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Stoney

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Posts posted by Stoney

  1. They look like they have a 'head' to them ... have you tried gently squeezing them? Both Beans & Stoney have had them before and 9 / 10 times they have 'something' nasty in them. I've even heard of them getting grass seed stuck under their skin which causes a cyst like bump to form.

    I don't think she would let me try to squeeze them, it was all I could do to just separate the toes enough to get the pics!

    When Beans and Stoney had them, did they have to have the vet remove whatever it was?

     

    No, my boys were VERY laid back and allowed me to pretty much do ANYTHING to them. If she won't let you get at them, don't mess with them more than you have to and/or take her to the vet.

  2. They look like they have a 'head' to them ... have you tried gently squeezing them? Both Beans & Stoney have had them before and 9 / 10 times they have 'something' nasty in them. I've even heard of them getting grass seed stuck under their skin which causes a cyst like bump to form.

  3. it takes 2 weeks for a cut paw to heal, w/ or w/o stitches. some dogs are just a pita when it comes to keeping a foot bandaged, some not. if you don't want to muzzle try a bite-not collar, she shouldn't be able to turn her head to bite the bandage and eat it off. do contact your vet, most likely since the stitches were in for a while the pad has started to heal and it will now just heal on it's own. as to bag balm, i never use the stuff. the cut needs to dry out and stick together, the bag balm prevents that. it's also not an antibiotic ointment. i treat a cut w/ saline irrigation then one glob of triple antibiotic ointment and cotton between the toes then wrapping w/ gauze, then vet tape(elasticon sp). i have an old mitten that i put over the bandage which is reinforced w/ my all time favorite- duct tape. it works as well as a therapaw since you can fit a bandaged paw into it.felis is crazy and eats all bandages, as long as it clots and starts to scab i'm happy, but pads do need protection. try the mitten or a shortied athletic sock, that works well and enjoy making a duct tape bootie. that stuff is hard to nibble thru.

     

    We use baby socks here, small like their feet, relatively tight so you don't have all that excess material taunting them to chew.

  4. Dave - our new boy - loves to chew on ANYTHING plastic. Most frequently it's Sarah's toys that take the brunt of the chewing. If he was chewing on anything else I would use bitter apple on it, but since Sarah puts the toys in her mouth & rubs her eyes etc I don't think that's exactly safe.

     

    Aside from cleaning up ALL THE TIME - do you guys have any suggestions on keeping him from chewing the plastic toys & non toys (today I caught him with the Roku remote...)?

  5. Beans has decided he loves poopcicles too. Not sure if it's the stressful household changes that are triggering it (baby, move, etc) or not, but it's pretty gross. Though, the eating isn't nearly as bad as the puke that sometimes follows - that's just WRONG!

     

    There's some sort of pill you can give them to make the poop taste bad to them - I forget what it's called though. It can be $$ if you have more than 1 dog b/c you have to give it to both so the poop eater doesn't eat the other ones' poo too.

  6. It's funny that this came up now! At the Greyhounds Only reunion this weekend I noticed that a LOT of their dogs had jagged rib ends - more than any of the dogs at REGAP. I'm wondering if it's a genetic trait? Most of the REGAP dogs are GreyMeadows dogs...don't know about the GO dogs.

  7. My boy Stoney does this every so often - it's usually nothing - but I think you're doing the right thing taking Chase to the vet, especially since Chase is a 'food hound'.

     

    Any other changes in her routine? Bowels (diarrhea or constipation)? Drinking more or less? Sleeping more or less ( :lol I know)?

     

    Perhaps fasting her for a day would be a good thing or even trying a bland diet?

     

    I feel like I'm grasping at straws here , sorry :(.

  8. I am wondering if well enough is best left alone. I would be afraid to bother it if it isn't painful.I don't know. What do others think :dunno

    Probably - but I'm prone to picking at things ( :rolleyes: my poor poor husband!) and well, it came off without a whimper or even a flinch from my drama king boy. I'm certainly not going after the ones on his other toes. And, unless they start visibly hurting him, I'll not treat them either. My vet is very 'hands off' and doesn't believe in a lot of treatments that aren't going to benefit the dog.

  9. Looked at Stoney's paws this evening and saw this:

     

    CIMG5169.jpg

     

    Is that a corn? Is it possible to have corns but not limp/be lame? He doesn't seem to have any pain... Plus, I was able to pull of the bigger of the round things without him complaining at all (didn't even flinch - barely woke up).

     

    Thanks a lot!

  10. So I don't know what you decided, but I can tell you that this happens in our house SO frequently, that we no longer even worry about a vet visit. Plus, our vet said that 90% of the time it's pointless to suture it because the skin is so thin it doesn't hold stitches well.

     

    Here's how we handle it... clean it well with saline or bandaid wash, dry it, smear in some Neosporin, put a small no stick gauze pad between the back of the toes and the main pad, then wrap with rolled gauze, tape. Finally, slap a baby sock over the whole mess and leave it for a day-ish (cover it w/ a plastic bag when they go out). Every so often, unwrap, clean and re bandage. After a few days, we leave the bandage off, and just tape a baby sock over the foot to keep it clean. They seem to heal after about a week or so.

  11. My Mom's sweet kitty Rina was diagnosed with Mammary cancer about three weeks ago. The tumors were so sudden to appear, and so quick to get beyond the 'operable' state that my parents opted to just keep her comfy. Two days ago one of the larger tumors exploded (literally) and Rina was quietly put to sleep.

     

    She was only 3 or 4 years old and lived with my parents for a little less than one year. She was an absolute sweetheart, even when she was howling and displaying as though she was in heat.

     

    CIMG2960-1.jpg

  12. Beans has the same problem - and he's had it for about a week now. He'll be heading to the vet Monday. Question, is Anglers' kind of mucosy and stringy? Beans' was this morning (we're at my parents so he's leashed walked and I'm very aware of the consistency) and I'm a little concerned because it persists despite immodium and a bland diet.

     

    Hope Angler feels better soon.

  13. We tried all the non Rx methods on Stoney.

     

    Melatonin - didn't do anything to him

    'Happy Traveler' - ditto

    Rescue Remedy - same thing

    Lavender oil and pressure point massage - HA!

    Tight fitting shirts/clothing - made him look funny but didn't help

    Rubbing w/ a bounce sheet - made him smell good - but didn't help

    Canine Lullabies CD - made us sleepy - but didn't do anything for the dog

    Confined spaces (closet, bathroom, crate) - just made him nervous

     

    Then we tried Xanax - which didn't do much even when we gave him the max dosage.

     

    Finally we hit on Valium. 30mg about 30 min before the storm hits is best. Even if we don't know about the storm 30 min in advance we can give it to him and it really calms him down. The best part is that it doesn't make him a zombie dog. He does get really relaxed and lays around looking stoned - but he's still his normal 'Stoney' self.

     

    Sometimes the fear and anxiety are too much for the natural/non Rx methods to work.

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