Reg: 07-13-2005
Posts: 31571
Loc: North-Central coast of California
Offline
Quote: Kristin Muntz
Wayne, please do not let your dog chew on tennis balls. One of my dog's prior owners let him chew on them for so long that you can see the dentin in his lower incisors and he has significant wear on his canines, as well. They are very very bad for dog's teeth.
In the bag;
"Off!"
Extra can of "Off!"
Hand towel with belt clip
Whistle
Fursaver
Prong collar
Extra links
2"wide nylon collar (for protection)
DD collar
LB DD collar leash
1"wide nylon tap
4ft skinny nylon leash (Drag line)
6ft 1"wide nylon everyday training/walking leash
LB Amish leather leash (for trialing)
10ft nylon stake-out line
Shock absorbing spring for stake-out line (unopened in bag)
2 bait bags http://leerburg.com/1385.htm
Jute tug
Leather tug
Ball on string
Dogzilla ball
Tennis ball (drive-building and fetch only- NO CHEWING)
SchH1 dumbbell
IB dowel
Extra Tracking articles
Along for the ride on training night or tracking days;
33ft, 1/2"wide long line/tracking line
Protection Harness (rarely used: dog prefers wide collar)
Bite wedge
Bite pillow
Burlap rag
Tracking flags and articles
2 touch pads (bucket lids)
Cap pistol and caps
Tub of cut treats
Water and bowl
First aid kit
I don't have near as much in my car but I do have the following:
Extra collar
Short OB leash
Water bowl
Water bottle (sport top so Sasha can drink from it)
1 Gallon bottle of water (refilled every week)
2 Empty peanut butter jars with enough kibble in them for a meal
Small jolly ball
Large Orbee ball
Two handed tug
Small one-handed tug
Slobber rags
Towels to clean feet or dry off after swimming
First Aid kit with benedryl, hydrogen peroxide, syringe, super glue, vetwrap and muzzle
Treats - Zuks minis and Vitalife chicken fingers
Bully sticks (6 inch)
Carting harness
Exercise pen (24" high)
Ok, I lied. I have more in my car than I realized.
Wayne, please do not let your dog chew on tennis balls. One of my dog's prior owners let him chew on them for so long that you can see the dentin in his lower incisors and he has significant wear on his canines, as well. They are very very bad for dog's teeth.
I totally agree with this. There have been several threads here about this, and I meant to find one ... I'm glad you posted about it, Kristin.
I agree too. I used a tennis ball only for retrieve, and it took only a month to damage his teeth. He was only chewing on it while he was retrieving the ball. Now all 4 canines are flat. I'm not making that mistake again.
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