May 19, 2011
What kinds of squeaky toys do you carry? Also do you have any suggestions on anything to help clean my dogs teeth? Any bones or toys?
Full Question:
Cindy,I am looking for a couple of things that I am having a hard time finding and I wanted your opinion. First my adult dog has a very strong drive for squeaky toys but any squeaky I buy him he destroys in about 15 seconds, because most squeaky toys are for small dogs and are made pretty poorly. I was trying to find something that squeaks and that would hold up a little better. The ideal toy would be just like one of your tugs that squeaks. This also would not be a toy that he is aloud to have all alone, there are very few toys he is aloud to have alone because he destroys most toys very quickly. So if you know of anything like this that would be great.
Also do you have any suggestions on anything to help clean my dogs teeth? Any bones or toys?
Thanks,
Andrew
Cindy's Answer:
We have this ball with a squeaker in it, it's fairly heavy duty (although not indestructible).
The Flappy toys squeak (EXCEPT the Floatie water toy).
We don't sell squeaky tugs for the simple reason that when we use tugs in our training, we don't want the dog munching all over it to make it squeak. We want the reward from playing tug to be the game with the handler, not the squeaking.
As for teeth cleaning, we use beef knuckle bones we order from our butcher and elk antler chews. One of the easiest ways to improve your dog's dental health is to feed a species appropriate diet (i.e. NOT kibble).
Here is a Q&A section on raw feeding.
I hope this helps.
Cindy
The Flappy toys squeak (EXCEPT the Floatie water toy).
We don't sell squeaky tugs for the simple reason that when we use tugs in our training, we don't want the dog munching all over it to make it squeak. We want the reward from playing tug to be the game with the handler, not the squeaking.
As for teeth cleaning, we use beef knuckle bones we order from our butcher and elk antler chews. One of the easiest ways to improve your dog's dental health is to feed a species appropriate diet (i.e. NOT kibble).
Here is a Q&A section on raw feeding.
I hope this helps.
Cindy
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