magnumlady wrote: » Maybe they are raw ones.....thank you. I will throw this one away.
cocker5 wrote: » Raw bones are fine.. my guy has his bones for weeks in the garden... they are especially tastey when they are fermented in the soil....and covered in worms - i know he's rotten... i try and wash them off he goes mad
Tryst wrote: » DON'T FEED YOUR DOG BONES PLEASE!!! If I had a euro for every dog that came into us with constipation or vomiting or some other problem related to feeding them bones I would be a very wealthy woman. Bone is indigestible they get nothing from it apart from something to chew, give them rawhide stuff instead. It doesn't last as long but its digestible. Giving a dog blocked with bone an enema is awful and its agony for them afterwards too, plus there is always the bill afterwards to think of too. You run the risk of giving them megacolon if they get blocked often enough too...And chicken bones are the worst they shatter into shards not great for all that soft tissue that the oesophagus is made from...Great for cleaning teeth...give them dried food if you want their teeth to be cleaned or get a toothbrush and clean them yourself, outside only inside is cleaned by the way the teeth are lined up, you can get flavoured toothpastes.
Tryst wrote: » In the wild dogs crack the bones to eat the marrow inside they don't eat the entire carcass. Either he misunderstood the vet or the vet was repeating what he learned in college as I am right now, so either all those generations of vets are wrong or it is better for dogs not to eat bone...And dogs are domesticated animals, have been for a while now so comparing them to a wild animal is pointless. A lot of wild carnivores also die from having bones stuck in their throats or somewhere in their digestive tracts. It's a risk not a gaurantee and having dealt with a ridiculous number of patients who have come in with problems relating to having eaten bone why feed it to them when there are plenty of safer alternatives? But of course your experience with your dogs is the be all and end all when it comes to these things, I am obviously in the wrong...I only have many many cases to draw my experience from... Any kind of food is not good for dogs in large quatities. The dried food should be measured out and fed to the weight of the animal in two daily allowances, it means it's easier to keep an eye on how calories the dog/cat is taking in and helps reduce the incidents of obesity. So when fed to an animal correctly there is no problem with dried food, but if you are just going to give them the bag and say have at it then yes there would be an issue. Dried food is better value than wet also as it's not 60-70% water...so you can feed them less ( you'd need to feed many tins/pouches of wet food to give them the same caloric value) and they get the same nutritional value out of it.