jlawrence01 wrote:My dog died the day I moved to Chicagoland. The day before, we attended a pig roast in honor of my father's 70th birthday. My wife claims that EVERYONE was feeding the beagle ... including me. He died at 12 yo which was old for an outdoor dog in Cleveland.
Cathy2 wrote:Bananasandwiches,
I once force fed a cat who hadn't eaten in several days due to illness. I swaddled it, then dragged the food so it clung to the cups on its tongue. Neither party in the transaction was having any fun. I was rewarded a few hours later, when the purr machine turned on and he began eating on his own again.
Regards,
bibi rose wrote:(I found out on this board that feeding liver is dangerous, although the vet hadn't said anything against it, presumably figuring that she didn't have long anyway.)
october271986 wrote:bibi rose wrote:(I found out on this board that feeding liver is dangerous, although the vet hadn't said anything against it, presumably figuring that she didn't have long anyway.)
It is? We feed our dog beef liver regularly.
bibi rose wrote:october271986 wrote:bibi rose wrote:(I found out on this board that feeding liver is dangerous, although the vet hadn't said anything against it, presumably figuring that she didn't have long anyway.)
It is? We feed our dog beef liver regularly.
http://www.lthforum.com/bb/viewtopic.php?t=7412&highlight=cat+baby+food This link should take you to the thread where it came up. It's about halfway down.
I didn't research into it any further.
Berenden consigned a local brewery to make and bottle the nonalcoholic beer, branded as Kwispelbier. It was introduced to the market last week and advertised it as "a beer for your best friend."
"Kwispel" is the Dutch word for wagging a tail.
The beer is fit for human consumption, Berenden said. But at euro1.65 ($2.14) a bottle, it's about four times more expensive than a Heineken.
Cathy2 wrote:Beer for DogsBerenden consigned a local brewery to make and bottle the nonalcoholic beer, branded as Kwispelbier. It was introduced to the market last week and advertised it as "a beer for your best friend."
"Kwispel" is the Dutch word for wagging a tail.
The beer is fit for human consumption, Berenden said. But at euro1.65 ($2.14) a bottle, it's about four times more expensive than a Heineken.
Cathy2 wrote:HI,
For pilling, I open her mouth and throw the pill to far reaches of her throat. Too far for her to drag it back. She accepts this rather complacently.
By contrast in the vet's office she jumps off the table, gets into a corner and is ready to take on everyone. All this while under the influence of a tranquilizer taken 90 minutes before.
She trusts the small group who feeds and takes care of her needs. Everyone else can just disapeer!
Regards,
TonyC wrote:it's no Karma, California Natural, or even Canidae* but it's better than anything from IAMS (P&G)/Purina(Nestle)/Pedigree(Mars). i don't eat MCD so my dog doesn't eat junk feed from mega-corp ABC.