Archive for February, 2010
The Pro and Cons of Feeding Bones
Feeding Bones – Should you or shouldn’t you?
Should you be feeding bones to your pet? How many and how often? Are there some reasons they shouldn’t be fed? Are there types of bones that shouldn’t be fed? Are there some dogs that shouldn’t have bones?
Bones are a great way to occupy your dog, give your dog a snack and help his teeth stay clean and tartar free. Raw bones of varying sizes are appropriate for nearly all dogs including those with few teeth! Raw beef bones come in a variety of sizes and types and one is bound to be perfect for your dog.
You can overdo bones in your dog’s diet. Some dogs are more sensitive than others so too much marrow as is found in beef marrow bones can cause havoc with their digestive system. Try only giving the bone for a limited time to help this. Other dogs get constipated if given too many edible beef bones so feed them according to your dog’s individual needs.
Puppies have little teeth and little mouths, giving them large recreational bones such as marrows and knuckle bones can be a little too much for those tiny teeth. Try rib bones or neck bones rather than the more dense inedible recreational ones. Time enough for those when they are older! If your dog is older and has lost a few teeth the same rule applies. Recreational bones can be a little hard for touch chewers causing chips or breakage. If you have a heavy dedicated chewer, stay away from recreational bones and feed the softer more edible ribs, necks and other edible bones.
Most all bones are appropriate for dogs but feed size appropriate – if your dog could swallow that bone whole its too small for him to be left with. Make sure the bones you feed fit your dog’s chewing ability as well as mouth size such as mini marrow bones for small dogs and regular marrow bones and huge bones for larger dogs.
Many beef bones are a great way to give your dog a snack on fast days. If you choose to fast your dog, why not throw him a bone to entertain him and give him some satisfaction.
Raw meaty bones are generally things like chicken backs, necks, turkey necks, chicken leg quarters and the like. These raw meaty bones are meals in and of themselves due to the nice balance of meat and bone. Beef bones, while fun and great for your dog, are often not covered with enough meat to make a good meal. Either add meat or try beef neck bones which a usually well covered and can ultimately make a great whole meal for your dog!
Why does my dog need probiotics?
An abundance of beneficial bacteria in a dog’s gut can help improve digestion, stop diarrhea, improve skin conditions, bolster the immune system and get rid of bad breath and gas. A quality probiotic will cause the beneficial bacteria to multiply dramatically to provide and maintain long term health benefits.
What are probiotics?
Probiotics are live microorganisms (in most cases, bacteria) that are similar to beneficial microorganisms found in the human gut. They are also called “friendly bacteria” or “good bacteria.” Probiotics can help to restore balance in the digestive system.
What can disrupt your dog’s digestion?
Antibiotic use, vaccine use, steroid use, pharmaceutical use, radiation therapy, stress, fear, processed foods, surgery, disease, and transport to name a few.
Probiotics can provide billions of colony forming units of good bacteria daily. Yogurt can help on a small basis but a good probiotic (like Dogzymes) provides the equivalent of 80 cups of yogurt in one dose.
What can beneficial bacteria do?
It can push out the bad bacteria. It can restore a healthy balance, counteract antibiotic damage, stimulate digestion, improve nutrient absorption, regulate vitamin absorption, support natural disease resistance, support the immune system, treat some infections, eliminate bad breath, stop diarrhea, improve skin and coat condition, stop gas and lower the chance of bloat.
A good probiotic is key to your pet’s good health and longevity.
The newest additions to our product line, the probiotics Dogzymes Canine Paste and Dogzymes Digestive Enhancer, provide a unique blend of naturally occurring digestive bacteria and enzymes with natural amino acids. We have acquired these products to replace our Fastrack products because we feel that they are superior. Fastrack has been our go-to probiotic for ten years and we are delighted to find something even better.
The Daycare Snow Maze

In October, Ohio has their corn mazes but in February we have snow mazes.

Here come the dogs. Chiquita (the shortest one of them all) and Gracie lead the way.
When Amy got to Daycare after 15 inches of snow over the weekend, she realized some of her customers might not be able to navigate the snow mass. So she decided to make them a maze to get their play started.

Here comes Rudy! This is fun.

Lola says, "Come on Gracie, I'll show you how to get out."

Gracie loves this stuff. She wants 12 or so more inches.
