionists offers customized answering...

Business Coaching 101

Have you ever received a business gift from someone?  Something like a book or audio or even a link to a video that promises to bring massive business success?  I have received a lot of these and am forever grateful that people think of me when they see, hear or read...

How can I get my phone answered?

You have a successful business.  But all of this growth and success has cost you some momentum.  You now do not have the time to answer your phone.  Some days you have a rough time getting to all of your email.What is a business owner to do?One great option is to...

Why Your Cell Phone will Kill Your Business

Do you remember business before cell phones?  Not that long ago, it was common to see some business people with HUGE cell phones.  They didn’t even call them cell phones.  They were bag phones or car phones or Motorolas.  Bringing it to the cell phone nomenclature is...

How to be an Outstanding Receptionist

Anyone can be a receptionist, but it takes special kind of personality and breed to be an OUTSTANDING RECEPTIONIST.  Becoming an OUTSTANDING RECEPTIONIST takes a lot of hard work and experience which will develop over time.  What are the most important...

10 Signs You’re a Dedicated Receptionist

If you’ve ever doubted your excellency, see if you can par 10 for 10 of these signs that you are indeed a dedicated receptionist! You speed-pee because missing a call feels equivalent to ramming a toe into a steel door.You get 45 minutes of lunch instead of 60 because...

Veterinary Answering Services
You were not leaving your cart just like that, right?

Almost set!

Enter your best email to get assigned a lead to your new account right away.