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The Bananana posted:So, puppy health question. - Listen to your breeder, they know more about dogs than you do - Talk to your vet I am not taking the blame if you let your puppy outside and they get sick.
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# ? Apr 19, 2020 15:57 |
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 18:38 |
StrixNebulosa posted:- Listen to your breeder, they know more about dogs than you do Yeah this. Would you be asking the same if dealing with an infant and their shots if the advice was the same? You've taken on a puppy, you're effectively a parent.
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# ? Apr 19, 2020 16:37 |
Parvo can live in the soil for a year. I think that's the main concern.
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# ? Apr 19, 2020 20:15 |
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This is a super controversial subject. Some people (behaviorists among them) say that trying to keep puppies in a bubble messes with their development. If you have potentially several thousand dollars to spend on parvo treatment they mostly won't die nowadays but I think something like 10% still do with treatment. Just make an informed decision on it. My personal opinion is it's probably not worth the risk of exposure but you will find some people who disagree. Here's some info about how parvovirus stays in the environment (written by a vet) https://veterinarypartner.vin.com/default.aspx?pid=19239&id=4951459
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# ? Apr 19, 2020 22:48 |
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DeceasedHorse posted:About a month ago, my wife and I recently adopted a young dog from a local shelter, and while he is generally well-behaved and a joy to have, he has become much less affectionate with my wife over the past two weeks or so. Honestly I think some dogs are just gonna like one gender more than the other, or one person more than the other. I don't know how much it can really change. It might be a personality trait. "My" dog is much more bonded to my boyfriend than me, he spends more time with him so I think that's part of it but some of it I think is my boyfriend having some kinda bromance with him. Now I'm getting the itch to get another dog. My dog looooves other dogs of all sizes and has a ton of energy which is a bit exhausting for my boyfriend, who he dotes on and hangs by all the time. I'm hoping getting another doggy might help him not be so obsessed with him. I think I'll try to find an adult dog.
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# ? Apr 19, 2020 23:13 |
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The dog my wife got for herself loves me more and she’s super salty about it. I don’t do anything special, sometimes dogs just like certain people more.
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# ? Apr 19, 2020 23:33 |
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rump buttman posted:I’m seeking advice. My parents have a one year old Australian Shepard. This is their 8th Australian Shepard and first time this kind of issue has ever came up. My parents got him neutered about six months ago. Shortly after, he got an infection at the site and was in pain. Some topical and swollowed antibiotics cleared up the issue. You could see about getting this done with a vet under sedation, or even just getting a sedating med like trazodone or gabapentin to try first. I would still use a muzzle if you do this because they can still be reactive. The other side of things is training them to very slowly tolerate more and more stimulation to that area. It sounds awkward but if you can desensitize them to it without actually going through with grooming, like just touching the area, they won't be as fearful that it's going to hurt as they realize that it doesn't hurt anymore. These type of associations can be tough to break and it may just come down to heavily sedating every time it needs to be done. Good on you for not wanting to hold him down and traumatize him more, it will just make it harder the next time if you do this anyway. TooMuchAbstraction posted:Groomers aren't going to be able to deal with a reactive/guarding dog any better than you can. If what you're asking is "do I bite the bullet and get the dog groomed despite the guarding"...that's a tricky question and really comes down to how likely the dog is to develop other health issues due to lack of grooming. If you do decide to get the dog groomed, though, I would strongly recommend tranquilizing the dog before grooming though. My (admittedly uninformed) opinion is that the stress from grooming while conscious and restrained, plus the potential regression on desensitizing, is worse than the physiological stress from being doped. But 100% talk to your vet first. Boxman posted:Here's one for the dog psychiatrists in the thread - our dog used to get the zoomies...pretty frequently. Once every couple days, just doing laps around the house. She was pretty young, nbd. This has slowly faded away, except when we give her baths or wash her paws after coming in from the rain. She reliably loses her poo poo completely. My dog does this, I think they are just trying to dry off! Maybe it does have to do with stress too. Holy crap congrats what a cutie!!
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# ? Apr 19, 2020 23:34 |
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Dixville posted:My dog does this, I think they are just trying to dry off! Maybe it does have to do with stress too. Some trainers think it does have to do with stress/excess energy from stress and it's their way of burning it off. Our dog sometimes gets zoomies after the bath depending on time of day, usually earlier in the day and he will but at night he is (generally) more calm after the bath. Dixville posted:Honestly I think some dogs are just gonna like one gender more than the other, or one person more than the other. I don't know how much it can really change. It might be a personality trait. "My" dog is much more bonded to my boyfriend than me, he spends more time with him so I think that's part of it but some of it I think is my boyfriend having some kinda bromance with him. Yeah, some dogs (just like people) are just going to like one person more than another, my wife really really wanted a dog, I did too but I wanted to wait longer, we got our pup and he became my dog.
