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Hubcitypam

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  1. Having lived with a dog with corns on all four feet I will tell you do NOT do surgery.  It costs an arm and a leg and they come right back.  The only thing that fixed Rex O'Million was duct tape.  Google it.  It has to be name brand not dollar store variety.

     

  2. Yes it is.  Many greys are universal donors with the added bonus of being gentle.  You just have to be strong when they pull it from the neck.  There was quite an uproar  in  Austin a few years ago.  Google Pet Blood Bank.  That is way different than donating via your vet.  I remember onne case where they brought the greyhound in and did a direct transfusion. 

     

  3. I am with Irene.  Over the years I used mine for many uses like blocking off doors.  If you set it up as stand alone maybe we had great success anchoring it to the door hinges with bungees cords so it wouldn't skitter or get knocked over.  MUCH better than a crate or stacked  but I usually had the crate with the door open and bedding in it  in the gated off room (kitchen).  It is a 4 ft.

  4. I'm guessing you can't put in a dog door which is on my list of top ten inventions ever.  I'm with Jan on that count.

    Pre dog door and when I'd foster up to 6 at a time they'd go oit in the yard we'd go out morning mid day and before bed.  The all knew "go potty" and last call was "go potty .go to bed". When I lived in an apartment inn Chicago and worked 10 hour days I paid a neighbor teen $3 a day to walk Axel mid shift.  Three times a day should be good.

  5. As always my view on jammies is unpopular.  With an inside dog in a heated house the please the owner more than the dog.

    Your dog was probably raised in Oklahoma or Kansas in an outside run with a baby pool in the summer and a communal dog house filled with straw in the winter. He grew, thrived and did just fine in snow and 100 degree heat. Then he's adopted and turns into a fashion model and glass figurine that needs jammies in a heated house

     

    "I roamed free the deserts and hills in the time before Christ.

    Where were my jammies then?
    I waited 20 long years for my master to return from his Odyssey.
    Where were my jammies then?
    I followed Caesar when he conquered cold, wet Gaul.
    Where were my jammies then?
    I hunted bear, bull, stag and men for my lord in the manor.
    Where were my jammies then?
    I was the first of my kind to see the Pacific Ocean.
    Where were my jammies then?
    I saw Yellow Hair meet his end at the Little Big Horn.
    Where were my jammies then?
    I chased Coyote and Jack Rabbit across the rolling Great Plains.
    Where were my jammies then?
    I snuggled in straw through long, cold nights on the farm. The next morning I ran like the wind after the lure.
    Where were my jammies then?
    I am a fierce predator and competitor. No one is faster than me.
    Where are my jammies?"

     

    - Credit to Donna and Brett Weeks

     

  6. I honestly wouldn't flip out at one non engorged tick.  If people did that every other dog in Oklahoma would be on antibiotics. 

    Remember when I got Bella from the farm and pulled ticks off her 50 at a time and quit counting at 200?...or the boy who had so many grape ticks his toes didn't meet?  Those are immediate antibiotic cases.  One tick really isn't in my book - but what do I know?  Not a vet and don't play one on TV.

  7. Eight hours is not a horrendous time to leave a dog.  People think of dogs honestly needing to pee in human terms.  We drink for many reasons other than thirst  - coffee to wake up, coffee/soda breaks at work, happy hour meet ups, beers while watch the game etc.  

    That said - if I were you I'd look into someone to give your girl a break while you are gone.  It can be done very reasonably.  Perhaps find a retired neighbor?  If you have a yard it's much easier but my knowledge of fenced yards in the UK is fuzzy.

  8. 2 hours ago, FiveRoooooers said:

    Pal, my first greyhound was quite comfy and came with everywhere in a Mazda Protege. It was a great car and finally traded in with 185K on the original clutch (and probably the equivalent of dogsnart lol). 

    :rotfl the very first "houndmobile"was a Mazda Protégé,  I stopped in Abilene Kansas on the way from moving from IL to TX and tossed girl in the back seat.  That Mazda went 155,000 on the original clutch.

    Around town is easy but you can do big trips in  a compact car by filling in the footwells with pillows and such.  Then toss a comforter over the top.

  9. Don't overanalyze.  Thousands  of greys have grown up hale and hearty on Purina which is WAY down on the average adopters scale in dog food.
    Chicken bones can splinter and cause problems.  I used to use beef knuckles (almost impossible to find) but then you risk slab fractures.   I became friends with a butcher and he'd cut a femur into 4 pieces and that worked best for me.

  10. 1 hour ago, Herman said:

    Hello,

     

    Quite new here on this Grey forum. In a couple of weeks our puppy will arrive in our home in The Netherlands. We have had many cats and dogs, but never a puppy! So this is new for us.

    That is why I have a little bit of a noob question about food for the little bugger.

     

    I’m a fan of raw food; it feels natural. However, after many years of research and talks with many dog owners and veterinarians, I have come to the conclusion that there isn’t a real need for raw food.

    I might be wrong, though. However, for my new puppy I am planning (he will be around 8/9 weeks) to give him a breakfast of a frozen chicken leg and a dinner of kibble (Acana puppy for the first six months), combined with an egg, some veggies, a little bit of stock and some bread. In the daytime he can have a frozen Kong filled with some peanutbutter, meat and dried fish. I have chosen Acana for the availability and the quality compared to the price. During the day he will have some Farmfood trainers (probably a lot) and a Yak cheese chew. I also will have a Nylabone for him, but only when he’s a little bit older (6+ months).

     

    There is some controversy around chicken (uncooked, I know). So I would like to know when to start (if at all) feeding like this.

     

    So to be thorough:

    •Frozen chicken leg in the morning, yea or nay?

    •An alternative for frozen chicken leg (for healthy teeth)?

    •When to start with bones?

    •What kind of bones?

    •My choice of dinner is a good choice or not?

     

    These are my questions. I do hope that you lovely people can help out a little bit.

     

    Have a greyt day!

     

     

     

     

     

  11. Maggie eats the Purina One weight management.  Bulletproof Morgan eats WOS - whatever's on sale.  Currently Purina Bella.  Purina actually has done far more feeding tests than any other company.  
    :rotfl  I believe I'm the one that coined the phrase "I got so fed up trying to find the perfect food I finally tossed a green bag of Iams in my cart...."

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