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# ? Apr 20, 2020 02:27 |
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Asking my vet, but seeing what y'all think too. Hello, We were looking for something to aid in establishing and settling our 8 week old puppy for overnight. We have been trying to establish the behavioral piece, but the people at Petco recommend NaturVet quiet moments Calming Aid. It says 1 chew for 26 Lb dog, for use in dogs 12 weeks old and up. Ingredients are chamomile, Melatonin, thiamine Mononitrate, passion flower, Ginger, and L-Tryptophan. Would it be ok to administer a 3rd of a chew to our pup in the evening?
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# ? Apr 21, 2020 19:44 |
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I would really avoid medicating a puppy for being a puppy. Its 8 weeks old, it's going to be hell for you. Just work through it consistently.
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# ? Apr 21, 2020 21:40 |
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Yeah, it's mostly like just being a puppy. Why do you want to medicate?
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# ? Apr 22, 2020 00:06 |
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Yeah you got sold by the pet store crew. Do you have neighbors that will be bothered by a whining puppy? If not, throw the chews in the trash where they belong and just tough it out. Puppies are 6 months of hell (with lots of fun too) followed by 10-15 years of awesome. You gotta come to terms with the fact that you’re going to lose some sleep for the next few months.
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# ? Apr 22, 2020 00:27 |
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For what it’s worth I adopted a then 8 week old puppy 2 weeks ago. He’s quiet all night now. So quiet I don’t even hear him get up and poo poo on the potty pad, but at least he knows to go there.
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# ? Apr 22, 2020 01:31 |
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I like this info about crate training https://veterinarypartner.vin.com/default.aspx?pid=19239&id=8569058 It is a little odd they say not to use that supplement under 12 weeks, maybe that was the age they tested it in. You could always hang onto it in case it's needed for something like a mild fireworks phobia or something. I've used trazodone a few times in my german shepherd mix puppy but not before like 6 months. Just to get him to sleep when he's being wild or harrassing the cat or something. I guess it's not ideal to drug puppies and this is probably something you'll just have to get through, but, sometimes you just need them to sleep. Benadryl might work for this in some dogs, didn't work for mine. Dosing is a milligram per pound and it's generally pretty safe but ask your vet first (some meds might interact with it). I wouldn't try it in a 8 week old though, but when they get older.
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# ? Apr 22, 2020 01:43 |
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My pup has a few pills she has to take at night, and I've taught her that when I say "DO YOU WANT TO DO DRUGS?" she's about to get a piece of cheese so she goes ballistic with happiness. Please don't call dog child protective services on me.
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# ? Apr 22, 2020 01:52 |
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Medullah posted:My pup has a few pills she has to take at night, and I've taught her that when I say "DO YOU WANT TO DO DRUGS?" she's about to get a piece of cheese so she goes ballistic with happiness. This rules actually
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# ? Apr 22, 2020 02:22 |
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Omg I am tired. More pics https://imgur.com/gallery/C0n4qhB
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# ? Apr 22, 2020 03:24 |
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Does anybody have a dog who was diagnosed with IVDD? I'd love to hear some anecdotes. The internet is full of fully paralyzed dogs in wheelchairs which scares me. There have to be minor cases of it too, right? 10yo normal-weight beagle, had trouble walking and was obviously in pain last Thursday. A quick trip to the vet and he had bloodwork and XRays done, but they didn't see anything concerning so they prescribed tramadol and sent us home. Not much improvement until we got home from work Friday to see him in VERY obvious excruciating pain 5 minutes after the vet closed, so we went to the E-Vet. E-Vet asked to see the bloodwork and XRays, which they sent off to their radiologist, who diagnosed IVDD in the lumbar vertebrae. They also told me tramadol isn't very effective in dogs so stopped that and prescribed gabapentin, along with a muscle relaxer, NSAID, and anti-anxiety pills (optional/as needed). He cried through the night Friday but did okay Saturday. By Sunday through today he's been entirely back to normal, movement and energy-wise. We are keeping him from jumping up/down on furniture, and confining while we are at work and sleeping. When it's time to go potty he outright frolicks, he's so happy-go-lucky. I try to get him to stop doing that but I have no idea how! I'm cautiously optimistic but really don't know what to think. Additional info - he has been holding his tail oddly for about a month, and yelped in pain if I tried to lift it; no conclusive diagnosis other than a pain pill prescription back then, either. In hindsight it seems obviously connected. During the 21 day rest/confinement period we are re-thinking our living room setup to discourage jumping from the back of the couch to the floor (the fastest route to the back door), probably going to figure out a ramp or pet-stairs for the bed, too. He ignored the last one we tried... Maybe some sort of just big booster step, he might use... Damn Bananas fucked around with this message at 16:08 on Apr 22, 2020 |
# ? Apr 22, 2020 15:47 |
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Quick question: there is talk about my family inheriting an 8/9 week old sheepadoodle due to a death in the family. We already have a well behaved dog (2 years old), but my understanding is that you’re supposed to do introductions outside of the current dog’s territory, right? Between New Dog only having one parvo shot and the coronavirus skulking around I don’t want to go too far afield. We live near a pretty large plot of land that doesn’t see a lot of dogs, but it does have wild life that utilizes it (mainly the occasional deer). Would that be considered too risky? My current dog hardly ever goes on our front lawn, so I can use that in a pinch, but I don’t know if our pooch considers that “hers.” Also, is it necessary to have the pup sleep in the master bedroom (we have a kennel and some cage extensions) or would it be okay for it to sleep on another level of the house? If I should go for the master bedroom, when is a good age to start moving the dog out of it? I’m totally fine with her sleeping with me, since I’m sure it will be an anxious mess at first - but I want to eventually transition the pup out of my room. Thanks!
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# ? Apr 22, 2020 18:15 |
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I groomed my parents dog! It was an ordeal. He ended up chilling and let me clean him up real good. Going to brush out again the next sunny day. Glad that dude doesn’t have dingle berries, or the beginning of matting. Now I got to get him to chill enough for my old rear end parents to do it with ease
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# ? Apr 22, 2020 21:13 |
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I may have asked this earlier but it looks like it got missed. Our 3 months old german shepherd lab mix seems to have had a good start on crate training, but unfortunately the past couple of weeks seems to be worse now. While she's great overnight (no whining and she can actually hold from 11pm to 5am letting my partner and I stagger and not have to get up in the middle of the night), she is still really much having difficulty settling into the crate when we put her in to sleep during the day. The difficulty is that I know as a puppy she should be sleeping 18-20hrs a day, but when she's outside of her crate she won't stop and gets the zoomies and starts biting even more worse than she normally does (not just nipping too, she's full on chomped down on my arm and fingers and my hands look like I took razor blades to them). So, we've been trying to prioritize lots of sleep, so our schedule is mostly 5am wakeup to pee, back to bed (which she does fine in the morning), 6am wakeup again for food, playtime till 7:30-8am, back in the crate to sleep (unless she wakes up and whines, then we'll take her for potty breaks), then out of crate for noon playtime and lunch, then back to crate for afternoon nap till 4-5pm for one more play session, then back to crate at 6pm for most of the rest of the night. Is this too much crate time? If so, how do we get her to sleep outside of the crate? It's frustrating because I have to acknowledge that her being outside of the crate is mainly difficult because of how bad the biting gets when she hasn't slept, so I feel like we're the ones who are impatient. Also, at what point do we transition her to just try and get her to settledown on her doggy bed in the living room? I know she's a puppy so its difficult for her not to just want to run around, but should we be doing something to transition her to know how to sleep outside the crate?
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# ? Apr 23, 2020 02:56 |
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Oysters Autobio posted:I may have asked this earlier but it looks like it got missed. Way too much crate time. The biting and zoomies are clear signs of stifled energy. You’re focused too much on “puppies need x amount of sleep” rather than what your own dog is telling you. When you do see her settle on her dog bed on her own, praise/treat to let her know it’s a good place to be.
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# ? Apr 23, 2020 04:31 |
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DarkSoulsTantrum posted:Way too much crate time. The biting and zoomies are clear signs of stifled energy. You’re focused too much on “puppies need x amount of sleep” rather than what your own dog is telling you. Yeah we had interpreted the zoomies and biting as signs of her being over stimulated and tired, so thought we should be getting her more sleep, and thus more crate time. We've been working on getting her on her bed outside the crate and she'll go on command quite often now but just haven't been able to have her sleep or chill outside the crate with us, she just gets more and more hyper and bitey. So how does a regular schedule go then during the day? Is the puppy just only in the crate for short periods and we just let the puppy fall asleep on her own terms?
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# ? Apr 23, 2020 12:46 |
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I have an older dog with some health issues to the effect that I try to feed him as much as possible every day to keep his weight up. 3 or 4 meals per day, generally - really whenever he wants to eat. I may be adopting an 8-9 month old puppy next week and would prefer to keep him on the normal 2-meal-a-day standard. I'm wondering if anyone has advice on how to manage that - taking him for a walk when I'm feeding my older dog, giving him a Kong to work on or something... some way to distract him so he doesn't think he's getting unfair treatment.
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# ? Apr 23, 2020 17:53 |
My four month old puppy is sleeping in our room, but sleeps from about 10pm to 8am straight through. Then it’s up, breakfast, potty (twice to be totally empty), morning playtime. From about 10am until noon she chills on her bed in my office (closed door). From noon to about 1:30 she has lunch and outdoor and playtime. Then more quiet office time in her bed until 3 or 4. Then playtime, then dinner, then playtime again. Then naps (in her crate or otherwise) interspersed with playtime depending on tiredness or zoomy levels, until bedtime.
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# ? Apr 24, 2020 04:25 |
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cailleask posted:My four month old puppy is sleeping in our room, but sleeps from about 10pm to 8am straight through. Then it’s up, breakfast, potty (twice to be totally empty), morning playtime. From about 10am until noon she chills on her bed in my office (closed door). From noon to about 1:30 she has lunch and outdoor and playtime. Then more quiet office time in her bed until 3 or 4. Then playtime, then dinner, then playtime again. Then naps (in her crate or otherwise) interspersed with playtime depending on tiredness or zoomy levels, until bedtime. So this seems very similar to us but with crate time instead of office time, interspersed with backyard fetch and running around. So I'm confused with all the conflicting info out there. Should I be getting her to nap in her crate during the day or should I be somehow encouraging her to sleep on her bed next to me in the living room? The latter to us unfortunately seems almost impossible because as time goes on sitting there leashed or otherwise she's either then too focused on us, with even more harder biting and snapping, or she's running around chewing on furniture. The only way she'll just chill next to us is chewsticks but once it's done she's just back to the same. And on top of this we do have success getting her to nap and settle right after we put her in, especially her morning nap, but just some days she won't settle. Should we try a separate room for her naps instead? Worried this will make her even more anxious as while we cover her crate with a thin sheet, it's still in the living room and main space with everyone. Oysters Autobio fucked around with this message at 12:29 on Apr 24, 2020 |
# ? Apr 24, 2020 12:13 |
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It sounds like she needs more activity if she's still extremely active, I would honestly give her more activity time and see what that does, rather than continuing to do something that doesn't seem to be working.
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# ? Apr 24, 2020 12:47 |
I think one difference is that she’s sleeping on her bed next to me - sometimes she gets up and pokes around the office, or chews a toy. If she’s getting too wound up I can tell right away and just take her out to play regardless of where she is on the schedule. A hard 5 minutes running after a ball of playing tug after a potty usually burns out off enough until we get to a more ‘active’ time. I actually have a question too: despite all the toys and chewer things I’ve bought, her strong preference is for sticks. The vet shrugged about it - is there something less, uh, wood that I can get her? That will leave fewer wood shards all over my house? Like what about those lamb horns they have at our local pet store, or some of the other ‘harder’ chews? Nylabone was a strong miss.
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# ? Apr 24, 2020 17:22 |
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They have harder woodlike chews, I know our pet supplies plus carried them near the nylabones, nylabone also has harder versions that aren't the weird silicone, unless those were what you were talking about already.
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# ? Apr 24, 2020 18:05 |
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Antler? Our dog loves his and it doesn't really leave any debris.
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# ? Apr 24, 2020 21:51 |
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We had good success with rawhide imitation sticks (hard chew sticks that can be chewed on for a little bit). You're not supposed to leave them unattended with it as it does wear away to a small piece they could theoretically choke on (though typically my pup's been good about just wearing it away to nothing). Apparently actual rawhide isn't good for dogs but these are edible. The brand we use is called Earth First but I'm sure there's a bunch of these brands around. They offer puppy sizes and then s, m and l. Online says you should only let puppies chew on puppy 'rated' chews because their teeth aren't as strong. Unfortunately the full size lasts a lot longer (maybe hour plus of non stop chewing). The sticks I find last 30mn to 45 of focused chewing. So far it's the only way we can chill with the pup, otherwise she attacks us on the couch or just follows us around nipping at our feet. Back to my issue of play, we're trying now for a bit longer periods outside the crate and we'll see if there's a real difference in behavior. Lots of resources online seem to characterize lots of biting and zoomies from being overly tired not from being understimulated. So, we'll try both and see which theory holds true for ours. Hasn't been a lot of consistency though, for example today each time we put her in the crate for a forced nap she fell right asleep with no whining, while other days we'll play with her the same amount and then she just won't settle Oysters Autobio fucked around with this message at 22:57 on Apr 24, 2020 |
# ? Apr 24, 2020 22:55 |
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Sometimes it's the dog being overstimulated, sometimes they actually do have energy that needs to be burned off. I'd caution against absolutes. You really just have to get to know your dog, and be prepared to try different tactics if the ones you're currently using don't seem to be working.
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# ? Apr 24, 2020 23:04 |
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I would love to find something my dog enjoys chewing on. She'll work on a bone here and there but anything else is gone in minutes in the German Shepherd jaws of death. Someone recommended I try yak cheese sticks, and she loved them... For the 32 seconds it took her to demolish. Made all the funnier by the label on them "Long lasting chew!". This little glutton is getting fat as hell. Add her restricted movement due to heartworm treatment to her never ending appetite and it's a bit frustrating, but I don't mind too much. She should be able to move around a bit more in a few weeks and she was a rescue that was skeletal when I got her so she can be chubby for a bit. I have to hide all food and snacks because this thing has eaten - - Entire bag of hot dog buns - Entire bag of Costco treats - Loaf of bread GLUTTON
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# ? Apr 24, 2020 23:15 |
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MF_James posted:It sounds like she needs more activity if she's still extremely active, I would honestly give her more activity time and see what that does, rather than continuing to do something that doesn't seem to be working. Kind of piggybacking off this, but, can you over work the puppy? Like, a lot of what i read says that pups can hurt or stunt their growth and dev if you work them more than whats appropriate for their age. But then I also read, make sure you run em around so they get all there puppy energy out.
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# ? Apr 24, 2020 23:18 |
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Usually the “don’t overwork” stuff is referring to not trying to run a marathon with your puppy. Jogging or heavy hiking with a dog under a year old can gently caress with their developing joints and lead to problems later. Letting them just run around the backyard or play fetch until they’re tired or whatever is fine. E: Also are you doing any training activities? Brain work is super tiring and is also important for bonding and getting to know your dog. BAGS FLY AT NOON fucked around with this message at 23:44 on Apr 24, 2020 |
# ? Apr 24, 2020 23:41 |
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Medullah posted:I would love to find something my dog enjoys chewing on. She'll work on a bone here and there but anything else is gone in minutes in the German Shepherd jaws of death. Someone recommended I try yak cheese sticks, and she loved them... For the 32 seconds it took her to demolish. Made all the funnier by the label on them "Long lasting chew!". These: https://www.chewy.com/premium-pork-...jRoCorQQAvD_BwE Not these: https://www.chewy.com/premium-nutri...shoCEfkQAvD_BwE My shepard also is a master of finding treats hidden on counters so they all have to be hidden away in cupboards. She also figured out how to unscrew the lid to a peanut butter jar to lick up about a quarter of a 40 oz jar Stravag fucked around with this message at 23:51 on Apr 24, 2020 |
# ? Apr 24, 2020 23:48 |
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Stravag posted:My dutch shepard crunches cow knuckle slices and other bones to eat them but i get her these rawhide replacement called pork chomps. They last her a long while like 30+ minutes some days. But i actually get the pork chomps and not nutri chomps. She just crunches the nutri chomps because they dont have the give to them i think? Too brittle? Thanks. Hahaha yeah I forgot to add the peanut butter jar, she did the same exact thing. It was hilarious, there wasn't too much left to begin with but you could see exactly how far into the bottle her tongue would reach. Spotless clean until it reached that point.
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 00:07 |
Thanks! Yeah she doesn’t seem to like any nylabone, either soft or hard. I’ll try antler some some of those chews! This afternoon’s backyard adventure definitely wore this puppy out. Hopefully we will have another hour or so of napping before dinner!
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 01:03 |
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cailleask posted:Thanks! Yeah she doesn’t seem to like any nylabone, either soft or hard. I’ll try antler some some of those chews! Those paws! She’s gonna be a big girl
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 01:17 |
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 18:38 |
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DarkSoulsTantrum posted:Usually the “don’t overwork” stuff is referring to not trying to run a marathon with your puppy. Jogging or heavy hiking with a dog under a year old can gently caress with their developing joints and lead to problems later. Letting them just run around the backyard or play fetch until they’re tired or whatever is fine. Trying to teach her stuff everyday. Today, a milestone: she went to the door, and started whining to be let out, so she could poop. I was.. Overjoyed.
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 01:24 |